- Independently Published
This Tutor Needs A Mother Fucking Drink: Coloring Books For Tutors
Key Metrics
- Laura Miller
- Independently Published
- Paperback
- 9781673805185
- 11 X 8.5 X 0.21 inches
- 0.56 pounds
- Health & Fitness > Pregnancy & Childbirth
- English
Book Description
#1 Gift For Tutors
**Designed By Tutors, For Tutors!**
Discover the hottest trend with this best-selling title.
Give the gift of laughter!
Finally a gift that doesn't suck.
So funny I nearly pissed myself.
Better than pounding sand!
This irreverent and sweary coloring book features laugh-out-loud funny and original designs that are perfect for taking the stress out of pregnancy!
Provides HOURS of coloring FUN, at home, in the car, or when trying not to swear out loud(!).
FEATURES:
- 50 High Quality Original Coloring Pages
- 100 Pages, High Quality Paper
- Large Page size 8.5x11 Inches for easy use.
- Perfect humorous gift for family, friends, coworkers, baby showers, etc.
Great as a gift or for yourself!
Give the gift of laughter.
Treat yourself, someone you love... or someone you hate!
Author Bio
Dr. Laura Miller received her Ph.D. from the University of California, Los Angeles, in 1988. She came to UMSL in August 2010. Endowed Chair in Japanese Studies.
After graduation from the University of California, Santa Barbara with BA degrees in Anthropology and Asian Studies, Dr. Miller taught English and supervised an English language program for Teijin Educational Systems in Osaka, Japan (1977-1981). She began teaching anthropology in the 1980s in Los Angeles, and has been a faculty member at several universities. At UMSL, she will teach new courses on Japanese culture and linguistic anthropology.
Dr Miller is currently working on two new book projects. Japanese Girl Stuff builds on multiple interests and expertise in linguistic anthropology, Japanese popular culture, and gender and media. She is also co-editing (with Alisa Freedman and Christine Yano) the volume Modern Girls on the Go: Gender, Mobility, and Labor in Japan, a collection which crosses the fields of history, anthropology, literature, and visual studies, investigating the lived experiences and cultural depictions of women who worked in service industries related to ideas of mobility.
Source: University of Missouri - St Louis
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