Sentences with phrase «book about real people»

It's a book about real people challenges with real people solutions.

Not exact matches

Maybe it's different in the world these people live in — where it's all about getting wantrepreneurs to click on their posts, buy their books, and attend their seminars — but let me explain how it works in the real world.
``... very strong politically correct and left - wing revisionist history attitude or tone that's also Anti-American (especially a vague charge against «U.S. foreign policy»), and strong anti-capitalist elements... blasphemy, implied urinating, vomiting, scatological humor, and comments on breast feeding and sexual parts of people's bodies; light brief violence includes beating on car window and trying to damage car, man comically shoves people off a stage, man burns books; sexual content includes homosexual references, implied adultery with a pregnancy out of wedlock, talk about a priest raping boy in the past, a giant condom balloon placed on church steeple, references to real condoms, implied fornication; upper male nudity, man wears a dress; alcohol use and drunkenness; smoking and marijuana use depicted, including eating marijuana brownies; and, strong miscellaneous immorality includes lying, stealing, revenge, rebellion, dysfunctional family portrayed, father is a pothead and a drinker and lives in a trailer»
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!
Yes, I am praying for opportunities to talk with people, and our girls are real outspoken about Jesus, and my wife and I are always carrying around Christian books, so maybe those spark the conversations.
A real Christian would go out and help all these people and be humble about it, not broadcast it on TV and write more books.
Kyle's book had comments about relationships and the real person where Shonna's book had comments on aspirations, goals and accomplishments.
Whether it is a television program, a story in a book or a real - life situation, talk to your kids about how another person might be feeling in any given scenario.
I don't get real excited about booked — loads of people are arrested every year, and most of them are in for just about long enough to post bond and that's it.
That's a pattern many people of color have seen before in Miami, one detailed in N.D.B. Connolly's book about the effect of Jim Crow laws on South Florida, «A World More Concrete: Real Estate and the Remaking of Jim Crow South Florida.»
I'm having difficulty discussing any issue about cholesterol with several people because of their rigid belief that cholesterol is not linked to heart disease, based upon Dr. Sinatras book «the cholesteral myth debunked» http://youtu.be/dAq7Sxyp-JQ please help us advise advise them to the real science, or is there something to it?
Be very cautious about people claiming there is «new science» on nutrition and health which real scientists, researchers and physicians are unaware of... two and two still make four whatever the diet book infomercials and promoters may say.
Dr Perlmutter IS right and years of science and research back up his claims along with true testimonials from real people - have you even read the book??? like I said before people like you who are not willing to give up gluten carbs and sugars are going to be the first ones to come on here with skepticism and claims that this is just another «fad diet - «newsflash Will this is a lifestyle and the followers are not in a cult they are real people who want to take charge of their health and live to see their great grandchildren and still be sound in their minds its fine to have questions but to come on here and insult this fine doctor who has helped so many people throughout his career and has written a New York times best seller to educate and help so many more people just makes you sound absurd and immature - he is speaking the truth everything we've been told about nutrition is a lie to profit the wheat industry, doctors and pharmaceutical companies because as long as people keep eating the wrong foods and getting sicker and fatter they will all profit.
Sugar Daddies have been receiving more recognition for their role in society than ever before, with more information about the real people who live the sugar lifestyle being shared and discussed online, in books, on TV, in the movies, and in hair salons and coffee shops.
The devil is indeed in the details and ditching apparently superfluous details about the main characters» previous affairs in the book makes them seem too much like a «movie couple» instead of real people.
At the film's recent press day, McKay, Lewis, Bale, Carell, Gosling, Hamish Linklater, Jeremy Strong, producer Jeremy Kleiner, and screenwriter Charles Randolph talked about turning the book into a movie and adapting it to the screen, why McKay was the right person to direct, what drew them to the project, how the actors met their real - life counterparts in preparation for their roles, the decision to combine a cinema verite documentary approach with other stylized elements, breaking the fourth wall, and using celebrities and pop culture figures as an entertaining storytelling device to explain complex financial concepts to the audience.
I have always gravitated to books about real - life events and people.
Just please don't make this all about «yay people are buying REAL books».
Sara and Dara, named for the Dick and Jane of Iranian children's books, are based on «real» people who the narrator follows around Tehran, and eventually confronts when one is about to diverge from the path he'd intended to write.
I love books about witches and demons as much as the next person, but sometimes the real world is far stranger than fantasy.
Buzz from others, real recommendations from people I know, tweets gushing about the great book they just read, all those things will get me to check out a book.
Katherine Sears shared an article on the Booktrope site about finding and connecting with our «raving fans» and it's so true — people really want to see their favorite writers succeed and word of mouth is still such a huge part of book marketing (whether it's online or in real life).
