I recently discovered that Amazon has revoked the rule about
authors reviewing in their own genre.
Thus
the authors review in detail the educational experiences and points of view of the last President Bush and President Obama, and they would argue that neither No Child Left Behind nor Race to the Top were written in the cards: the programs were specifically shaped by presidents whose own educational experiences demonstrated to them the need for effort and judgment.
Not exact matches
Then, a few weeks ago,
author and academic Sherry Turkle penned a New York Times Sunday
Review piece highlighting research along the same lines, including one study that showed simply having your phone out and
in view can impede the process of making deep personal connections.
It was there that
author F. Scott Fitzgerald spent some time with his friend Rumsey, learning about «the lifestyle of the moneyed aristocracy of Old Westport, Long Island, and their involvement
in the movement of eugenics,» according to a 2015 article
in the F. Scott Fitzgerald
Review.
According to Goodman, your book should have three things upon launch: social proof, i.e., a number of Amazon
reviews; an «intangible,» e.g., a quote from a renowned expert
in the field, say a New York Times bestselling
author; and lastly a good book (which may seem obvious, but...).
Subsequently, another peer -
reviewed article argued that the findings reported
in this post (and affiliated article) were biased and that the
authors» data do not provide evidence of non-citizen voting
in U.S. elections.»
Here's how one of the study
authors explained the study procedure
in The Harvard Business
Review:
He is an internationally renowned expert
in the field of acute care and especially acute kidney injury, and is the
author of over 100 peer -
reviewed publications.
Explaining their findings
in Harvard Business
Review, the study's
authors, Harvard's Robert Huckman and Bradley Staats of the University of North Carolina, pointed to the time it takes new team members to learn how to communicate with one another and determine who is the best authority
in different areas.
He also
authored many published legal articles including New Developments
in Oklahoma Business Entity Law, Summer 2003 edition of the Oklahoma Law
Review and Application of Securities Laws to Limited Liability Companies,
in the Consumer Finance Law Quarterly Report Vol.
Any opinions, analyses,
reviews or recommendations expressed
in this article are those of the
author's alone and have not been
reviewed, approved, or otherwise endorsed by Discover.
In «Promoting Innovation and Efficiency by Streamlining Competition Reviews,» authors Brian Facey and Joshua Krane argue that merger review should support and encourage mergers that generate innovation and economic efficiencies in Canad
In «Promoting Innovation and Efficiency by Streamlining Competition
Reviews,»
authors Brian Facey and Joshua Krane argue that merger
review should support and encourage mergers that generate innovation and economic efficiencies
in Canad
in Canada.
Ms. Bloxham is also the
author of the Governance chapter
in The Investor Relations Guide (published by Kennedy publications) and the Board chapter
in Business Valuation Resource's Guide to Healthcare Valuation and the
author / co-
author of over 100 articles published by, among others Corporate Board Member, Directors Monthly, Directorship Magazine, International Finance and Treasury, Bank Accounting and Finance, American Banker, National Underwriter, Valuation Issues, Shareholder Value Magazine, CFO Magazine, Corporate Finance
Review, the Wharton Leadership Digest, the Journal of Strategic Performance Measurement, Executive Talent, and the Journal of Cost Management.
Any opinions, analyses,
reviews or recommendations expressed
in this article are those of the
author's alone and have not been
reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by the companies included
in the article.
An accomplished
author as well, Mr. McCourt's academic articles have been published
in the Alberta Law
Review, Saskatchewan Law
Review, Manitoba Law Journal, Canadian Family Law Quarterly, Legal Medical Quarterly, and The Barrister.
Tip:
Author HReview is a perfect example of a plugin you can use to boost your visibility
in SERPs, by displaying rich snippets for your articles,
reviews, etc..
Editorial Note: Any opinions, analyses,
reviews or recommendations expressed
in this article are those of the
author's alone, and have not been
reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any card issuer.
Before the giveaway, Colorado literary agent Rachelle Gardner warned
in a blog that if Christian
authors fail to mention their books» faith - based content, they are
in danger of receiving nasty
reviews.
