I floated out a query
about chapter books for boys on Twitter and received a wonderful response (thank you people of Twitter)!
Not exact matches
We talked
about the
book, I sent him a
chapter, and he wrote a wonderful testimonial.
No, this
book won't offer you many chuckles, but it might help readers break through our culture's unhelpful silence around our inevitable end and think through how to go
about the final
chapter of life with some dignity.
They liked the idea of checklists at the end of the
chapter, but couldn't we tell them what they should do
about what they just read, and why did the
book need to be so wordy?
I had a lot riding on this event because I was
about to finish my
book about Apple and I badly needed the scene for the last
chapter of my
book.
For example, there's a scene in the
book's fifth
chapter in which Lyons discusses an article Shah has written on LinkedIn
about the wisdom of bringing a teddy bear named Molly to meetings as a stand - in for the customer, so that staff will always remember to keep the customer top - of - mind.
into something manageable (one
chapter) I am able to read
about 50
books each year.
In your
book, you dedicated an entire
chapter to the importance of surrounding yourself with the right support team and staff — say more
about how this impacts relationship marketing...
I'm in the process of writing a
book and I'm currently on the
chapter about Warren Buffett.
While I'm not quite half way through this brilliant
book, I recently did finish an insightful
chapter about the customer journey and particularly how experience happens for potential customers in the marketplace vs. how it could be better architected.
For me
about half the
book felt fairly useless since I didn't intend to go into real estate (and he focuses on that heavily, not just on the one
chapter but throughout the whole
book), and I also am turned off by stories that are purported to be true but you're not sure if they are (ie, as mentioned the whole «rich dad» scenario).
In a post last year titled «The Buffett Series - Thinking
About Bonds» I recommended reading the
chapter «The Last Hurrah for Bonds» in the excellent
book, «The Davis Dynasty».
The (main) reason is that we don't have something like that in Germany: / Sorry, can't give you much more information on that topic but this
book (which I highly recommend) has one
chapter about it.
Harper's final
chapter For several years Stephen Harper has been working on a
book about hockey.
A
chapter in Andy Kilpatrick's
book, «Of Permanent Value: The Story of Warren Buffett» is written
about Francois» career.
What makes the
book authentic is the
chapter about «pitfalls» and some case studies where they made mistakes.
The
book consists of ten
chapters of
about twelve pages each, and although its argument is at times subtle, allusive, and demanding of full and total concentration, it also marches briskly along.
I ran headlong into an example process of rationalization while doing research on a
book chapter about the Wycliffe Bible Translators.
Today's excerpts come from «God Things» — one of the most talked -
about chapters in the
book.
For many atheists (and I'm not saying agnostics, because I know there is a
chapter in the
book about agnostics) committing to steps that are dependent on something you believe doesn't exist is nearly impossible.
But I rejected the Hebrew god when I was eleven and read
about the atrocity described in The
Book of Numbers,
Chapter 31.
The final three
chapters of the
book dealt with the Holy Spirit in the
book of Revelation (chap 6), what Revelation reveals
about the New Jerusalem (chap 7), and how we can read, teach, and understand the
book of Revelation today (chap 7).
Enough has been said
about sin earlier in the
book, particularly in
chapter three, that I trust no reader will think I regard it as incidental.
«full of BS organized religion is» the
book of 1st Timothy
Chapter one tells us
about how Satan was trying to inflitrate the church through devil following people, and possible believers led astray by the devil.
As he wrote earlier in this
chapter, any use of the test as «a substitute for searching conversation»
about world view / setting and the other dimensions of narrative explored later in the
book was in his view more likely to yield a mechanist reduction than a deepened symbolic understanding.
In
Chapter 12 of William P. Young's The Shack, Jesus talks with the
book's protagonist, Mackenzie,
about the inadequacy of institutions in bringing people closer to God.
I've never heard of N.T. Wright and maybe he's a quality guy, but it's so typical of scholars to write
books containing hundreds or even thousands of pages
about a topic the God covered in five to ten
chapters.
When I was writing my
book about The Unforgivable Sin, I originally intended to include
chapters on Hebrews 6, 1 John 5:16 - 17, and other similar passages that cause trouble in the minds of many.
When he was presented with fiftyeight peer - reviewed publications, nine
books, and several immunology textbook
chapters about the evolution of the immune system, he simply insisted that this was still not sufficient evidence of evolution, and that it was not «good enough.»
After a few opening biographical
chapters about the birth and early life of Chesterton, the rest of the
book is devoted to summarizing his written works and the events surrounding their publication.
There is a lot more
about this
book on his website, where you can download a free sample
chapter, and preorder the
book for only $ 10 (if you order by Sunday, August 19).
One of the things that makes the
book the most interesting, is that Wallace begins each
chapter explaining some of the tools and approaches he used as a homicide detective, and then he goes on in the rest of the
chapter to show how he used this tool or approach to investigate the claims of the Gospels
about Jesus Christ.
There are whole
chapters of John's Gospel that I would like to snip right out of the
book so that no child ever has to read what John said Jesus said
about Jews.
You must have skipped over the
chapters about the Crusades in your history
book, smart guy.
P.S. I wrote an entire
chapter in my latest
book about the evangelical hero complex and our complicated relationship with our mutual callings and vocations and regular work, if you'd like to read more
about this very thing.
This
book features theological questions
about death, each
chapter beginning with a practical case.
I love that if I have a question
about a
chapter in his
book, I can go to his blog, and ask him.
In the first
chapter of my
book Through the Moral Maze, * I talk
about the most significant of those periods of great intellectual change in human history, the so - called «Axial Period»
about 2,5 OO years ago, also sometimes called the period of «The Great Awakening.»
He is a very important figure in the Bible, and you can read
about him in the opening
chapters of the
book of Ezra.
-- What did the
book of Daniel say to all its readers throughout the centuries if all these
chapters are
about an already determined future far, faraway?
Whenever I talk
about this
chapter of my
book, Finding Spiritual Whitespace, everyone gets very quiet.
To enter, all you need to do is leave a comment below this blog post with your favorite quote or
chapter from the
book, or just a general comment
about why you want in on the giveaway, by Monday April 18th at 9 a.m. EST..
After all, I wrote a whole
chapter in my
book about reclaiming lament as a response to those very things.
It includes questions for discussion and ideas for action corresponding with each
chapter as well as a list resources for those wishing to learn more
about the topics addressed in the
book, (perhaps from people who don't conduct their research from the rooftops of their homes).
The second half of the
book of Ephesians,
chapters 4 - 6, is all
about our responsibilities with these riches.
So is Christianity really following Jesus or the writers of these gospels... oh and the Hebrew
chapters has not clue who and when was it written... my suggestion is to spend sometime to know what you believe and what you want to believe... also if you really like to know
about what real Jesus was, please read Quran... more eighty times the name of Jesus is mentioned in this
book... where there is a
chapter with Jesus» mother name «Mary»
chapter 19, there is another
chapter name «ale imran'the grand father of Jesus,
chapter 3... and then compare what Jesus really was dear brother in mankind...
The bibliography at the end of each
chapter will direct the reader into deeper study, though even here, there are glaring omissions from the lists of
books about the various topics.
However, with one exception (the feminist Mud Flower Collective's God's Fierce Whimsy, discussed in
Chapter 4),
book - length essays
about the nature and purpose of theological education written from any of their perspectives have not yet been published.
When he is given fifty - eight peer - reviewed publications, nine
books, and several immunology textbook
chapters about the evolution of the immune system, he simply «not good enough».
I also really appreciated the final
chapters of the
book where he wrote
about practical applications for living in light of a nonviolent God.