enki Library
 
What My Daughters Taught Me
Description
Without a word spoken, mothers effortlessly read a room, gauging its temperature, scanning their children's faces and measuring their heartbeats . . . This is the language of love, a language that should not be the monopoly of mothers. It is a language that we men can reclaim and relearn, as it lies dormant within us, waiting to be brought back to life. I was sure that whoever gave women this gift would not have bypassed fathers, in case they ended up like me."When Joseph Wakim's wife died of breast cancer in 2003, his three daughters were only eleven, nine and four years old. Despite well-meaning friends, family and even strangers telling him he would need help to bring up his daughters, Joseph followed his heart and did the job his way, trusting that he - and the girls - would know what to do. To stop himself from succumbing to grief and taking his daughters with him, Joseph relied on humor and honesty as they all learned to live again and celebrate life, while honoring the memory of his beloved wife, Nadia. Twelve years later, the family is thriving, and Joseph and his daughters have learned hard and valuable truths about each other - and themselves. This moving and engaging memoir will touch the hearts of parents and children everywhere, and may even provide some secrets to family harmony that we can all share. --Provided by publisher.
  • Without a word spoken, mothers effortlessly read a room, gauging its temperature, scanning their children's faces and measuring their heartbeats . . . This is the language of love, a language that should not be the monopoly of mothers. It is a language that we men can reclaim and relearn, as it lies dormant within us, waiting to be brought back to life. I was sure that whoever gave women this gift would not have bypassed fathers, in case they ended up like me."When Joseph Wakim's wife died of breast cancer in 2003, his three daughters were only eleven, nine and four years old. Despite well-meaning friends, family and even strangers telling him he would need help to bring up his daughters, Joseph followed his heart and did the job his way, trusting that he - and the girls - would know what to do. To stop himself from succumbing to grief and taking his daughters with him, Joseph relied on humor and honesty as they all learned to live again and celebrate life, while honoring the memory of his beloved wife, Nadia. Twelve years later, the family is thriving, and Joseph and his daughters have learned hard and valuable truths about each other - and themselves. This moving and engaging memoir will touch the hearts of parents and children everywhere, and may even provide some secrets to family harmony that we can all share. --Provided by publisher.
APA Citation (style guide)

Wakim, J. (2015). What My Daughters Taught Me. Allen & Unwin.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation (style guide)

Wakim, Joseph. 2015. What My Daughters Taught Me. Allen & Unwin.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities Citation (style guide)

Wakim, Joseph, What My Daughters Taught Me. Allen & Unwin, 2015.

MLA Citation (style guide)

Wakim, Joseph. What My Daughters Taught Me. Allen & Unwin, 2015.

Citation formats are based on standards as of July 2010. Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published.
Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy.
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020 |a 9781925267877 |c $9.99
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035 |a 1000338430
041 |a eng
1001 |a Wakim, Joseph.
2101 |a What My Daughters Taught Me
24510 |a What My Daughters Taught Me |h [electronic resource] / |c Joseph Wakim.
260 |a [S.l.] : |b Allen & Unwin, |c 2015.
300 |a 1 online resource (288 p.)
337 |a ebook
520 |a Without a word spoken, mothers effortlessly read a room, gauging its temperature, scanning their children's faces and measuring their heartbeats . . . This is the language of love, a language that should not be the monopoly of mothers. It is a language that we men can reclaim and relearn, as it lies dormant within us, waiting to be brought back to life. I was sure that whoever gave women this gift would not have bypassed fathers, in case they ended up like me."When Joseph Wakim's wife died of breast cancer in 2003, his three daughters were only eleven, nine and four years old. Despite well-meaning friends, family and even strangers telling him he would need help to bring up his daughters, Joseph followed his heart and did the job his way, trusting that he - and the girls - would know what to do. To stop himself from succumbing to grief and taking his daughters with him, Joseph relied on humor and honesty as they all learned to live again and celebrate life, while honoring the memory of his beloved wife, Nadia. Twelve years later, the family is thriving, and Joseph and his daughters have learned hard and valuable truths about each other - and themselves. This moving and engaging memoir will touch the hearts of parents and children everywhere, and may even provide some secrets to family harmony that we can all share. --Provided by publisher.
562 |e 1
592 |a 9781925267877.jpg
650 0 |a Death.
650 0 |a Fatherhood.
650 7 |a FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS / Death, Grief, Bereavement |2 bisacsh.
650 7 |a FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS / Parenting / Fatherhood |2 bisacsh.
655 7 |a Electronic books. |2 lcsh
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