James Fitzpatrick is the
author of several books and his columns have appeared
in First Things, National
Review, the New Oxford
Review, and Intercollegiate
Review.
The
author of the
review thinks this book sinks under its own weight, for its
author makes no secret of his loathing of the whole homosexual community, quoting every passage
in the bible that can even remotely be translated against them, often twisting passages to say what they do not mean.
Richard Hausknecht, the
author of the article
in the New England Journal of Medicine, acknowledged that the «abortion cocktail» was indeed an experiment when he stated
in his report that «the protocol [of the experiment] was approved by the investigative
review board of the Mount Sinai Medical Center.»
Two months after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, Turkish
author Orhan Pamuk published an essay
in the New York
Review of Books (titled «The Anger of the Damned»)
in which Pamuk, who is often mentioned as a contender for the Nobel Prize, tried to explain the violent resentment that Muslim societies feel towards the West.
Religion Can Make You Poor
In her
review of Lisa A. Keister's Faith and Money: How Religion Contributes to Wealth and Poverty (February), Naomi Schaefer Riley takes the
author to task for the superficiality of her analysis of her study's findings regarding religion's effect on socioeconomic status.
Susan Walker,
in her Toronto Star
review, opined that the
author of the Fourth Gospel «was no screenwriter nor much of a storyteller, for that matter.»
First, a study published
in 2016 showed that during «2013 and 2014, only 4 of 69,406
authors of peer -
reviewed articles on global warming, 0.0058 percent or 1
in 17,352, rejected» anthropogenic global warming.
Even the account of judicial
review (sort of)
in FEDERALIST 78 appears to be mainly a response to the Anti-Federalist
author Brutus.
So a Christian who was a fan of this book (and the
author) commented that this was the stupidest
review they had ever read... Another Christian weighed
in and said that the commenter was stupid as well for just using cut - and - paste attacks upon people who write critical
reviews.
Authors Blankenthorn and his divisive and jabbing rhetoric on homosexual marriage and Fox - Genovese for her testy rebuff of feminism are severely criticized for their opinions
in this
review of their books.
Catholic
authors were
reviewed and discussed
in the general press.
If / when an
author in the group becomes published, he / she promises to help other members
in the group also get published, and
in return, they promise to write about and
review the
author's book so they can sell more copies.
Renewing the Left: Politics, Imagination, and the New York Intellectuals By Harvey Teres Oxford University Press, 326 pages, $ 30 The
author teaches English at Syracuse University and here
reviews in great detail the controversies on the literary left from Partisan
Review through Norman Podhoretz's Commentary.
And yet, when the gifted musician /
author Jeremy Begbie
reviewed art historian Dan Siedell's book God
in the Gallery
in the current issue of Image, Begbie appeared - ever so subtly - to take issue that Dan Siedell,
in a book about art, limited himself to «one particular current within the Nicene river, the Eastern Orthodox tradition... and the council of Niceae (787 CE), the conference which established the orthodoxy of icons.»
Finally, imagine that
in a
review of «Christ
in the Concert Hall,» a gifted musician /
author came along and pointed out that the
author focused on «only one current» within the diverse river of Christianity.
1) Here's a 2009
review of a biography of Helen Gurley Brown,
author of Sex and the Single Girl, the landmark 1962 book — both for the Sexual Revolution and 60s feminism — and editor -
in - chief of....
John T. McGreevy of Notre Dame,
author of Catholicism and American Freedom (
reviewed in «Catholics, Protestants, and the Meanings of Freedom,» The Public Square, August / September 2003), visits that question
in «Shifting Allegiances: Catholics, Democrats & the GOP.»
1) Here's a 2009
review of a biography of Helen Gurley Brown,
author of Sex and the Single Girl, the landmark 1962 book — both for the Sexual Revolution and 60s feminism — and editor -
in - chief of Cosmopolitan magazine.
