First Annual Juried Exhibition, Southampton Cultural Center, Southampton, NY, Curator: Arlene Bujese Small Work Exposition, Boltax Gallery, Shelter Island, NY A
Book About Death - The Ties That Bind, Second Street Gallery, Bayshore, NY.
Group show based on
A Book About Death which takes its inspiration from the late, underground American artist Ray Johnson Women as Muse, East End Arts Council, Riverhead, NY Small Works, East End Arts Council, Riverhead, NY
Publications: 2011
A Book About Death.
He has exhibited widely throughout the Philippines and internationally, including «Southeast Asian Abstraction: A New Dialogue,» at Sotheby's Singapore and «
A Book About Death» at the Emily Harvey Space, New York, NY.
A book about death seems to invite the idea of also being a book about sex — especially when it's a young adult book.
Jill:
A book about death seems like it shouldn't be funny, but Denton Little's Deathdate is hilarious.
It is difficult to write an uplifting
book about death and dying but it seems that Anna McPartlin has succeeded in doing so.
Green himself is a subscriber to the belief that the best works of art are partly defined by what you bring to them, and while on the surface this is
a book about death, it's actually a book about life, though never a sentimental one.
Not exact matches
While Gates admits he isn't usually «one for tear - jerkers
about death and dying,» he was drawn to Kalanithi's search for meaning through
books, writing, his family, medicine, surgery, and science.
From pronouncements
about the «
death of literature» to predictions of shorter
books, the pay - per - page system is being roundly criticized.
To learn more
about how Kepler's
Books survived its near -
death experience, read Bo Burlingham's three - part series at www.inc.com/keyword/may09.
Custom auto designer George Barris wrote
about the car in his 1974
book «Cars of the Stars,» describing a series of accidents it was involved in after Dean's
death.
She shared a recent conversation she had with Sheryl Sandberg
about her new
book Option B, in which the Facebook COO writes
about resilience in the face of her husband's sudden
death.
Grant co-wrote the
book «Option B»
about resilience with Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg in the wake of her husband David Goldberg's sudden
death in 2015.
Fuhrman has since written numerous
books about crime, including The Murder Business: How the Media Turns Crime Into Entertainment and Subverts Justice and Silent Witness: The Untold Story of Terri Schiavo's
Death.
It was the Cali cartel that three years ago ordered the
death of a New York journalist, Manuel DeDios, who had written
about the drug traffickers in Spanish - language publications and
books.
Kidnapped model Chloe Ayling has revealed she is to tell all
about her Black
Death sex slave ordeal in a new
book.
hey chut — we don't care how many comedians may know the cardinal direction of mecca while on stage as they shuffle for a laugh - something
about your holy
book espousing slavery or
death to non-believers is really more the point of contention.
There are two very good
books about what it is like to come very close to
death and yet not die.
In «With Her» Milosz speaks of hearing a passage from Scripture during Mass at St. Mary Magdalen in Berkeley: «A reading this Sunday from the
Book of Wisdom /
About how God has not made
death / And does not rejoice in the annihilation of the living.»
And this wasn't merely academic reflection on the
book; students were sharing their own griefs and fears
about death.
Those nut cases have kids dying from hunger and freezing to
death but all they are worried
about is an old
book.
So let's say this movie is
about a woman whose life was shaped by love of her father; the making of the film Mary Poppins (as well as the writing of the
book) is
about her coming to terms with the truth
about personal love and
death and all that.
That's one of the things I was pointing out to someone who read a
book on necromancy (long island medium) and was totally sold on everything the author wrote and was now at «peace» from reading
about the endless cycles of
death — i.e. soul coming back as such... dying then coming back again as another.
In contrast, Caldecott states in the first line of his preface: «The
book is
about Tolkien's spirituality, by which I mean his religious awareness and experience, the things he believed
about life and
death and ultimate truth» (p xi).
But however one takes Moby - Dick, the
book sufficiently demonstrates that its author was capable of huge, cosmic ideas
about life and
death, freedom and necessity, wisdom and insanity.
Such a fascinating
book deserves more time than we can give it, but I'd like to start off by talking
about the current attitudes
about life after
death that have come to dominate much of Western Christianity and that Wright seeks to evaluate.
By reading this
book, you will see the
death of Jesus in a whole new light, and will also have your eyes opened
about the plight of humanity and what Jesus came to rescue and deliver us from.
What is is
about Islam, for example, that makes it acceptable to issue a
death warrant against an author — Rusdie — simply because he wrote a
book?
