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Lavishly illustrated natural history of the distinctive lava highlands in the Connecticut Valley
How a groundbreaking advocacy organization has helped shape Connecticut's criminal justice system since 1875
The moving stories of two Indigenous men and their repatriations
Compelling account of the abolitionist's life, legal battles, and legacy
A vivid series of trials from America's earliest days
When writer Anne Farrow discovered the logbooks of the eighteenth-century slaving ships, her mother had been recently diagnosed with dementia. As she witnessed the impact of memory loss, she also began a journey into the world of the Atlantic slave trade. This book is a powerful meditation on how slavery still affects us.
A riveting account of Connecticut's involvement in the Civil War
This account of two siblings, one with Down syndrome, growing up in 1970s Connecticut is ';rich in character, humor, hard-earned insights, and love' (Rachel Simon, author of Riding the Bus with My Sister).Nothing Special is a disarmingly candid tale of two sisters growing up in the 1970s in rural Connecticut. Older sister Chris, who has Down syndrome, is an extrovert with a knack for getting what she wants, while the author, her younger, typically developing sister, shoulders the burdens and grief of her parents, especially their father's alcoholism. Dianne Bilyak details wrestling with their mixed emotions in vignettes that range from heartrending to laugh-out-loud funny, including anecdotes about Chris's habit of faux-smoking Popsicle sticks or partying through the night with her invisible friends. Poet and disability advocate Bilyak strikes a rare balance between poignant and hilarious as she paints a compassionate and critical real-world picture of their lives. They struggle, separately and together, with the tension between dependence and independence, the complexities of giving versus receiving, the pressure to live as others expect, and in the end, the wonderful liberation of self-acceptance.';With charming specificity and hilarity, Bilyak writes frankly about her own identity, and that of her sister's, comparing her own self-consciousness with her sister's striking lack thereof... Bilyak hits home something that we so badly need to hear right now: that people with disabilities are not a monolith, and that there is no perfect way to love or be loved by them.' Bekah Brunstetter, writer and producer for NBC's This is Us
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