"The tight labor market in recent years has created a crisis for employers trying to hire and retain talent, and changed employees' expectations of employers. This book describes the new workforce and how forward-thinking employers can adapt to the newly empowered workforce to hire, retain, and inspire employees"-- Provided by publisher
Heather McGowan Books
Heather McGowan is an American writer whose work delves into the complexities of the human experience. Her stylistically refined prose often reveals hidden character motivations and societal nuances. McGowan explores themes of identity, maturation, and the search for meaning in the modern world. Her novels are distinguished by their insightful observations and an original approach to storytelling.


Schooling
- 320 pages
- 12 hours of reading
Heather McGowan’s widely praised first novel introduces a literary artist of consummate skill, and a narrative voice of astonishing sensitivity and sensuousness. Tracking every mercurial shift of her character’s consciousness, the result is dreamy, disquieting, and achingly alive. Schooling is a portrait of an adolescent girl, thirteen-year-old Catrine Evans, who following her mother’s death is uprooted from her home in America to an English boarding school. There she encounters classmates who sniff glue and engage in arson and instructors who make merciless fun of her accent. She also finds the sympathetic chemistry teacher Mr. Gilbert, who offers Catrine the friendship she so desperately wants–a friendship that gradually takes on sinister and obsessive overtones.