Sentences with phrase «be interested in your book as»

These are people interested in those books so they should be interested in your book as well, because it's in the same genre.
Question of the Week: Romance authors, are your readers just in it for the «good parts,» or are they interested in the book as a whole?
A lot of them are genre - specific book review sites, because one of the most powerful marketing tricks is to write book reviews (or book «lists») about other books in your genre, so that you're attracting highly targeted traffic who are «pre-screened» and likely to be interested in your book as well.

Not exact matches

In one study, «the number of books «liked» on Facebook profiles was negatively correlated with [psychopathy]-- a finding the authors suggested might indicate that an interest in books contradicts psychopathic tendencies such as thrill seeking, impulsivity, and affect deficiencies,» reports Psychology TodaIn one study, «the number of books «liked» on Facebook profiles was negatively correlated with [psychopathy]-- a finding the authors suggested might indicate that an interest in books contradicts psychopathic tendencies such as thrill seeking, impulsivity, and affect deficiencies,» reports Psychology Todain books contradicts psychopathic tendencies such as thrill seeking, impulsivity, and affect deficiencies,» reports Psychology Today.
One of the things that surprised me about book publishing was how interested I was in the business side of it, and as that interest in the business grew, my interest in the magazine grew.
As the company meets one - on - one with institutional money managers, their tentative commitments to buy given numbers of shares — known as «indications of interest» — are jotted down in the booAs the company meets one - on - one with institutional money managers, their tentative commitments to buy given numbers of shares — known as «indications of interest» — are jotted down in the booas «indications of interest» — are jotted down in the book.
The reason fairness would require that this ratio be equal to one is that, as argued by the Italian economist Luigi Pasinetti in his 1981 book, Structural Change and Economic Growth: A Theoretical Essay on the Dynamics of the Wealth of Nations, a fair interest rate is such that the purchasing power of one hour of labour stays constant through time even when its monetary equivalent is lent or borrowed.
His biography contains elements of an epic novel: growing up the son of a jailed Trotskyist labor leader in whose Chicago home he met Rosa Luxembourg's and Karl Liebknecht's colleagues; serving as a young balance of payments analyst for David Rockefeller whose Chase Manhattan Bank was calculating how much interest the bank could extract on loans to South American countries; touring America on Vatican - sponsored economics lectures; turning after a riot at a UN Third World debt meeting in Mexico to the study of ancient debt cancellation practices through Harvard's Babylonian Archeology department; authoring many books about finance from Super Imperialism: The Economic Strategy of American Empire [1972] to J is For Junk Economics: A Guide to Reality in an Age of Deception [2017]; and lately, among many other ventures, commuting from his Queens home to lecture at Peking University in Beijing where he hopes to convince the Chinese to avoid the debt - fuelled economic model off which Western big bankers feast and apply lessons he and his colleagues have learned about the debt relief practices of the ancient civilizations of Mesopotamia.
Liberal MLA Mary Polak (Langley) was instrumental as a Surrey School Board trustee in banning gay - positive books from Surrey Schools: The book ban was later struck down by the Supreme Court of Canada which said «instead of proceeding on the basis of respect for all types of families, the Board proceeded on an exclusionary philosophy, acting on the concern of certain parents about the morality of same - sex relationships, without considering the interest of same - sex parented families and the children who belong to them in receiving equal recognition and respect in the school system.»
I noted with interest the Guaranteed Income part of the book but with the heavy USA leaning see that for us in the UK only annuities are really available — and as I have dual nationality as a Kiwi we don't even have those back in New Zealand.
Stopovers, as we know them, are changing in less than 3 weeks, so if this is something you are interested in, you need to use your United miles to book a ticket before October 6, 2016.
If you're interested in reading well written books you might as well give it a shot.
The books are published by the Oxford University Press as a direct response to something that has been worrying educationalists for some while - the fact that boys vastly outnumber girls in illiteracy rates, and that many start secondary schools with very poor reading skills and no apparent interest in acquiring any.
Commentaries on Virgil and Virgilian legends» in which Virgil appears as a powerful magician» make up the last half of the book, which will be of great interest to scholars and devotees of the poet.
Our «early traditions about Jesus» (to use the title of a little book by the late Professor Bethune - Baker) are not interested so much in what has been called the «biographical Jesus» as they are concerned with what Jesus did and said as he was remembered by those who believed him to be their Lord, the Risen Messiah, and who were therefore anxious to hand on to others what was remembered about him.
