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Charlie Sheen’s children lost in the chaos

Charlie Sheen's children lost in the chaos

As the troubled actor continues down a destructive path, his twin boys become the real victims of his bizarre behaviour.

But early last week, as his downward spiral continued with a series of bizarre rants, the troubled Two And A Half Men star turned daddy daycare, babysitting his twin toddler sons – with the assistance of not one but two girlfriends!

Following a spat about money while on holiday in the Bahamas with Charlie and his two blonde “goddesses”, the boys’ mother, Brooke Mueller, left Max and Bob, who turn two next week, in their 45-year-old father’s care.

What Charlie describes as his “unconvential family” was shortlived, however. Brooke took her ex-husband to court a few days later, claiming the actor had violently threatened her. Charlie was ordered by a judge to stay 100 yards (91m) away from Brooke – and the twins were removed from his care.

“I do not know where my children are, but I’m not panicking,” Charlie said in an interview with the US Today Show after his sons were taken from his home.“This is not about emotions, it’s not about ego, it is just about getting very focused.”

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At home with Princess Mary and the royal twins

At home with Princess Mary and the royal twins

With her beautiful baby twins about to be christened, Mary has decided her family is complete.

The stunning official photos taken by the royal family’s favourite photographer, Steen Brogaard, portray Mary and Frederik as very hands-on, relaxed and devoted parents.

But Mary has revealed the demands of being a Crown Princess and mum to four very young children are proving a challenge. Indeed, Mary now believes her young family is complete. She’s blessed with four happy and healthy children and that will be her lot. Mary’s sister, Patricia Bailey, speaking exclusively to Woman’s Day, reveals the Aussie princess will definitely be drawing the line at four.

“The twins are fabulous, they’ve been so good for the whole family,” Patricia says. “But I think that’s it now. I’ve got three children, big sister Jane’s got three and Mary’s got four. I think that’s enough, we [our family] are at good numbers.”

Mary is mindful that her two eldest children, Prince Christian, 5, and Princess Isabella, 3, are not overshadowed by the joyful arrival of the twins, whose names are yet to be revealed.

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Kate shines at her royal debut

Kate Shines at her Royal debut

William’s bride-to-be wins over the public at her first official royal engagement. Judy Wade was there.

Sharing whispers and jokes as they pulled up in a Range Rover, Prince William and Kate Middleton began a new chapter in their love story when they embarked on their first official royal engagement together.

The launch of a new inflatable lifeboat at Trearddur Bay in North Wales, just a few kilometres from the farmhouse where the couple have made their home, was Kate’s first proper opportunity to show the world she has all the qualities of a future queen.

Applauding as his giggling fiancée poured champagne over the bow of the $350,000 lifeboat, William declared, “I do the talking bit and she does the fun bit”.

He was clearly anxious as they set off to greet the crowds, nervously rubbing his hands together and constantly checking that she was following him. But Kate acted as if she’d been going on royal walkabouts all her life.

She smiled, waved and shook hands with her fans as she moved through the crowd, crouching to chat to children, patting dogs and thanking everyone for coming with a confidence and grace that belied her lack of experience.

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Royal snub: Why Princess Mary isn’t invited to the royal wedding

Royal Snub: Why Princess Mary isn't invited to the royal wedding

Everyone from the butcher to the local publican got an invitation to the wedding of the century, so why didn’t Kate Middleton invite our Princess Mary to share her joy?

Read all about Prince Williams pre-wedding visit to Australia!

Kate has instead invited a bizarre list of friends, including her butcher, grocer and postman. Even the couple’s favourite publican will be in attendance. With two of William’s ex-girlfriends also on the list, along with Kate’s disgraced uncle Gary Goldsmith, who was previously disowned by the couple after a drug scandal in 2009, the snub seems doubly insulting.

And while down-to-earth Mary is probably more than happy to stay at home with her gorgeous newborn twins and watch the extravaganza on television, her fans still want to know why on earth she and Frederik were not invited.

