Sentences with phrase «old reader lives»

Read next: The Old Reader lives: Site will stay open to the public thanks to an unnamed «corporate entity» in the US

Not exact matches

In determining its top such spots, International Living advised readers to keep in mind how close a new location is to their old home, whether it is relatively easy to get long - term visas for residency there, offers a low cost of living and is home to a preexisting population of foreigners likLiving advised readers to keep in mind how close a new location is to their old home, whether it is relatively easy to get long - term visas for residency there, offers a low cost of living and is home to a preexisting population of foreigners likliving and is home to a preexisting population of foreigners like you.
Paul wants his readers to put off that old way of conduct, and live their new life in the Spirit with the new man which was created by God for righteousness and holiness (Ephesians 4:22 - 24).
No question about it, the listening is demanding, not only because of the writer's rhetorical style but also because of the assumption that the reader knows the Old Testament and the wilderness life of Israel, a life centered in the tabernacle and the daily ministrations of the priest.
At the risk of sounding «flaky» and «corny» and although process thinkers and readers once they have finished this book will understand, I need to mention three very special creatures in my life: Buksi, my eighteen year old cat who died Easter Sunday, 1987; Csibi, my two year old cat; his mother, Whiskers, now four.
Five times in this letter, the author warns his readers what could happen to them if they reject Christianity and return to their old way of living as Jews.
Regrettably, repeated references to liberation from «the system» of nationalism, consumerism, imperialism, etc. lack the specificity and subtlety that might enable readers to know what biblical faithfulness means in their lives, if they do not happen to be Old Testament scholars publishing books.
Often, therefore, when Matthew narrates an important event in the life of Jesus, he calls the reader's attention to a prophecy in the Old Testament of which this event is the fulfillment.
Updike presents the reader of his novels and stories with the pseudo — wise men of today's society — with Jimmy, the big Mouseketeer who quotes Socrates; with the neon owl that advertises pretzels; with Ken Whitman, the scientist living in Tarbox who is considered intelligent in his field but who lacks a basic understanding of life; with Bech the writer, honored in direct proportion to the decline of his literary production; with Connor, the efficient, well - trained administrator of the old people's home who fails to comprehend as much of life's mystery as his simple and sometimes senile wards do.
All this needs to be made clear, for the word «heaven» appears a good deal more in the New Testament than in the Old Testament, and there is a strong tendency for readers to assume that it means there what later Christian orthodoxy meant by the term, namely, an eternal spiritual sphere above this world where the faithful departed live with God.
The letter that triggered hundreds of reader comments - from a 60 year old Englishman who had never cooked a meal in his life.
We have partnered with Not Just Any Old Day... It's Your Special Day in order to give TWO of our readers a chance to win a $ 50 Mini Calendar Charm Expandable Bracelet for the love in your life.
Lauren Casper, author of It's Okay About It: Lessons from a Remarkable Five - Year - Old About Living Life Wide Open, shares what she hopes readers will take away from her book and advice about adoption.
Note that this level of targeting relies purely on the IP number of the server that requests the page — once you start using the demographic data that the company gathers from Post.com readers, they can geotarget with around 95 % accuracy (solving the old problem of every AOL subscriber appearing to live in Vienna, VA).
His book invites readers, especially those old enough to remember life before the Web, to hold on to downtime, daydreams and stillness.
And while many readers graduate from fashion glossies to other publications as they get older, newspaper readers are often loyal for life.
Guided reading is truly enriching the lives of readers young and old around the globe.
Nah, looks live a very old ebook reader with little advantage over competitors.
Faulks creates believable characters formed by their varied, personal histories, and he gives readers an understanding of the scope and context of their entire lives — from childhood through old age, and in some cases, death.
The title story, «The Lives of Rocks», in which a geologist, living in the forest and weakened by cancer treatments, comes to rely on the help and company of two children from a rigidly fundamentalist family who are happy to help until she teaches them that the earth is millions of years old; and «Fiber» in which a logger muses on his job in the Yaak Valley before turning on the reader with a direct plea to help protect the area - in a few swift words changing the reader from casual observer to participant.
To a superlative degree, Acceptable Loss provides colorful characters, a memorable portrait of waterfront life, and a story that achieves its most thrilling moments in a transfixed London courtroom, where Monk faces his old friend Oliver Rathbone in a trial of nearly unbearable tension - in sum, every delectable drop of the rich pleasure that readers expect from an Anne Perry novel.
If a reader wanted to peruse an old issue and read about life on the battlefields of the Napoleonic Wars or the... [Read more...]
If a reader wanted to peruse an old issue and read about life on the battlefields of the Napoleonic Wars or the first Wimbledon, suffice to say it would be very hard to locate the original printed version.
He also treats the reader to some marvelous descriptive prose: «She fires up the bus, which rumbles to life with the enthusiasm of an old man passing gas.
Life and love are both battlefields in Wallner's anguished debut of wartime suspense, translated from German, which quickly embroils the reader in the tragic double - life of 22 - year - old Corporal RLife and love are both battlefields in Wallner's anguished debut of wartime suspense, translated from German, which quickly embroils the reader in the tragic double - life of 22 - year - old Corporal Rlife of 22 - year - old Corporal Roth.