Why should those who are dieing in africa of hiv procreate... because it says so in a book... interesting... i know a few books that say stuff too, should i take them as seriously as you take a book... have you all the books of moses, or just what you found between the covers of the bible?
I'm especially interested in your feedback after this post, as Christian marriage books based on mutual submission can be hard to come by.
As to obligations of a more personal nature I have many people to thank — colleagues who have advised me, students at Union Theological Seminary who have stimulated me with their responsive interest, members of the congregation of The Riverside Church, New York, who, by their attentive listening to mid-week lectures on the subjects handled in this book, have kept alive my confidence that even difficult and recondite problems concerning the Bible are of vital, contemporary importance.
It would be less than the truth, however, if the author's interest in writing the book were represented as merely the desire to explain ideologies.
Their books may not be known to most of the general public interested in questions related to Jesus, the Gospels, or the early Christian church, but they do occupy a noteworthy niche as a (very) small but (often) loud minority voice.
The increased interest in Bible study could well be interpreted as marking an intellectual swing back to the center, but the huge demand for simple books of personal religion suggests an emotional retrenchment somewhere to the right of center.
You don't have enough king James scripture verses in it for any Christian publisher to be interested in putting it out (I've talked to Christian agents about this, and they are as frustrated as the writers at how boxed in to rigid rules Christian books have to be) and that is a sad fact about book publishing today.
i believe it is worded in such a way that believers as well as unbelievers will have their interest piqued to pick up the book and read it in its entirety in order to find out the answers.
Dan Baker, in his interesting and I think helpful book, What Happy People Know, reminds me of the New Testament, as well as Kubler - Ross, when he writes: In the ultimate analysis, human beings have.in his interesting and I think helpful book, What Happy People Know, reminds me of the New Testament, as well as Kubler - Ross, when he writes: In the ultimate analysis, human beings have.In the ultimate analysis, human beings have...
If you are interested in Barth, you might take up Von Balthasar's Theology of Karl Barth, the book that Barth himself regarded as the best exposition of his thought.
The message of this book is that democratic life should be conceived not as an enterprise of autonomous men, no matter how clever they may be in organizing to pursue their interests, but as a way of realizing the Will of Heaven — that is, of doing the truth and serving the right in which man's proper being and destiny consist, This is another manner of signifying the «public philosophy» earlier mentioned.
Two intriguing examples of what is at stake here are the resurgence of interest in the photographs of Edward S. Curtis and the recent (now defunct) lawsuit filed against Andrews, whose books relate her training as a shaman.
In the book, I argue that it makes sense that if there's a God who loves and there's a God who created sex — which is an interesting idea in of itself — that what God has to say about this topic is important, and common sense actually supports the New Testament as it relates to seIn the book, I argue that it makes sense that if there's a God who loves and there's a God who created sex — which is an interesting idea in of itself — that what God has to say about this topic is important, and common sense actually supports the New Testament as it relates to sein of itself — that what God has to say about this topic is important, and common sense actually supports the New Testament as it relates to sex.
Her book is a strong counterargument to Tolstoy's dictum that all happy families are alike, while each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way — as if unhappy families were more interesting than happy ones.
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.
Unfortunately, it is Lowe's 1962 book that most Interested people have read, and his more confident disposition there tends to show up in the secondary» literature now as definitive intellectual history.
Though a good part of the book is necessarily historical, his primary interest is in the recent past and the changing fortunes of Christians as a result of the Arab awakening and political developments that have altered the face of the region in the twentieth century (e.g., the founding of the state of Israel).
There are, as one would expect, several essays in the book on Jews and Judaism, some reflecting Kristol's religious interests» the need, for example, to sustain in Jewish identity a religious element and not merely a cultural one» others his political ones, exploring the relations of modern American Jews with a pluralistic American society that has given them an uncommonly large, though not unlimited, berth.
They include the «chilling effects» of libel suits, the perennial conflicts between property and access, the three out of four publishers who intervene in news decisions affecting their local markets, the advertisers» freedom to move their money to where their interests are, industry self - regulation in broadcasting and advertising, the backlash against conveying under duress (as in a hostage crisis) points of view that are never aired as directly without duress, the flareups of book banning and censorship of textbooks, the rout of the civil rights movement, the retreat from principles of fairness and equality (even where never implemented), the attack on scientific and humane teaching, the threat of self - appointed media watchdogs to also spy on teachers in the classroom, and the general vigor of ancient orthodoxies masquarading as neo-this and neo-that.