Islam today still beheads people for apostacy — if not on the national level then at the village / local level (saudi arabia, Iran), still burn people to
death for witchcraft (indonesia and saudi arabia), Draw the prophet and earn yourself a
death sentence from the Clergy, Write a
book critical of islam and get the same deal, write a magazine article expessing concern
about the rise of islam in your country and have your throat slit on a public street in YOUR own country...
Allison — the
books of the New Testament WERE in fact written by the apostles, most written
about 30 years after the
death of Christ.
Despite the withering contempt of experts and allies alike — even the architectural critic Lewis Mumford, letting his unfortunate susceptibility to vanity get the better of him, could not resist dismissing
Death and Life as a «preposterous mass of historic misinformation and contemporary misinterpretation» assembled by «a sloppy novice» — this unaccredited journalist - mother, with no college education, no training in planning, and no institutional support, wrote a
book that would change the way the world thinks
about cities.
Richard Beck, in his
book The Authenticity of Faith (which I've been reading of late), writes this
about the relationship between
death and fundies.
In the last years of his life his influence was further underscored in that others began to write
books about him — a trend that was to intensify after his
death so that now we see a steady stream of theses, monographs and studies coming out each year, though we still await the authorized biography to be done by his old friend John Howard Griffin.
This
book features theological questions
about death, each chapter beginning with a practical case.
Imagine that you pick up an ancient history
book and it tells you
about three men who were put to
death around 33 BC for religious and political crimes.
Or what
about the drowning of the Egyptian army in the Red Sea, the earthquake the swallowed up all those who followed Korah in rebellion against Moses, or the things that God allows Satan to do to Job, or even some passages in the New Testament such as the
death of Ananias and Sapphira, or the bloodbath that takes place in the
book of Revelation?
Later in the
book, Baruch asked
about the exact nature of the resurrection body at the consummation, and he was told by God that the dead would rise exactly as they were at the moment of
death, and after they had been given an opportunity to recognize one another, they would then undergo a spiritual transformation.
It is significant that from the second century to the nineteenth, when modern historical scholarship became current, theories
about the Bible were held which no competent historian now accepts, such as that Moses wrote the entire Pentateuch (the first five
books of the Old Testament) including the description of his own
death.
We also sit down with speaker and author Shane Claiborne to discuss his latest
book, «Executing Grace,»
about ending the
death penalty in America.
but thats not what i'm talking
about... i am discussing the god you claim to worship... even if you believe jesus was god on earth it doesn't matter for if you take what he had to say as law then you should take with equal fervor words and commands given from god itself... it stands as logical to do this and i am confused since most only do what jesus said... the dude was only here for 30 years and god has been here for the whole time — he has added, taken away, and revised everything he has set previous to jesus and after his
death... thru the prophets — i base my argument on the
book itself, so if you have a counter argument i believe you haven't a full understanding of the
book — and that would be my overall point... belief without full understanding of or consideration to real life or consequences for the hereafter is equal to a childs belief in santa which is why we atheists feel it is an equal comparision... and santa is clearly a bs story... based on real events from a real historical person but not a magical being by any means!
That he would write
about his brush with
death was to be expected, for he wrote
about everything: in
books and magazine articles» not to mention his collection of observations and arguments published in the back of this magazine each month.
(ENTIRE
BOOK) Christians have always been concerned
about last things —
death, judgement, heaven, and hell.
You are perhaps most widely known for your moving
book Lament for a Son,
about the
death of your son Eric.
After the
death of our son, I dipped into a number of
books about grief.
So as I'm writing my next
book — a memoir
about church — I started reminiscing
about youth group and all the crazy games we used to play, chief among them Chubby Bunny — a game in which several «volunteers» cram as many marshmallows as they can into their mouths and attempt to say «chubby bunny» without throwing up or choking to
death.
In a recent
book (After
Death: Life in God, SCM Press) I have argued that what has just been said is a proper «demythologizing» of traditional Christian talk about death, judgment, resurrection, and eternal
Death: Life in God, SCM Press) I have argued that what has just been said is a proper «demythologizing» of traditional Christian talk
about death, judgment, resurrection, and eternal
death, judgment, resurrection, and eternal life.
And like I've said before, I don't give a flying backward fuck
about your immoral
book of
death.
In making the case that the
death of God was permanent, the
book initiated a wide - ranging and innovative — some would say undisciplined — conversation
about the nature of post-Christian existence.
Based on Dr. Seuss's final
book before his
death, this is a story
about life's ups and downs, told by the people of Burning Man 2011.