Judith Gwinn Adrian
judith46.bsky.social
Judith Gwinn Adrian
@judith46.bsky.social
Author
Joshua, the punter. The coach. The prison guard. The boy with a bad heart. He found his calling in working with pre-teens, helping "his" boys overcome the challenges they too often faced. A beloved man. #Southsideraiders #punters #MadisonWisconsin
henschelhausbooks.com?s=Walking+th...
January 30, 2025 at 10:28 PM
From brujeria to baseball. Pascual always questioned why his family faced such hardships and challenges. "This isn't the way it is supposed to be." He was right; with strength and determination, he made it home.
#PuertoRico #educationalleadership #Milwaukee
henschelhausbooks.com?s=Rounding+T...
January 30, 2025 at 10:22 PM
Jackie Millar was shot, execution style. The boys were 15 and 16. They stole her car; left her for dead. Disabled, Jackie lived. She wanted to meet the boys, visited them in prison regularly. She forgave. Because she is Jackie Millar,
#crime #JackieMillar #forgiveness
www.amazon.com/Because-I-Am...
January 30, 2025 at 10:01 PM
Judith Gwinn Adrian‬ ‪@judith46.bsky.social‬
She wrote her name on the McPherson, Kansas, water tower; fearful that all that would remain were her bones, if she fell. Chutzpa. Wisdom. Ways to deal with an evil, debilitating disease: Dermatopolymyositis. judithadrian.com/nancer-the-d...
#Myositis
January 30, 2025 at 9:46 PM
Tera lived secrets; she did not live like other people, she said. True. She moved from collector to hoarder, progressively tipped into a perilous world of rats and disease. And yet, she was a kind, compassionate, loving woman. Meet Tera in all her complexities.
www.amazon.com/Teras-Tale-c...
January 28, 2025 at 6:42 PM
An unflinching exploration of two worlds that could not be more different by race and class; yet there are clear connections. The book plumbs the depths, with brave humor, or our correctional system and all the lost talent.
#Corrections #race #crime #Wisconsin
henschelhausbooks.com/product/in-w...
January 28, 2025 at 6:36 PM
Two autobiographies. Profoundly different women. A child named Hope. Coming together through adversity; a tale of the kind of measured interactions so needed today. Phil Salamone painted beautiful baby Hope for our book cover.
henschelhausbooks.com/product/from...
www.philipsalamone.com
January 24, 2025 at 9:50 PM