This book might have been, perhaps should have been, much longer and more detailed; and unquestionably it may be faulted as being altogether too much a reporting of what one theologian has found interesting and useful in his study of the process - philosophy.
You might be interested in this online commentary «Putting God on Trial: The Biblical Book of Job» (http://www.bookofjob.org) as supplementary or background material for your study of the Book of Job.
In his recent book, Life, Liberty, and the Defense of Dignity, he offers «four benefits» of mortality: interest and engagement, suggesting that adding, say, twenty years to the human life span would not proportionately increase the pleasures of life; seriousness and aspiration, proposing that the knowledge that our life is limited is what leads us to take life seriously and passionately; beauty and love, presenting the idea that it is precisely their perishability that makes, for instance, flowers beautiful to us, just as the coming and going of spring makes that season all the more meaningful; and, finally, virtue and moral excellence, by which he means the virtuous and noble deeds that mortality makes possible, including the sacrifice of our own life for a worthy cause.
Because images, in a book or in a sermon, are generally regarded as decorative and hence optional in their bearing upon the principal form and content of the communication, the imaginative preacher may have to endure such comments as «His sermons don't seem theologically weighty» or «It was too interesting to have contained much truth», or perhaps such inverted compliments as «I was much involved in your talk, or whatever it was.
The book is interesting as a scripture of a particular religion, in that it includes so much material from poets who were never associated with the movement, though some of them deeply influenced Nanak.
However, I am very interested in learning more and so which of the above books about Jesus or god that would be good for me to read as I am being introduced to Christianity?
One of the epigraphs in Paul Mariani's book is from Flannery O'Connor:»... if the writer believes that our life is and will remain essentially mysterious, if he looks upon us as beings existing in a created order to whose laws we freely respond, then what he sees on the surface will be of interest to him only as he can go through it into an experience of mystery itself.
If it interests you or any of your readers, I wrote a book called Nine Lies People Believe About Speaking in Tongues, and deal with many things I see come up in these comments like Paul said you can't speak in tongues in a meeting unless you have an interpreter, speaking several languages allegedly being the same thing as speaking in tongues in the Bible, etc...
As summer comes to a close and we return to the rhythm of the school year, I've been hearing from a lot of readers who are interested in using Evolving in Monkey Town as a book study for their Sunday school, college group, or book cluAs summer comes to a close and we return to the rhythm of the school year, I've been hearing from a lot of readers who are interested in using Evolving in Monkey Town as a book study for their Sunday school, college group, or book cluas a book study for their Sunday school, college group, or book club.
Conceived as the introduction to an analysis of the Kawi language of Java, this book actually is the ripest fruit of the great linguist's interest in human speech and its products, an interest that lasted throughout his life.
Certainly she had materials of the sort that compose sacred scriptures in other faiths, and certainly she had a priesthood who might have been thought of as interested in crystallizing Egypt's religion by means of a preferred set of sacred books.
For example, one of the charges against Honest to God, almost as soon as it appeared, was that John Robinson had said nothing in that book about «future life» — although the critic must have forgotten that not many years before the bishop had written, while still a theological teacher, a treatise entitled In the End God which is a considered and very interesting and suggestive discussion of exactly that subject as well as of the related aspects of «the last things»in that book about «future life» — although the critic must have forgotten that not many years before the bishop had written, while still a theological teacher, a treatise entitled In the End God which is a considered and very interesting and suggestive discussion of exactly that subject as well as of the related aspects of «the last things»In the End God which is a considered and very interesting and suggestive discussion of exactly that subject as well as of the related aspects of «the last things».
In 1949, four of the five best - selling nonfiction books — excluding books on canasta — were religious titles, and though independent publishers produced many of these books, the popular interest in religion benefited the denominational publishers as welIn 1949, four of the five best - selling nonfiction books — excluding books on canasta — were religious titles, and though independent publishers produced many of these books, the popular interest in religion benefited the denominational publishers as welin religion benefited the denominational publishers as well.
He wrote essays on it before he began to write as a philosopher, even a philosopher of physics... Principia Mathematica... is probably the only book bearing his name in which an interest in the activities of the mind does not often show itself» (DWP 21).
Also, please contact me if you are a small group leader interested in using Evolving in Monkey Town as part of a book study... or if you write for an online / print publication and would like a copy for review....
Interest in the topic of virtue has also been evident in our culture at large - as evidenced, for example, in the popularity of William Bennett's Book of Virtues and the various spin - offs from that project.
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