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Books with author David Kessler

  • The End of Overeating

    David Kessler

    Audio CD (Recorded Books, March 15, 2009)
    None
  • You Can Heal Your Heart: Finding Peace After a Breakup, Divorce, or Death

    Louise Hay, David Kessler

    Audio CD (Hay House, Inc., Feb. 4, 2014)
    In You Can Heal Your Heart, self-help luminary Louise Hay and renowned grief and loss expert David Kessler, the protégé of Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, have come together to start a conversation on healing grief. This remarkable book discusses the emotions that occur when a relationship leaves you brokenhearted, a marriage ends in divorce, or a loved one dies. It will also foster awareness and compassion, providing you with the courage to face many other types of losses and challenges, such as saying good-bye to a beloved pet, losing your job, coming to terms with a life-threatening illness or disease, and much more. With a perfect blend of Louise’s teachings and affirmations on personal growth and transformation and David’s many years of working with those in grief, this empowering book will inspire an extraordinary new way of thinking, bringing hope and fresh insights into your life and even your current and future relationships. You will not only learn how to help heal your grief, but you will also discover that, yes, you can heal your heart.
  • Under the Flag of France

    David Ker

    eBook (, Sept. 15, 2014)
    The tale of Bertrand du Guesclin's life and military service. This fable details several aspects of life from boyhood to adulthood as well as the battles and duties he served throughout his military career. Told in a story-like fable atmosphere, the reader gets easily and fully immersed in the almost mythological life of Bertrand du Guesclin. Sample Passage:Startling words, in truth, to hear from any one’s lips; and doubly so from those of a boy of fourteen, with his whole life before him.It was a clear, bright evening in the spring of 1334, and the setting sun was pouring a flood of golden glory over the wooded ridges, and dark moors, and wide green meadows, and quaint little villages of Bretagne, or Brittany, then a semi-independent principality ruled by its own duke, and little foreseeing that, barely two centuries later, it was to be united to France once for all.Over earth and sky brooded a deep, dreamy stillness of perfect repose, broken only by the lowing of cattle from the distant pastures, and the soft, sweet chime of the vesper-bell from the unseen church tower, hidden by the still uncleared wood, through one solitary gap in which were seen the massive grey battlements of Motte-Brun Castle, the residence of the local “seigneur,” or lord of the manor. A rabbit sat upright in its burrow to clean its furry face. A squirrel, halfway up the pillar-like stem of a tall tree, paused a moment to look down with its small, bright, restless eye; and a tiny bird, perched on a bough above, broke forth in a blithe carol.But the soothing influence of this universal peace brought no calm to the excited lad who was striding up and down a small open space in the heart of the wood, stamping fiercely ever and anon, and muttering, half aloud, words that seemed less like any connected utterance than like the almost unconscious bursting forth of thoughts too torturing to be controlled.“Is it my blame that I was born thus ill-favoured? Yet mine own father and mother gloom upon me and shrink away from me as from one under ban of holy Church, or taken red-handed in mortal sin. What have I done that mine own kith and kin should deal with me as with a leper?”In calling himself ill-favoured, the poor boy had only spoken the truth; for the features lighted up by the sinking sun, as he turned his face toward it, were hideous enough for one of the demons with which these woods were still peopled by native superstition.His head was unnaturally large, and covered with coarse, black, bristly hair, which, worn long according to the custom of all men of good birth in that age, tossed loosely over his huge round shoulders like a bison’s mane. His light-green eyes, small and fierce as those of a snake, looked out from beneath a low, slanting forehead garnished with bushy black eyebrows, which were bent just then in a frown as dark as a thunder-cloud. His nose was so flat that it almost seemed to turn inward, and its wide nostrils gaped like the yawning gargoyles of a cathedral. His large, coarse mouth, the heavy jaw of which was worthy of a bulldog, was filled with strong, sharp teeth, which, as he gnashed them in a burst of rage, sent a sudden flash of white across his swarthy face like lightning in a moonless sky.His figure was quite as strange as his face. Low of stature and clumsily built, his vast and almost unnatural breadth of shoulder and depth of chest gave him the squat, dwarfish form assigned by popular belief to the deformed “Dwergar” (earth-dwarfs) who then figured prominently in the legends of all Western Europe. His length of arm was so great that his hands reached below his knees, while his lower limbs seemed as much too short as his arms were too long. In a word, had a half-grown black bear been set on its hind legs, and arrayed in the rich dress of a fourteenth-century noble, it would have looked just like this strange boy.
  • Your Food Is Fooling You: How Your Brain Is Hijacked by Sugar, Fat, and Salt by David A. Kessler

