How Do You
Get People to Help You?
Author's name: Kosi Avotri, MD
Publisher: PublishAmerica
Release Date: May 2008
Page Count: 48
Format: Paperback
Cost: Soft Cover: $12.95
ISBN: ISBN: 1-60563-344-5
Genre: Self Help
Web Site: www.avotribooks.com
About the book:
Even the most self-reliant persons need other people to do things with
them or for them everyday. In this book I discuss some ways to obtain the
help we need from friends, family, coworkers, subordinates, superiors and
even strangers. Young executives who need the cooperation of people they
supervise may find the information in the book particularly helpful.
Endorsements:
"Dr. Avotri's book “How Do You Get People to
Help You?” will provide new managers with
a road map to success in their roles by providing simple, but seldom
practiced principles that are sure to enhance interpersonal relations."
-Matt Hayes, CEO of Riverview Regional Medical Center, Gadsden, AL
2. “Dr. Avotri speaks from the heart and speaks from
experience: he captures the human
side of medicine with his insights” Doug DeGraaf, Chief Executive Officer, Gadsden Regional Medical Center,
Gadsden, Alabama.
Purchase “How Do You Get People To Help You?” via the
web at any of these web sites:
Child
of Polygamy
Authors: Dr. Kosi J. Avotri and Nella P. Avotri
Book Title: CHILD OF POLYGAMY
Author's name: Kosi J. Avotri, MD and Nella P. Avotri
Publisher: Authorhouse
Release Date: August 2005
Page Count: 243
Format: Paperback
Cost: $14.95
ISBN: 1420873067
Electronic Book Version: 1420873075, $4.95
Genre: Fiction
Web Site: www.avotribooks.com
Purchase
Child of Polygamy via the web at any of these web sites:
Child Of Polygamy was the first book published by Avotribooks
Facts about the book:
Distributors and Booksellers:
Ingram: 1-800-395-5599: paperback only
Authorhouse : 1-888-519-5121, paperback and electronic versions.
Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble.com and other on-line book sellers, paperback
only.
This book uses the story of a young girl to introduce readers to Ghanaian
culture
and traditional religion. The story describes and explores family stress,
sibling rivalry and the practice of polygamy, as it existed in Ghana of
the 1960s and 70s, as well as the interaction of the local religion with
Christianity and how they influence one another.
The novel tells the story of Safia, the youngest daughter of a fractured
polygamous family in Ghana, West Africa. She was born in the house of her
maternal grand father who was the village chief. Thus, most of her earliest
memories consisted of some dramatic events in her grand father’s
life. Her rural life was peaceful and happy until age eleven when things
changed drastically, and for the worse. As a result of her mother’s
sudden illness Safia was "forced" to spend the next four years
in her father's house with her stepmother and stepsiblings. There, she
was tormented, humiliated and isolated by her oldest stepsister.
The book explores the young girl's attempt to cope with her tragedies while
trying to learn and understand the local traditions, customs and beliefs,
and how they conflicted with the Christian beliefs she was learning at
school.