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- The plucky squire [video game]. by All Possible Futures (Firm),game developer.; Devolver Digital (Firm),publisher.;
Game developer, All Possible Futures."'The plucky squire' follows the magical adventures of Jot and his friends--storybook characters who discover a three-dimensional world outside the pages of their book. When the malevolent Humgrump realizes he's the villain of the book--destined to lose his battle against the forces of good for all eternity--he kicks the heroic Jot out of its pages and changes the story forever. Jot must face challenges, unlike anything he's ever seen if he is to save his friends from Humgrump's dark forces and restore the book's happy ending"--IGDB.com.ESRB content rating: E10+, Everyone 10+ (content is generally suitable for ages 10 and up) for fantasy violence.Supported features: Nintendo Switch Pro controller compatible.System requirements: Nintendo Switch game system.
- Subjects: Video games.; Platform video games.; Puzzle video games.; Action adventure video games.; Adventure video games.; Fantasy video games.; Action video games.; Third person video games.; 2D video games.; 3D video games.; Video games.; Gentry; Good and evil; Villains; Heroes; Imaginary places; Imaginary wars and battles; Books; Characters and characteristics in literature;
- Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 2
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- The AARP crash course in finding the work you love : the essential guide to reinventing your life / by Greengard, Samuel,author.(CARDINAL)561777; American Association of Retired Persons.(CARDINAL)146478;
Includes bibliographical references (page 327) and index.A new attitude: Understanding the new order -- Career change checklist -- What is recareering? -- Find your work style -- Longer lives = richer careers -- The workforce redefined -- Generations at work -- Stepping back to move forward -- A new mindset takes hold -- Myths be damned -- Key questions -- Navigating the world of work: Set your sites on making a change -- Retirement redefined -- America's fastest growing occupations -- Boost your KQ -- Working for life -- Boomers in demand -- Second acts: still flying high -- Where gray matters -- Key questions -- What is your recareering style? Adapters -- Opportunists -- Key questions -- Change agents -- Reinventors -- Active retirees -- Fantasy seekers -- Recareering with style -- Worksheet: discovering your style -- Discovering your ideal career: Career & personality tests -- How to gauge your interests online -- Career counseling comes of age -- Is counseling for you? -- What about online counseling -- Does your employer offer counseling? -- Key questions -- Does a career coach make sense for you? -- Transforming skills into an occupation -- Coaching qualifications -- Second acts: of blueprints & bedpans -- Self-assessment can trigger change -- Finding a career you admire -- Focus on the future -- Worksheets: Self-assessment; Assessing careers; Pulling it all together -- What are my options? -- Understanding your work personality -- Know thy skills -- Key questions -- 10 careers ideally suited for recareering boomers -- Other careers to consider -- Career options by the numbers -- Make a federal case of it -- Back to school, forward to work: Laying the groundwork for a career move -- Explore your options -- Cultivate lifelong learning -- Out of the cube and into the class -- Extend your education -- Learning to change -- Get schooled -- Helping others attain "Aha!" -- Money matters: Making Social Security count -- Assessing your situation -- Expected & actual sources of income in retirement -- Understanding your assets & borrowing options -- Factor in your financial choices -- How to make a severance or buyout work for you -- Explore an alternative lifestyle -- Making things compute -- A new career changes the equation -- Learning to feel -- Addressing healthcare-coverage risks -- The challenge for women -- Retirement: the end game -- Calculate career-change costs -- Estimate your net worth -- Track income & expenses -- A question of balance: Flextime -- How to sell an employer on a flex-work format -- Job sharing -- Telecommuting & the virtual office -- Key variables in the motivation equation -- Contract work -- Cultural immersion -- Sabbaticals -- By your leave of absence -- Phased retirement -- Taking the bite out of the generational sandwich -- A new generation of perks -- Thinking big, working small -- 7 steps to breaking away -- Making sense of change -- Higher callings: Embracing the new activism -- Clarity via charity -- Volunteering -- Putting street smarts to work -- A tool kit for trading places: How to locate possible employers -- Where the bosses are -- Saw your blog, want a job? -- Job fairs -- Social networking sites -- Virtually connected -- Minding your business -- Crafting a business plan -- Buying into a franchise -- Nursing a passion for change -- 5 myths of entrepreneurial success -- Basic business structures -- Make your presence known: Applying for a job -- Internship -- How to whip the waiting game -- Make yourself available -- Resume rules: dos and don'ts -- Understanding search firms -- You on the Tube? -- 6 steps to an effective cover letter -- Sample resume & cover letter -- Mastering the art of the interview -- You've changed careers, now what? Starting all over again is gonna be rough -- Navigating a new workplace -- Exit strategy -- Discovering your style -- Career resources.Boomers reinvented society; now they're reinventing themselves, and AARP wants to facilitate that process. This book explores both the motivations and the methods of those taking part in the social phenomenon known as recareering. A new generation of American workers is no longer counting the days until retirement; instead they're seeking greater fulfillment in their personal lives by tackling new--and often much more socially significant--work. Switching careers is a challenge at any age, yet boomers may have more to overcome than their younger counterparts. Author Greengard shows readers how to sort out their feelings about their existing career; successfully transition to a new one; and work toward a greater sense of balance in their daily lives. Profiles of recareering veterans show how others have attained their own goals. These are rounded out by tips, quizzes, worksheets, how-to sidebars, and other practical resources.--From publisher description.
- Subjects: Career changes.; Job satisfaction.; Vocational guidance.; Career development.; Vocational interests.;
- Available copies: 11 / Total copies: 13
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Results 1 to 2 of 2