    David A. Kessler

    Paperback (Roaring Brook Press, Jan. 1, 1615)
    None
  • Under the Flag of France : a Tale of Bertrand Du Guesclin

    Ker, David

    eBook (HardPress Publishing, Aug. 23, 2014)
    Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made available for future generations to enjoy.
  • Under the Flag of France

    David Ker

    eBook (@AnnieRoseBooks, July 14, 2015)
    I must plead guilty to having, for the purposes of the story, placed my hero’s castle (which unhappily no longer exists) much nearer to Rennes than it actually was; but the chief events of his life are given here very much as I found them in the old French chronicles.DAVID KER.
  • IS THERE AN ELEPHANT IN YOUR KITCHEN: SUPER CHUBBY

    Kessler

    Paperback (Little Simon, Oct. 15, 1986)
    Illustrations and simple questions examine some of the things that belong in a kitchen and some that do not. On board pages.
    M
  • you can heal your heart: finding peace after a breakup, divorce, or death

    Louis L Hay & David Kessler

    Paperback (Hay House, March 15, 2014)
    You Can Heal Your Heart is a perfect friend for those who might have had sour relationships, lost their loved ones or pets and other losses and emotional challenges. The book contains the authors' advices and affirmations about how to surpass a phase of grief of acute distress and depression and just let it all phase out. With an intimate set of suggestions that evoke hope and new insights into the brighter side of life, this book might as well help you in not just putting an end to sadness but also heal the heart.
  • You Can Heal Your Heart: Finding Peace After a Breakup, Divorce or Death

    Louise Hay, David Kessler

    Paperback (Hay House UK, Feb. 4, 2014)
    In You Can Heal Your Heart, self-help luminary Louise Hay and renowned grief and loss expert David Kessler, the protégé of Elisabeth Kubler-Ross, have come together to start a conversation on healing grief. This remarkable book discusses the emotions that occur when a relationship leaves you brokenhearted, a marriage ends in divorce, or a loved one dies. You Can Heal Your Heart will also foster awareness and compassion, providing you with the courage to face many other types of losses and challenges, such as saying goodbye to a beloved pet, losing your job, coming to terms with a life-threatening illness or disease and much more. With a perfect blend of Louise Hay's teachings and affirmations on personal growth and transformation and David Kessler's many years of working with those in grief, this empowering book will inspire an extraordinary new way of thinking, bringing hope and fresh insights into your life and even your current and future relationships. You will not only learn how to help heal your grief, but you will also discover that, yes, you can heal your heart.
  • IS THERE A GORILLA IN THE BAND: SUPER CHUBBY

    Kessler

    Paperback (Little Simon, March 1, 1994)
    A brightly illustrated, gently humorous board book, featuring a tough, padded cover, introduces toddlers to a variety of musical instruments. For children under four.
    L
  • Under the Flag of France

    David Ker

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Sept. 15, 2014)
    Under the Flag of France By David Ker
  • IS THERE A PENGUIN AT YOUR PARTY: SUPER CHUBBY

    Kessler

    Paperback (Little Simon, March 1, 1994)
    Young children can learn all about familiar objects at a birthday party and have lots of fun too with a humorous board book that features a sturdy construction and vivid illustrations. For children under four.
    F