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Make Lemonade is a verse novel for young adults, written by Virginia Euwer Wolff and originally published in 1993 by Henry Holt and Company. [1] [2] It is the first book in a trilogy series [3] consisting of Make Lemonade, True Believer (the second installment), and This Full House (the third installment).
The lemon, like many other cultivated Citrus species, is a hybrid, in its case of the citron and the bitter orange. [5] [6] The lemon is a hybrid of the citron and the bitter orange. [6] Taxonomic illustration by Franz Eugen Köhler, 1897 . Lemons were most likely first grown in northeast India. [7] The origin of the word lemon may be Middle ...
In 2016 Kwon published a short story called "You Do Not Know." She later expanded it and published it as Lemon, [1] which was published in its home country in 2019. [2] Changbi Publishers is the South Korean publisher. [3] It was published in English in 2021, with Janet Hong being the translator. [1]
Don Lemon invites readers to question their own faith in his new book, "I Once Was Lost."
Although the first two known uses in print are by Hubbard, [5] [6] [7] many modern authors [8] [9] attribute the expression to Dale Carnegie who used it in his 1948 book How to Stop Worrying and Start Living. Carnegie's version reads: "If You Have a Lemon, Make a Lemonade." [10] Carnegie credited Julius Rosenwald for giving him the phrase. [10]
Stanley A. Burroughs (October 9, 1903 – June 16, 1991) was an American naturopath and promoter of pseudomedicine known for inventing the Master Cleanse or "lemonade" diet, which he published in his book The Master Cleanser. [1] [2] [3]
Master Cleanse (also called the lemonade diet or lemon detox diet) is a modified juice fast that permits no food, substituting tea and lemonade made with maple syrup and cayenne pepper. The diet was developed by Stanley Burroughs , who initially marketed it in the 1940s, and revived it in his 1976 book The Master Cleanser . [ 1 ]
Limonene takes its name from Italian limone ("lemon"). [4] Limonene is a chiral molecule, and biological sources produce one enantiomer: the principal industrial source, citrus fruit, contains (+)-limonene (d-limonene), which is the -enantiomer.