November 8: Meet Betsy Devany, author of Lucy's Lovey, a new picture
book about a little girl and her very loved lovey (Dedham)
It's the perfect follow up to Harriet's Home at Sea,
a book about a little girl's home on the Great Barrier Reef and the devastating effects an oil spill has there.
But Abbot's accessible four-fold biography is an entertaining and immensely informative
book about a little - known aspect of the Civil War: female spies.
In a guest post, she offers her opinion on what makes this wordless
book about a little dog and her treasured toy a very special book indeed.
One author I know has a children's
book about a little girl's teddy bear who travels from Minnesota to her deployed father in Afghanistan; this book has done tremendously well with military families, so the author continues to tap that market again and again.
I imagine it goes without saying that after Twilight became huge, we were seeing werewolves and teenage vampires everywhere, and that Harry Potter brought in its wake a ton of other kids
books about little witches, little warlocks, and little wizards.
There are many
books about the Little Ice Age.
Not exact matches
Like so many
books about innovation and the exciting world of tomorrow's business, it's a
little buzzwordy and breathless, which can get stale quickly — and when you're talking
about the future, stale is the last thing you want to be.
As per the Times article, «Amazon sells
about one in four printed
books, according to industry estimates, a level of market domination with
little precedent in the
book trade.»
But in the
book, it explains how it's not just
about if you can survive on a
little bit of sleep but also what happens to your body over the long term when you deprive it of sleep.
There's a great children's
book called «Rosie Revere, Engineer,»
about this
little girl named Rosie who likes to build things.
This year, I'm feeling the birthday doldrums a
little more acutely than usual since I've just
about finished up the manuscript on my next
book, Humans 3.0, which is all
about how technology is affecting human nature.
It's no shock that reading with kids is good for their intellectual development, but if you want them to get more out of
books, blog Dumb
Little Man suggests actively engaging your kids
about what their reading.
If you start disrupting
books, especially
about what
little girls can be when they grow up, and if you start putting different characters in those stories, you're able to disrupt power in a very important way.
Comey has captured a few days» news cycle with a
book that contains some harsh words, but
little substantive new information
about the Russia investigation or Trump's encounters with Comey.
Over the weekend I listened to Russ Roberts» interview with Jason Zweig, who made an excellent observation of how vast the financial markets are and how
little time investors spend thinking
about this: I think if there's one overriding theme to the
book, one of the things I've tried to get across in The Devil's...
If I am on a website
about real estate, there is
little reason why I want to see information on e-cards, comic
books or dating.
Possibly the most important
book you can read
about investing (even though it has
little to do with the nuts and bolts of investing) is a
book called Poor Charlie's Almanack that collects the wisdom of Charlie Munger.
You had talked
about the increase on delinquencies on the student loan
book being a function of seasoning, and it's a
little bit out of whack with what you would expect from a seasonality perspective.
You talked a
little bit
about the future of currencies in your
book.
His first
book, «You Need to Be A
Little Crazy: The Truth
about Starting and Growing Your Business» describes the ups and downs and emotional trials of running a business.
I think you are right
about your
book, I think a $ 199 or even a $ 250 price tag would have
little effect on the demand.
Web content guru Gerry McGovern, author of «Killer Content» — one of the best
books on writing copy for the web — says that one of the biggest mistakes companies make in regards to their website content is thinking that customers care one
little bit
about the company.
I know there's a lot of people out there that are always hearing us talk
about the
book security analysis but today's episode we're actually going to go into a
little bit of depth to talk
about what we actually know
about this
book.
Countless articles and
books recount the success stories of legendary value investors, yet there is very
little information
about:
It's funny, I was chatting with god the other night, you know
about girls and money and basically life in general, and then from out of no where god was like, «Yo, Chuckles, I have a job for you, it's very important that you do it, I need you to go and vote this upcoming election and I need you to vote for Rick Perry, he seems a
little crazy, but don't worry, he's all good in my
book».
We must, therefore, retain a
little more confidence in American medicine than this
book alone is likely to produce in us, but, so long as we keep that in mind, White Coat, Black Hat should force us to ask some hard questions
about how best to structure the practice of medicine.
