/PRNewswire/ A new book from a Yale-trained, internationally- recognized clinical psychologist helps parents, teachers, and clinicians recognize and address.
Published:
6:30 AM May 26, 2021
Updated:
8:08 AM May 26, 2021
Heather Pizer-inggs, Duty Manager, Andrea Zanchi, Duty Manager, Teresa Haughey, Managing Director, and Jo Pizer-inggs, Bar Manager/Sommelier, at Th Ostrich Inn on Fakenham Road in South Creake. Picture: Danielle Booden
- Credit: Danielle Booden
A village pub which has been closed for four years is gearing up to finally reopen to the public.
The Ostrich Inn in South Creake will open to the public on June 1, reopening the doors of the building for the first time since 2017, after the previous pub, Plume of Feathers, closed its doors.
The Inn on Fakenham Road will be a pub and restaurant, and will also offer rooms inspired by the greenery of Norfolk, with all named after cooking herbs, including basil and lemon thyme.
Rob Taylor interviews Jen Sookfong Lee
Photo: Sherri Koop
After writing eight books of fiction and non-fiction, Jen Sookfong Lee is about to publish her first poetry collection:
Lee’s books include
The Conjoined, nominated for International Dublin Literary Award and a finalist for the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize,
The Better Mother, a finalist for the City of Vancouver Book Award,
The End of East,
Gentlemen of the Shade, and
Chinese New Year. She was born and raised in Vancouver’s East Side, and she now lives with her son in North Burnaby.
Rob Taylor: In “Yesterday, You Had the Best of Intentions” you write about a black that “hurts your eyes”, and also the “soft, enabling dark.” Blackness and darkness pervade
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