Not exact matches
«I might lose whatever credibility I have with
readers if I
suggested flat out that a book centered around the subject of oil, written by an economist, was a
page - turner, but I am willing to say with conviction that Why Your World Is About To Get A Whole Lot Smaller, by former CIBC Chief Economist Jeff Rubin, is a fantastically compelling read.
The front
page sparked anger online, with many critics
suggesting it was attempting to titillate its
readers with the image of a woman who had recently been killed.
Young
readers will do just what Carle
suggests, immediately warming to the absurdity on each
page of The Nonsense Show.
When you make a picture book, you use words, images, and the book's form — the book's shape and heft and physical quality — to
suggest the
reader's path of movement through the story: right to left, up and down, in and out,
page to
page.»
If I had thought ahead, we would have
suggested readers check the recommendations
pages on our website for updates.
Elsewhere, works such as Miranda Maher's 100 Coordinates of Violence confound typical literary expectations for a book, reprinting an identical image with a different series of numbers on each
page, coordinates of latitude and longitude that signal documented acts of violence across the globe: Here, the work
suggests, the true book is out there in the world, for the
reader to go and discover.
Each time a news blog or social media Web
page adds a link to its site directing its
readers to a news story, it
suggests that the author of the blog places at least some importance on the content of that article.
I
suggest that
readers have a critical look at the Callous Wind Facebook
page.
A
reader on my facebook
page had
suggested that I add a little parking lot for them in my side yard, and I loved that idea.