Burge, like the other
authors reviewed here, recounts the atrocity carried out by Jewish terrorists at the Arab village of DeirYassin just prior to the declaration of the Israeli state
in 1948.
In what is essentially a complimentary
review of William Martin's book, A Prophet With Honor: The Billy Graham Story, Wacker credits the
author with showing a balanced view of Graham, and summarizes Graham's appeal from political, social, cultural, as well as homiletical, ecclesiastical and theological perspectives.
As I showed
in my
review, no appeal to consensus can achieve the aim that Collins and Walls have
in mind, because there was broad consensus for at least a thousand years about the existence of an apostolic succession
in the episcopate — a doctrine that the
authors consider themselves free to reject.
In reviewing different metaphors and images of the atonement in the New Testament and the works of Brunner, Aulen, Luther and others, the author posits that the best approach is through an understanding of God's reconciling love as seen in Christ and as experienced in disclosure, suffering, communication and communit
In reviewing different metaphors and images of the atonement
in the New Testament and the works of Brunner, Aulen, Luther and others, the author posits that the best approach is through an understanding of God's reconciling love as seen in Christ and as experienced in disclosure, suffering, communication and communit
in the New Testament and the works of Brunner, Aulen, Luther and others, the
author posits that the best approach is through an understanding of God's reconciling love as seen
in Christ and as experienced in disclosure, suffering, communication and communit
in Christ and as experienced
in disclosure, suffering, communication and communit
in disclosure, suffering, communication and community.
In that journal in October, Stephen Barr (author of Modern Physics and Ancient Faith, reviewed in «Cutting Edge» in November / December 2003) wrote an article entitled «The Design of Evolution.&raqu
In that journal
in October, Stephen Barr (author of Modern Physics and Ancient Faith, reviewed in «Cutting Edge» in November / December 2003) wrote an article entitled «The Design of Evolution.&raqu
in October, Stephen Barr (
author of Modern Physics and Ancient Faith,
reviewed in «Cutting Edge» in November / December 2003) wrote an article entitled «The Design of Evolution.&raqu
in «Cutting Edge»
in November / December 2003) wrote an article entitled «The Design of Evolution.&raqu
in November / December 2003) wrote an article entitled «The Design of Evolution.»
I had read much of Borges's work, including many relatively unknown essays and
reviews, as I prepared to write a dissertation on his «Libros y autores extranjeros» («Foreign Books and
Authors»), a biweekly column he published from 1936 - 39
in the Buenos Aires magazine El Hogar.
The
author reviews a book on Darwin by John Haught, who seeks not simply to provide a theology
in dialogue with evolutionary theory, but a theology of evolution.
In order to understand it, we must lay some groundwork by
reviewing what the
author of the book of Hebrews has said up to this point.
With the war
in Iraq it seems appropriate to take a hard look at historical and political realities about U.S. response to atrocities, raised by the two books the
author reviews..
They begin impressionistically with some symptoms of popular change: the growing acceptability among Catholics of the iconic Baptist evangelist Billy Graham, the adoption by Catholics of the Alpha courses initiated at Holy Trinity Brompton, the inclusion of hymns by Protestant
authors in Catholic hymnals, the welcome afforded by many evangelicals to the witness and writings of Pope John Paul II, a favorable
review by the star evangelical intellectual J.I. Packer of a book titled The Born - Again Catholic (1983), and so on.
Seitz,
in his
review of The Book of J by Harold Bloom and David Rosenberg, takes both
authors to task for essentially dismissing over 100 years of scholarship
in order to present their thesis that the
author of the J portions of the Pentateuch was both a woman and a secularist.
Particularly unforgivable to their critics (and often mentioned
in the damning
reviews) was the
authors» strong support of the Reagan administration.
These grand claims and promises are, alas, not met and thus are clearly overstated given that the
authors find such meager evidence of health benefits of religion
in the more than 1,200 studies and 400 research
reviews they examine.
He understood, said the
Review, that the evil of racism was not unique: «It is, as the
author points out, the same problem of prejudice which
in varying degrees affects all groups of whatever color, race or religion.