Princess Mary, 39, is one of only a very select few who know how difficult it is to make the transition from ordinary person to royal, and she could have helped ease the bride’s nerves. A close European neighbour and fellow commoner who has won the affection of her people with her natural charm, Mary could have been the perfect mentor for Kate, steering her through the minefield of protocol as she transforms into a princess.

The snub is even more galling when you realise fun-loving Fred is a cousin of Wills – the groom is a member of the extended Danish royal family through his grandfather Prince Philip – and that Mary is probably the one person in the world who will really understand how nervous Kate will be feeling on April 29.

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Suri’s $100,000 birthday party!

Casually sipping on Starbucks, flicking through style bible Vanity Fair and using her own credit card to buy designer heels… Suri Cruise behaves like a bored twentysomething.

But next month the world’s most indulged preschooler will be celebrating only her fifth birthday.

And what a celebration it will be! A source close to Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes tells Woman’s Day the proud parents are in the early stages of planning a lavish party for their little princess. Details are still top secret, but we can reveal the doting duo have set aside an astonishing $100,000 to ensure it’s an unforgettable occasion.

Read more in this week’s Woman’s Day on sale March 7, 2011.

Woman’s Day

Suri enjoys a mini hot chocolate.

And it seems whatever Suri wants, she gets.

At four-years-old, Suri is shopping for high heels and make-up.

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Kate Middleton’s family photos

Eight weeks out from the wedding of the decade, Kate Middleton’s family have released a series of intimate family photographs of the young princess-to-be.

The snaps show Kate as a toddler, on holidays with her family, and posing informally with Prince William on the day of their graduation from St Andrews University.

The candid images have been published on the new royal wedding website alongside a short biography of Kate.

William and Kate will wed in London’s Westminster Abbey on April 29.

Kate aged three on a holiday with her family in England’s Lakes District

Kate aged four with her father and sister Pippa in Jerash, Jordan

Kate, aged five, at her family home in the UK

William and Kate on their graduation day at St Andrews University

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Kate on her graduation day from St Andrews University

January 17, 2012: A six-year-old boy with Down syndrome has modelled in an ad for Target, becoming a source of inspiration for countless families.

William and Kate announce their engagement in St James’ Palace

William and Kate visit their old college at St Andrews University

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William and Kate officially launch a new lifeboat in Wales

William and Kate visit Belfast in Northern Ireland for Shrove Tuesday celebrations

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The Leopard

The Leopard

The Leopard by Jo Nesbo, Harvill Secker, $32.95

Since Swedish author Stieg Larsson and The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo smashed the bestseller lists, a new literary sub-genre has developed – “Scandicrime” – with a buzz all of its own. Scandicrime is noir-ish, slightly subversive packed with antiheroes and set in the frozen snow-deadened landscapes of Scandinavia. There literally seems to be something in the water – well the snow – that seems perfectly suited to confronting, dark, emotional thrillers but the similarities between the works ends there and standing head and shoulders above the Scandi stereotypes is Norwegian writer Jo Nesbo.

The Leopard is Nesbo’s sixth Harry Hole novel published in English (his eighth over all) and at 611 pages, it may seem quite an undertaking. But fear not, you won’t be putting this down! Nesbo’s special skill is in his storytelling – even more impressive when you consider this is in translation.

The gentle drip drip of nuggets of information, and superb twists and turns, keep you guessing always a few steps behind the wily protagonist – brooding detective Harry Hole, who at the beginning of the story is holed up in Hong Kong, trying to erase the memory of his last painful case and the loss of his wife and son with a mix of compulsive gambling and opium.

The beautiful Kaja is sent over to lure Harry back to Oslo to work on the case of a burgeoning serial killer whose form of murder involves a uniquely gruesome torture instrument called Leopold’s apple which chokes its victims and then shoots deadly spikes into them at the pull of a chain. Harry only agrees to come because officer Kaja tells him his father is gravely ill.

