Not exact matches
Malcolm Gladwell's Outliers, the
book that popularized the idea that mastery in a given field takes
at least 10,000 hours of practice, had just
come out, as had Geoff Colvin's Talent is Overrated and Daniel Coyle's The Talent Code, both of which emphasized the role of dedicated practice (and discounted natural - born talent) in excellence.
Finally we
come to the
least valued US large bank, Citigroup (NYSE: C), which currently trades
at 0.80 x
book on a beta of 1.6.
im glad no - one believes in demons - the devil or god — and they try to rationalise everything — and discredit the bible — just shows me where we are
at in the holy
book — see if i remember, the end times
come when «scorners and scoffers abound» when — wrong is called right and right is called wrong — and people would be married and given in marriage as in the daysd of noah --- sodom and gammorah had gay issues badly - im just gonna laugh and alaugh and laugh when ya «ll burn - do me a favor —
at least read the bible once — see what it says before you — go against it.
At least religions have
books about their Gods and morality that have been claimed for thousands of years to have
come from their Gods.
One thing I found really interesting is that one conclusion the
book came to is that these «faith wars» had a direct impact on the fall of the Roman Empire because the gov» t had to deal with the internal struggle and the external enemies had to take a back seat in importance or
at least drastically distracted the leadership.
In this
book, the long process of how our scriptures
came to being is unveiled, and
at the very
least, certainly challenges the credibility of this man's interpretation.
Nevertheless, when it
comes to the water baptism, you know, the outward sign of the internal stuff, I believe there is another answer to the question why Jesus» disciples never immersed «in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit «(as in Mt 28:19),
at least is not recorded in the Acts, but «in the name of the Lord Jesus «(as in whole
book of Acts, starting from 2:38).
Lem me see here, according to your holy
book your God personally ordered more infant killings than all American abortion doctors combined, ordered the annihilation of half a dozen civilizations, routinely taunted and tortured humanity, introduced evil into the world then blamed the things he created for it (even though he's supposed to be omniscient and omnipotent), then abandoned humanity for
at least a couple thousand years while making plans to
come back and slaughter 2/3 of Earth's inhabitants so that he can judge them and throw most of them into a torturous hell for all of eternity... for not being able to overcome the nature your
book says he gave them... Just so he can have non-free will - having cloud gnomes sing his praises for eternity.
Exactly, If they are really Christians or have
at least read the last few
books of the Bible they defiantly would have read or
come across that no one will know when the world is going to end only God knows this («But the day of the Lord will
come like a thief.
Hidden allusions are never easy to be sure of and particularly is this the case with an ancient text, but one can
at least see the reasons why Martin - Achard
comes to the conclusion that these verses from the
book of Hosea not only apply the idiom of resurrection to Israel's hope for the future, but also show where it
came from.
I find many of the times, the objection or concern many have for what tongues are
comes from a misunderstanding of the purpose behind ONE of the diversities of tongues — there are
at least four different kinds (diversities) of tongues mentioned in the Bible, (I've had readers of my
book disagree with me and insist there's even more).
Careful reading of
Book Z of the Metaphysics, to be sure, makes clear that there are
at least two conceptions of substantial form in Aristotle's philosophy: one more Platonic in character whereby the form possesses its own substantial unity and communicates that unity to the material elements (stoicheia) from the outside, so to speak; the other apparently originating with Aristotle himself according to which the substantial form
comes into being as it unifies the elements into an organic whole (cf. TKT 67 - 120).
No other document
comes close to being written over 1500 years by
at least 40 authors all claiming to have interacted with a being ergo God, and the result is ONE
BOOK....
As elsewhere in the Islamic world, people in Indonesia believe that during that night God determines human fate for the year to
come, or — according to popular conceptions,
at least among the Sundanese — that God looks into the good and bad deeds of the people, which have been recorded in their
books.
I ask that blog readers buy my
books to help support the blog, and the work I do on it, since advertising does not even
come close to covering the cost of operating a blog (well, my blog
at least).
The history
book paints a nasty picture from a West Brom point of view, however this is a much improved Baggies outfit who
came close to ending their Liverpool voodoo back in September, when going down 1 - 0
at Anfield despite producing a performance worthy of
at least a point.
As a group, we have read
at least 100
books on birth, so we polled all of our doulas and
came up with this list just for you!
My feverent hope is that more people will read this
book and either not feel so alone in their quest to do what is so normal for their children, or will
at least come to understand a little better why those of us who nurse long - term do so.
Remember, all the recipes in this
book come from home cooks, so there's no reason you shouldn't be able to
at least attempt these recipes.
Some of the most enjoyable parts in this
book — for me,
at least —
come when McAuliffe takes a break from the bugs and biology to introduce some of the quirky scientists who study parasitic manipulation.
Modern mimic: The first formalized suggestion that we should be relying on meat and modeling ourselves,
at least food-wise, after our cave - dwelling ancestors
came from The Stone Age Diet, a 1975
book by gastroenterologist Walter Voegtlin.
In this
book, Dean Falk explains how the study of those ancient brains — or
at least, the impressions they left in the skulls they occupied — may help to provide an answer to one of the biggest questions: where did we
come from?