Reviewers of the
book in the New York Times and elsewhere opined that ecology was
little more than a commonsensical concern for global housekeeping, and quite innocent of the far - reaching and rather alarming implications
about which I warned.
Well, I'll see if I can get the brothers down in the store to send you a
little book about the monastery here.
The
Book of Relevation also talks
about armor - clad locusts with teh face of a man, the hair of a woman, the mouth of a lion and the tail of scorpion wearing tiny
little crowns.
I would think God, and / or, Allah, cares a
little bit more
about human life than words on some paper from a
book.
I don't see anything in there
about compiling a bunch of
little - ish
books into one big
book to be bought or sold, or left in hotel rooms.
So just cause Peter followed Christ doesn't mean he was saved he had to have the Spirit to truly follow him which he didn't get til the
book of acts so using him denying Christ as an example that's its ok is completely foolish because he didn't have the holy spirit because the spirit is truth and why would it deny itself as being Christ think
about that a
little bit
But Love evinced a tough side also, recording a number of remarkably angry songs: the garage - punk classic «My Flash on You,» one the fastest versions of «Hey Joe,» a cover of «My
Little Red
Book» that ditches the lost - love vibe of the original, and finally «7 and 7 Is,» a breath - taking hardcore punk prototype from early» 67, complete with a nuclear explosion finale and lyrics
about throwing one's Bible in the fireplace.
Over the past month, I've been talking to people all over the country and across the United States
about my
little yellow
book.
In my
book «Religious Literacy,» I argued that the United States is one of the most religious countries on Earth, and yet Americans know very
little about their own religions and even less
about the religions of others.
And I felt like Chris articulated much of how I feel
about that
little yellow
book, and even my own ongoing work: I want to create the pipeline, to build the bridge, to hold out my hand and say walk a while with me and see for yourself.
I suspected I'd get a
little pushback from fellow Christians who hold a complementarian perspective on gender, (a position that requires women to submit to male leadership in the home and church, and often appeals to «biblical womanhood» for support), but I had hoped — perhaps naively — that the
book would generate a vigorous, healthy debate
about things like the Greco Roman household codes found in the epistles of Peter and Paul,
about the meaning of the Hebrew word ezer or the Greek word for deacon,
about the Paul's line of argumentation in 1 Timothy 2 and 1 Corinthians 11,
about our hermeneutical presuppositions and how they are influenced by our own culture, and
about what we really mean when we talk
about «biblical womanhood» — all issues I address quite seriously in the
book, but which have yet to be engaged by complementarian critics.
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.
Here is what I did take away from the
book, which I think is a valuable insight: The Book of Revelation is not just a prediction about future events which will happen during the Tribulation and Millennium, and therefore, has little - to - no impact on our lives to
book, which I think is a valuable insight: The
Book of Revelation is not just a prediction about future events which will happen during the Tribulation and Millennium, and therefore, has little - to - no impact on our lives to
Book of Revelation is not just a prediction
about future events which will happen during the Tribulation and Millennium, and therefore, has
little - to - no impact on our lives today.
Some
book titles leave you with
little doubt
about their purpose.
There is so much more I could have said
about the unforgivable sin in that
little book.
Now if you know anything
about me or my
book, you will understand why I'm a
little nervous
about interview # 2.
John Macquarrie's wonderfully lucid
book An Existentialist Theology: A Comparison of Heidegger and Bultmann (Harper & Row, 1955) can give to English - speaking audiences who wish to understand a
little more
about the spirit of this century a thorough introduction to Bultmann's use of Heidegger.
JDJ, «Smart» isn't learning science from your preacher, or from a
book written thousands of years ago by men who know relatively
little about the natural world.
Readers who care
about literary modernism will find
little to detain them in this
book.
The author of the
book reviewed here believes that the institution of marriage is
about to collapse and there's
little that can be done
about it.
Has anybody on this blog ever read the Big
Book of Alcoholics Anonymous.It clearly states that we know only a
little about this disease and if you find a better solution our hats are off to you.
I will, if I may, quote what I said
about modalism in my
little book on the Apostles» Creed, whose title you quote.
Sure, you can like
little things
about Rands
book, but if you ignore the central tenet I quoted, I'd hardly call you Randian.