books by subject
Child & Developmental Psychology

Practice of Child-Clinical Neuropsychology: An Introduction (Studies on Neuropsychology, Neurology and Cognition)

Handbook of Neurodevelopmental and Genetic Disorders in Children, 2/e: First Edition: Second Edition

The Origins and Development of High Ability (Novartis Foundation Symposia)

Introduction to Infant Development

Play: Its Role in Development and Evolution

Pediatric Neuropsychology, First Edition: Research, Theory, and Practice, 2nd Edition (Science and Practice of Neuropsychology)

Traumatic Brain Injury in Children and Adolescents: Assessment and Intervention (The Guilford School Practitioner Series)

Pediatric Traumatic Brain Injury: New Frontiers in Clinical and Translational Research

Intelligent Testing with the WISC–III (Wiley Series on Personality Processes)

The Special Educator's Tool Kit

A History of Modern Wales 1536-1990

Child Development: An Illustrated Guide, DVD Edition

Rethinking Innateness: Connectionist Perspective on Development (Neural Networks & Connectionist Modelling) (Neural Network Modeling and Connectionism): A Connectionist Perspective on Development

Living with Emetophobia: Coping with Extreme Fear of Vomiting

Developmental Neuropsychology: A Clinical Approach (Brain, Behaviour and Cognition)

Developmental Cognitive Neuropsychology (Brain, Behaviour and Cognition)

Development in Infancy

Human Developmental Neuropsychology

Why Did I Marry You

Psychodarwinism

EOA: The End of Adolescence (Oxford Medical Publications)

Meeting at the Crossroads: Women's Psychology and Girls' Development

Social Development: Psychological Growth and the Parent/Child Relationship

Reflective Parenting: A Guide to Understanding What's Going on in Your Child's Mind

Different Like Me: My Book of Autism Heroes

Speaking with Style: Sociolinguistic Skills of Children

Mass Media, An Aging Population, and the Baby Boomers (Routledge Communication Series)

Understanding Your Baby (The Tavistock Clinic - Understanding Your Child)

Saying No: Why it's Important for You and Your Child
