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How to make your hair soft and thick (100% guaranteed)

There are many ways to soften hair for a long time by natural substances that contain proteins and* .vitamins that nourish the hair.Follow me to tell you the latest and best ways to help nourish and grow your hair 100%.1 First Step: Use natural oils that soften hair from the root and eliminate hair breakage. Inside the oils there are useful natural substances that protect and soften the hair.2  ↔Some important oils↔ *Olive oil is one of the most important and best oils for hair* Lettuce oil: Provide hair and skin with the three elements that increase their vital appearance -silicon, phosphorus and sulfur - by applying a light massage of lettuce oil to the scalp and skin.1 Lettuce oil comes after the olive oil in terms of its ability to lengthen the hair; so the amount of lettuce oil is heated suitable for the length of the hair and massage the scalp well from the roots to the ends and then covered with a plastic cap every evening, and wash the hair in the

All 7 of Elizabeth Strout's Books

Just over a month after Oprah announced she'd selected Ta-Nehisi Coates' The Water Dancer for the new Apple addition of Oprah's book club, Lady O has made yet another addition to her celebrated list of over 80 titles. Her latest pick, announced November 6, is Elizabeth Strout's Olive, Again. The novel, published earlier this month, is the sequel to her Pulitzer Prize-winning 2008 book, Olive Kitteridge. It's also is Strout's seventh published work in a canon of celebrated literary fiction and short stories, many of which have become New York Times bestsellers. So, in honor of Oprah's latest book club pick Olive, Again, we've compiled a complete list of books by Elizabeth Stout—and they're each just as essential as the next. Like its predecessor Olive Kitteridge, Olive Again weaves together 13 separate stories about the citizens of Crosby Maine as we again meet the prickly Olive, now in her late 70s.

Ways You Can Read More Books in 2019

It's (almost) that time again: As the holidays approach, we're reminded to set goals for the year ahead. And according to market research company YouGov, one popular New Year's resolution—just after things like eating healthier and focusing on self-care—is finding time to read more books. As you can probably guess, this made the team here at OprahMag.com very happy, because just like Oprah has shown us with her game-changing national book club, we love to read every genre, and encourage others to do so, too. And despite a recent American Time Use Survey—which found that 2017 marked a 30 percent decrease in interest in leisure reading since 2004—it sounds like Americans are genuinely interested in learning how to read a lot more often. So if you're looking to fall in love with your next page turner (and the next, and the next), we've put together some useful tips to both read and enjoy more books in the year ahead. Read before you fall asleep. Skip out on tha

Read An Exclusive Excerpt from Olive, Again By Elizabeth Strout

Oprah has just announced her latest Oprah's Book Club Pick is Elizabeth Strout's "Olive, Again." Here, Strout shares an exclusive excerpt called "The Poet"—the first story the author wrote in the book. In this short tale,  Olive Kitteridge bumps into an old student of hers, Andrea, who has recently wrapped up her tenure as America's poet laureate—much to the surprise of her former math teacher. "The Poet" e mbodies what makes Strout's writing so sublimely wonderful: humor coexisting alongside heartbreak, the essential moments of grace shared between very different people. Check out the exclusive excerpt below. On a Tuesday morning in the middle of September, Olive Kit­teridge drove carefully into the parking lot of the marina. It was early—she drove only in the early hours now—and there were not many cars there, as she had expected there would not be. She nosed her car into a space and got out slowly; she was eighty-two years old, an