Protecting the Gift (Paperback)

product title divider
Earn Super Points: Write a Review
product title divider
Author:  Gavin De Becker
EARN 10 SUPER POINTS! What's this?
Sorry, this selection is currently unavailable.
product image
$15.00
You Save 34%
Our Price:
$9.78 + $3.10 SHIPPING
Total Price:
$12.88
Quantity:
Ships from/sold by Buy.com
45 day return policy
Format: Paperback
Condition:  Brand New
See all sellers
10 New and Used
for
$1.95
advertisement

Product Summary

Format: Paperback
ISBN-10: 0440509009
ISBN-13: 9780440509004
Buy.com Sku: 30570413
Publish Date: 4/10/2007
Buy.com Sales Rank: 5806
Dimensions:  (in Inches) 9.25H x 6L x 1T
Pages:  352
Age Range:  NA
See more in Conflict Resolution
Advertisement middle
 
The bestselling author of "The Gift of Fear"--and one of the nation's leading experts on predicting violence in our culture--teaches parents how to keep their children safe.
From the Publisher:
This indispensable resource offers keen insights into the behavior and strategies of predators, empowering parents with practical new steps to enhance children's safety at every age level. |Also available as an audiobook.An authority on human violence shares advice on how parents can protect their children from being victimized, explains how to minimize danger, and discusses such topics as school safety, teenage dating, and firearms.
Annotation:
An authority of criminal justice and the psychology of human predators examines how parents can detect violent behavior in daycare workers, school employees, and other individuals who interact with their children. Through a series of real-life stories, he introduces practical tactics that may prevent young children and teenagers from being the victims of sexual abuse and violence.
Praise
advertisement
"PROTECTING THE GIFT leads the way in this field. It's a must for all parents raising children in an increasingly violent society." - Robert Ressler

Read A Chapter

The Search for Certainty

Friday was the one evening each week that Holly spent entirely with Kate, usually along with other mothers and their daughters met through Kate's school. This particular Friday, the plan was an early meal at a restaurant, followed by a movie. At dinner, the women were protective, as always, but they'd recently initiated a new freedom: letting the girls sit at a nearby table on their own. The tables were close enough for Holly to see that her daughter wasn't eating much--it interfered with talking--but she didn't bug Kate about that in front of her friends; she was eight now, old enough to be embarrassed.

If you took away their twenty-five-year age difference, Holly and her daughter were like twins: both slender with short dark hair and large blue eyes, both liked to talk and to laugh, and both loved movies. This particular Friday, their movie would be Jurassic Park. After dinner Holly decided to leave the car at the restaurant and ta
Click to read more...
Advertisement Bottom