I've never been a part of a critique group in the real world, but having used several critique partners for my books, I know to think about it when one person says it but really consider making changes only when all or most say it.
I do worry about whether people who read this book are going to try to take this as an actual history of the real underground railroad.
So I don't think of Traveling Mercies as a book about religion at all, but rather as a handbook, or maybe a sort of owner's manual, for people who are trying to live faithfully: which is to say, learning to cooperate with grace — even (or especially) when real life rears its very confusing head.
Almost anyone can self - publish a book, but the difference between creating a potential book (one that can be ordered if anyone ever hears about it) and creating an actual book (one that people are actually reading) is knowing what to do after your plans for publication are in place... and while your topic is still hot, and you're still interested in using your book as a vehicle for building brand, increasing your credibility, making money, or fulfilling your life - long dream of being a real author.
When I discovered they were real people who had written the books Rushdie talks about, I decided to find out more about them.
Also, one of the best discussions of love and marriage in any book I've read lately, for real, with people working out their problems and talking about being angry and being forgiving and how to deal with people who hurt you.
I didn't know it was historical fiction, so that sent me to the Internet to read about the real people in the book.
Seeing the «real people» did not change how I feel about the book.
My grade probably shouldn't be taken as a real judgment of the book so much as what it's like to read about conversations between people you don't know about things you only vaguely recognize that aren't really explained.
I think because of my «don't quite fit into any box» status, I do best when I can talk to people directly about my book, and about the real events that lie behind it.
While many traditional publishers panic about keeping up with the tech, or how to price their e-books, the real revolution is happening over there, just out of sight — and could have a more profound impact on the publishing business than simply the format people choose to read books in.
One other friend of mine left he was in the real estate space wrote a book with with a major publishing house and then a few years later stopped he left real estate and went into a really strong personal development business and the publisher went up well you're not promoting this book anymore and they took his book word - for - word and put somebody else's name on the cover of it and just put a new introduction on it no credit to anybody he had worked because he had two co-authors help him with it because he's dyslexic so they essentially were the ones that wrote it and he provided a lot of the content and the publisher gave those other authors no credit took his name off and put somebody else's name on the front and then the publisher was 100 % within their rights to do it so you know there's a lot of things that I challenge people to kind of think about what's important and if you're putting all your expertise into this book you want to make sure that somebody's negotiated a heck out of it giving you a contract that actually makes sense for you and your business.
Of course, because you can free your fantasy and create a perfect character or dive deep into your memory and think about comic's hero, movie or cartoon hero, book character or even real person could be a hero for you?
It encompasses all that is written about actual events and real people — it includes memoir, biography, self - help, diet books, how - to books, military, history, cook books, legal advice — anything that is true and real.
One very real issue that few people talk about is the ability to sell very slightly used (i.e., read once or only partially) books on Amazon and eBay.
Our systems crawl the internet, reading conversations about books by real people, from blogs, review sites, social media and other sources.
Author's Note is somewhat of general idea, but commonly you will see comments about something relating to the story; or maybe that the characters which representative of real people and real events, are fictional; or you could mention something that ties into the history of a book; or you can mention something about your writing experience like «When I first started writing this book, I expected...».
Be a real person and talk about other things besides your book.
I will put in there something about me as a person so as to remind people that they're not just reading a book, a dead product, they're reading something that a real living, feeling person wrote.
She also cited The Millionaire Next Door is a good book for learning about how the real rich people live.
You've got shades of The Matrix, where people's bodies atrophy while they're living in a machine - constructed dreamworld; of the zombie - like VR junkies in Shadowrun; and of every other movie, book, and video game about people ruining their real - world lives to enjoy a virtual one.
This book sets a gold standard for how to integrate ACT and schema therapy and shows us step by step how to make real changes in the lives of clients struggling with their relationship to their own pain and relationships with the people they care about
If you read real estate investment books, articles on BP, listen to podcasts or just generally find yourself learning about real estate investment then you will notice a common thing that is almost invariably mentioned, the use of other people's money.
Perhaps they read a book about buying real estate on the cheap or watched late night tv paid programming about buying real estate at basement prices or with other people's money.
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