Braille (Contracted), Electronic braille (Contracted), DAISY Audio (Direct to Player), DAISY Audio (Zip), DAISY text (Direct to player), DAISY text (Zip), Word (Zip), ePub (Zip)
Arts and entertainment, Police and military, Social issues, History, Politics and government, War
Synthetic audio, Automated braille
Building walls that separate us from others is as old as humanity. People have built walls to keep others out…
for thousands of years, from the Great Wall of China to Hadrian's Wall to security fences along the US-Mexico border. But did you know they've also been built to keep people in, to grow food, to control nature and to collect taxes? Sometimes they've helped people and kept communities safe, but they've also created inequity and done more harm than good. Why do we have walls at all? Walls: the Long History of Human Barriers and Why We Build Them explores the many reasons humanity has put up walls over the course of our history, and why we continue building them today
Canadian authors (Non-fiction), Medicine, Award winning non-fiction
Human-narrated audio
« Lorsque Philippe apprend que Louis-Chêne, son papi adoré, a une maladie qui affecte sa mémoire, il est inquiet. Et…
si son grand-papa l'oubliait ? Pourtant, même si son grand-père ne se souvient pas de son nom et ne le reconnaît pas toujours, le garçon sait qu'il l'aime encore... au-delà des mots. Ce conte illustré vous permettra d'aborder l'Alzheimer avec votre enfant, d'une façon simple et imagée. Grâce à la section « trucs et astuces », vous découvrirez ensemble les gestes à poser pour vous adapter aux différents stades de la maladie et pour conserver une belle complicité avec la personne atteinte. »--Quatrième de couverture