Its the story that he tells, many times brutal and harsh, but the reader is aware that these old timers lives harsh and short lives.
Little girls are getting raped and murdered and yet, somehow, in the middle of all this, Abe is able to not only make the reader care about the mundane life of an 11 - year - old, but manages to create scenes that I think are actually funny.
Let Me Be Frank with You By Richard Ford Ecco • $ 14.99 • ISBN 9780061692079 Almost 30 years after Frank Bascombe was first introduced to American readers (in The Sportwriter), Ford's celebrated character makes a wistful and poignant reappearance as a 68 - year - old retiree contemplating life in New Jersey in the devastating aftermath of Hurricane Sandy.
Stories like, «I Was a Three - Year - Old Arsonist» and «If You Need an Arm Condom, It Might Be Time to Reevaluate Some of Your Life Choices» leave the reader holding his sides over the misfortune that Lawson has suffered in the name of making our lives better by comparison.
I create comic books and am confident of the quality of the content (when 11 year old readers I've never met in my life endorse it, it's got to be true...), but reading your article makes me rethink of the title.
That dedicated eReader has some advantages in price point, ease of reading in some light conditions, and battery life is no news to librarians, who have helped many an older reader learn to use devices given to them by their children or grandchildren.
But as they grow older, details about their true purpose, who really owns their bodies and the outside world begin to creep in, drastically altering the reader's perception of their seemingly idyllic lives.
Written in what the author describes as «a shadow tongue» — a version of Old English updated so as to be understandable to the modern reader — The Wake renders the inner life of an Anglo - Saxon man with an accuracy and immediacy rare in historical fiction.
In the year ending in January 2012, the American Association of Publishers reported that e-book sales had risen more than 49.4 % in the adult books category, 475.1 % in the children's and young adult category, and 150.7 % in the religious publications category.5 We at the Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project reported that ownership of e-book readers among adults age 18 and older had nearly doubled from 10 % of the population to 19 % over the holiday gift - giving season at the end of 2011, and ownership of tablet computers had surged a similar amount.6 In the final week of 2011 the e-book version of 42 of the top - selling 50 books on USA Today's best - seller book list was outselling the paper version of the same book.7
With «incantatory prose» that «sweeps over the reader like a dream,» (Philadelphia Inquirer), Hoffman follows her celebrated bestseller The Probable Future, with an evocative work that traces the lives of the various occupants of an old Massachusetts house over a span of two hundred years.
2017 Semi-finalist in the Kindle Book Awards * Nominated for Reader's Choice Award 2017 * Top Finalist in the KCT International Literary Award For eighteen - year - old Lacey, life at home is a rollercoaster.
The novel's focus is decidedly internal rather than external, and the reader lives inside twelve year old heads for the duration.
The final plot revelations can not help but direct the reader back to Old Filth points But you don't need to be familiar with both to be moved by Betty's life, by the decisions she makes, and the honorable way she conducts herself, even at the expense of her own happiness.
It will tell a new story from the familiar setting, but hopefully the readers will still get some hints at how the lives of the old favourites are going.
Peck transports readers first to rural Illinois in 1893, where 13 - year - old Rosie lives on a farm, then on to Chicago, after Rosie and her siblings have been invited by their aunt to the World's Columbian Exposition.
Old features: battery life still lasts for 7,500 page turns and the Reader also displays PDF, RTF, TXT and JPEG formats like before.
The self - publishing revolution has made it possible for authors to bring their moribund out - of - print titles back to life by repackaging and in some cases revising the contents for major sales to old fans and new readers.
The latest piece of evidence is the story of independent author Amanda Hocking, a 26 - year - old who lives in Minnesota and writes fantasy - themed fiction for younger readers.
He and other industry professionals of the old publishing paradigm are still holding onto that gate with both hands (and white knuckles)-- but readers like mine (who, granted, aren't into LIT - tra - chure, but just want to escape into a good read that gets them to think and maybe even changes their outlook on life) aren't particularly flooding to read the books that were deemed acceptable reading material by the old - fashioned gatekeepers who tend to be looking for this year's bestseller to put out in multiple re-iterations in 2 - 3 years.
The criticism of old devices was that you'd need an external light source to be able to read in the dark, but this new generation of readers solves that problem, without losing the inherent benefits of an E Ink display in long - lasting battery life, daylight visibility and low levels of eye strain.
A frequent commenter on FMF Old Limey wrote a the following comment on a reader profile of a young engineer PD where he commented how it seemed life is harder for a young engineer today then in was in the 60es.
Saatchi published a number of books, including Be the Worst You Can Be: Life's Too Long for Patience and Virtue (2012), in which he answered questions from readers and journalists, and Beyond Belief; Racist, Sexist, Rude, Crude, and Dishonest (2015), a collection of older advertisements that are now widely seen as offensive.
One astute reader commented then that the holder of the title may have been New Hampshire's Charles Yardley Chittick, whose age had earned him an entry in Wikipedia as the oldest living patent attorney in the United States.
Start Blog Reader Favorites Free Ebooks Products Coaching Store About Contact Forums 30DLBL Day 14 — Reflecting on Your Life by Celes Email to friend This is Day 14 of the old 30DLBL in Sep ’10 (Live a Better Life in 30 Days).
Start Blog Reader Favorites Free Ebooks Products Coaching Store About Contact Forums 30DLBL Day 26 — Create Your Bucket List by Celes Email to friend This is Day 26 of the old 30DLBL in Sep ’10 (Live a Better Life in 30 Days).
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