Good questions! I think it was short by today’s YA standards - - maybe 200 pages. Definitely not a collection, just a short novel. It was more a historical fiction.
Thanks for the suggestion! Based upon the Wikipedia description I don’t think this is it, but I’ll read it to be sure.
I’m really not sure how I posted here, but I’m grateful for your answer. This is exactly what I was looking for.
Friend, where were you in June?!?!
Cool stuff, though. Now when I switch things up I have a tool!
Has the nonprofit applied for the Google Ad grant? Worth looking into it, if not.
What’s up with that? I can’t see any of the pictures hosted here.
I always assumed that it increased engagement. Can’t find what you’re searching for? Put up a post asking (even though someone’s already asked that question 1,000 times).
I very rarely use YouTube, but I’ve noticed that when I start listening to older top 40 or contemporary bluegrass, those videos drop in
Increasingly in my life, I’ve found this to manifest as an intolerance of frustration. Need a tool that’s not at hand? That project’s never getting finished. Anyone have methods for coping with this?
If you’d like folks who aren’t in the know, it would be great to explain the jargon.
The 15-minute city is an urban planning concept in which most daily necessities and services, such as work, shopping, education, healthcare, and leisure can be easily reached by a 15-minute walk or bike ride from any point in the city.
This is wholesome in the weirdest way.
This is a possibility, although the descriptions I can find are pretty limited. One mentions that the protagonist is a mall-rat. Any guess on when the book is set?
Edit: This was written in 96, which would have been too late. Thanks for the suggestion, though!