Once back in Oslo, Harry finds himself at the centre of a police turf-war and forced to work undercover with only a couple of officers to help him (including Kaja) which of course suits his unconventional ways perfectly. As the bodies mount up, it becomes evident that the only connection between the victims is that they all spent a night together in an isolated mountain hut along a ski route and the killer is picking off the guests one by one. How many will die before Harry works it out?

The action switches deftly between Hong Kong, Norway and Africa and the constantly swirling plot is laced with a fevered romance, a subplot as Harry tries to help his dying father and lashings of dark emotion. This is slick, sophisticated thriller telling at its peak.

About the Author

Jo Nesbo was born in Oslo, Norway in 1960, his father a bus company managing director and his mother a librarian. He describes his childhood as “a painful delight” and decided to be a writer when he was 14 “songwriting for my friends who all played in bands”.

He worked as a freelance journalist and even a strockbroker before writing his first Harry Hole novel at 36, an instant hit winning the Glass Key Award for best Nordic crime novel. He also continued writing songs and is the lead singer and songwriter in Norwegian rock band Di Derre.

His inspiration for Harry Hole was “the police officer in the village where my grandmother lived. She would tell us kids that if we weren’t home by eight, Hole would come get us!” and he says he derived the ideas for the crimes in The Leopard from “my own fears and nightmares.”

Jo has a daughter Selma, 11, and is currently working on his ninth Harry Hole novel.

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In 30 words or less, tell us what is great about a book you are reading at the moment. Post your review below, email [email protected], or write to The Great Read, GPO Box 4148, Sydney, NSW 2001.

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Please ensure you leave an email address you can be contacted on in order to be eligible for the prize.

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Separate Beds

Separate Beds

Separate Beds by Elizabeth Buchan, Penguin UK, $24.95

British author Elizabeth Buchan writes chick-lit for the middle-aged woman which may sound a little grumpy-old-womanish but is actually surprisingly thought-provoking and hugely enjoyable.

Separate Beds centres on Annie Nicholson, a 49-year-old health service manager, who hasn’t slept in the same bed as her media exec hubby Tom for five years. Added to this the couple appears to have been abandoned by their eldest daughter, their son is facing the loss of his furniture business, wife and child and their younger daughter is living in the attic trying to be a novelist. So when Tom loses his high-powered job, the new stress threatens to push this family further apart.

What sets Buchan apart in this crowded genre is her perceptive and intelligent observations, smart plotting and likeable characterisation.

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The Golden Prince

The Golden Prince

The Golden Prince by Rebecca Dean, HarperCollins, $32.99

Buttercup blond, blue-eyed 16-year-old Edward VIII – heir to the British throne and love-thwarted subject of novel, The Golden Prince – bears an uncanny physical resemblance to another young prince and heir to the British throne, about to wed in London this Easter. But this is where the similarity ends. Edward, of course, went on to marry a divorcee and abdicate for love.

But Rebecca Dean’s gentle, slightly far-fetched part-fact part-fiction tale precedes that, recounting a royal love affair which could have changed the course of history. The lonely teen naval cadet, eldest of four brothers, son of disciplinarian King George V and distant Queen Mary, falls in love with a commoner and for this prince there’s no happy ending. A country road collision brings “David” – as the Prince is known at Dartmouth naval college – face to face with Rose Houghton, the eldest of four sisters who reside at Snowberry, a gentrified, yet blue blood-less family seat. David is bewitched with the “spiffing family life” and especially with youngest sister, loveable Lily.

Dean deftly weaves social and political detail into her historical fantasy – Rose’s suffragette leanings, Marigold’s flirtation with an emerging Hollywood – as well as commentary on the stifling royal rulebook. Perfect to wile away the hours while waiting for Wills and Kate to appear on Buck House balcony, for their post-wedding kiss.

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Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll

Some of the world’s greatest books were written for children and Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland takes, for me, pride of place in that pantheon. Carroll’s surreal fictional world maybe full of games and riddles and bizarre characters but it is Alice herself with whom we engage – the knowing innocent, adrift in an illogical world over which she has no power (until she destroys it, of course).

Without this book opening up the possibilities of fiction to me, I would never have become a writer.

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