"Friday at approximately 1:14 pm Eastern Standard Time I decided that covering the gray in my hair was priority. To set the facts straight I started dying my hair at age 39 and not one day sooner. One day I looked in the mirror and saw that my natural blonde hair was no longer sultry. Instead of a Dietrich look, I was assuming a dead on impression of Bette Davis in "What Ever Happened to Baby Jane." "Six months ago I wrote about the subject of chin hairs because getting rid of them has now become an important daily ritual for me. Things have not gotten any better these past few months and I...
"Friday at approximately 1:14 pm Eastern Standard Time I decided that covering the gray in my hair was priority. To set the facts straight I started d...
Let's face it, most everyone went to High School and somehow it doesn't matter what you did and where you were, everyone pretty well has similar memories. Thoughts about growing up, music, the clothes, and your fellow classmates in the 50's to the late 60's are not just for class reunions. There isn't a day that does not go by that I don't have flashbacks like in the film Peggy Sue Got Married. This book would not have been written had it not been for the former students of Heroes Memorial and Massey Vanier in Cowansville, Quebec, Canada joining together on Facebook to create these...
Let's face it, most everyone went to High School and somehow it doesn't matter what you did and where you were, everyone pretty well has similar memor...
Every single person in my family has died from cancer except my Grandmother. When confronted with someone else in my family with the dreaded disease I knew there was nothing I could do but my utmost. If I did my best-would he survive? I wrote when I felt the pressure, and know that very few understand what it is like to be a caretaker unless they have done it themselves. This book consists of words of pain, worry, and frustration. No matter how much strife, frustration and anger you might be confronted with-cancer always seems to win out. When will it stop?
Every single person in my family has died from cancer except my Grandmother. When confronted with someone else in my family with the dreaded disease I...
Flash Cadilac was a unique store before its time. It opened in 1976 at 174 Rideau Street in downtown Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. It was owned by fashion designer Linda Seccaspina and her husband Angelo. The emporium was one of the longest running stores in downtown Ottawa and Linda ended the chapters of Flash Cadilac and Savannah Devilles in 1996. Linda was never going to write this book but thanks to Webb Dan and Lost Ottawa she knew she had to get some sort of remembrances out there. These are her memories and opinions during the reign of the stores. To each and every one of you that...
Flash Cadilac was a unique store before its time. It opened in 1976 at 174 Rideau Street in downtown Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. It was owned by fashion ...