So many people have a
book inside them (
at least one) and as a publicist, I help make authors» dreams
come true.
I've invited you on today specifically because you've got a new
book coming out, and anytime one of my friends and fellow biohackers is launching a new
book, it's always cool to talk about it because you've spent a lot of time writing, and doing research about something that hasn't been written about before, or
at least that's what we hope.
As you already know Stella & Dot
came out with their 2013 Spring collection and it looks absolutely stunning, wearable and gorgeous pieces make me so excited to share my inspirations;D Even though it's still winter, cold, snowy and messy out there, most of these pieces are year round (really all of them,
at least in my
book of rules!)
They
come with all those
books, magazines and iPods in order to save themselves from this cold and lonely world
at least for some time.
The film's title
comes from the name of a self - help
book written by Teddy Raymond (Tom Berenger), a semi-anonymous guru whose work has managed to sweep the nation (or
at least greater Los Angeles; the movie makes it hard to differentiate between the two) despite his lack of participation in the publicity machine.
At least our good guys are being put to use, as Season 2 swiftly sets up its structure for the coming weeks: Setrakian is keen to find a book that might help defeat the strigoi; Gus is on board with Mr. Quinlan's turf war against the evil undead; and Fet (Kevin Durand, as charming as ever) plans to track the critters through the city, one block at a tim
At least our good guys are being put to use, as Season 2 swiftly sets up its structure for the
coming weeks: Setrakian is keen to find a
book that might help defeat the strigoi; Gus is on board with Mr. Quinlan's turf war against the evil undead; and Fet (Kevin Durand, as charming as ever) plans to track the critters through the city, one block
at a tim
at a time.
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
comes with a lot of impressive credentials: it's based on a best - selling novel by John le Carré, it's helmed by the director of a successful Swedish vampire movie, a previous mini-series adaptation of the
book is fondly remembered (
at least by people of a certain generation) and it has one of the best British casts in recent memory.
At least once a month, invite a parent volunteer to
come in and videotape each student reading aloud from a favorite
book.
Okay, realize that if you have an internal business publication deadline, don't announce the exact date because it takes days for a
book to
come live on Kindle and PubIt and Kobo and iBooks, a month of time
at least for any POD with proofing, and such.
Yeah, there are a lot of problems with this... not the
least of which is that a one shot pull doesn't show the «range of rankings» for a
book on a given day, or that sales
at rank x are different in March then they are in December, or that a
book won't stay
at the same rank for a year, which is where the train
comes off the rails.
If there are already a number of
books on that topic, you may wish to write about something new or
at least come at the topic from a brand new angle.
So it should
come as no surprise that
at least one enterprising blogger has put his own twist on the topic: Dave Holmes (My Year of Everything) plans to read one my - year - of
book every week, and then write a
book about his experience.
My journey with this series was one I enjoyed very much and I hoped would last forever, but alas, all good things have to
come to an end... but
at least Becca Fitzpatrick knew how to make a lasting impression with her fourth and final
book.
And, of course there's plenty of tripe that
comes from NY publishers, but
at least the
books that make it through meet some sort of minimum standard.
FBReader and Moon +,
at least in Android flavors, even
come with a way to search for free
books and bring them directly into the e-reading software.
Unless something triggers an unexpected spike in my sales, I don't expect to see any additional profit from this
book coming in for
at least another year or two.
At least, as an independent
book publicist, I have found that it would be in your best interest to learn that there are
book promotion opportunities after the advance
book publicity campaign has
come to a hard stop.
The battle to persuade consumers to
come into bookshops and pick up a paperback will continue to rage, but for now the
books world can breathe a sigh of relief that
at least people are still reading.
Does your
book's retail price
at least come close to what the traditional
book publishers are asking for their
books?
(Also, the more speaking you do
at libraries, the better your bookstore sales will be, because
at least some of the patrons who
come hear about your
book at your library talk will then go out and purchase the
book at their local bookstore.
If all the
books in a series are borrowed and read, the author probably
comes out ahead or
at least even.
Everybody that
came to the party bought
at least one
book.
Stick with self - publishing for
at least three
books and you will start to see serious money
coming in each month.
At least, when it
comes to
books.
Interesting post, but the cozy mystery genre has been around
at least since Agatha Christie, and historical mysteries have been around for quite a while as well (Ellis Peters» first Cadfael mystery was published in 1977), so I'm not sure it's accurate to say that Ms. Locke helped «grow the historical mystery genre into what has now
come to be known as «cozy mysteries» in the
book industry.»
At least I got answers and know the
books are
coming back to me.
Kait — thanks for the quick reply — I just did a search on bn.com for «smashwords» and
came up with this list... http://productsearch.barnesandnoble.com/search/results.aspx?WRD=smashwords&page=index&prod=univ&choice=allproducts&query=smashwords&flag=False&ugrp=1 You're right —
at least one of the items is actually a hardback
book that
came up in the search.
But the comics industry seems convinced (or
at least quite hopeful) that the
coming digital comic revolution, in which devices such as the iPad eliminate the need for reading printed media, will end up driving readers into comic -
book stores in search for the good stuff — on paper.