Sentences with phrase «book about the power»

Founder Adam Robinson is passionate about recruiting; not only does he have over 20 years experience in the industry, he has written a book about the power of predictive hiring.
In fact, Quiet, Susan Cain's book about the power of introverts, was probably 100 percent based on him.
A hopeful book about the power of love to triumph over distance.
Throughout Donna's academic and professional career she has written books about the power of dignity and, specifically, its importance in negotiations of all kinds.

Not exact matches

It's just a shame about the Surface Book's battery life in tablet mode — it's comfortable to use, but you won't last long without a power cord.
Rhett Power is head coach at Power Coaching and Consulting and the author of The Entrepreneur's Book of Actions, a new book about daily exercises for becoming wealthier, smarter, and more successBook of Actions, a new book about daily exercises for becoming wealthier, smarter, and more successbook about daily exercises for becoming wealthier, smarter, and more successful.
It shares that title with Steven Hahn's 2004 Pulitzer Prize - winning book about black political power.
In answering the question about Hahn's book, Coates added that T'Challa would also be grappling with «supervillains with cool powers.
The Barnett government is hoping to raise $ 3 billion by selling 51 per cent of Western Power to Australian investors, and will also use the privatisation deal to remove about $ 8 billion of debt off the state's books.
Normally, retailers get to decide how much they sell books for, but the publishers were down with the plan because they were worried about Amazon's growing power and the company's penchant for selling ebooks at low prices.
We talk about grit all the time here at Spartan Race but Dr. Angela Lee Duckworth is the woman who literally wrote the book about it (or at least she will be when Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance is published May 3 by Scribner).
It was [this book], and it taught me about class, satire, and the inspirational power of serious silliness.
Shaq's book report revealed it had been less than transformative: «This is about a young man who has power, wealth, and women (much like me), and gives them all up to pursue a holy life (not so much like me).»
More information about how to successfully deliver positive reinforcement is included in my books, Bringing Out the Best in People: How to Apply the Astonishing Power of Positive Reinforcementand Other People's Habits: How to Use Positive Reinforcement to Bring Out the Best in People Around You.
The man known for his ability to see into the future has written a book that's largely about the limits of our predictive powers.
Now, with a book, a fashion line and a million Instagram followers under her belt, she tells us about fostering confidence, building a career with longevity in mind and how to pose like a power broker.
But he says he was also highly influenced by the Power of Full Engagement, a 2005 management book by Jim Loehr and Tony Schwartz about optimizing productivity through awareness and work - life balance.
The book is particularly helpful, says Branson, because the authors explain how to build and successfully channel new power: «It's a useful lens to use when thinking about how business has changed, how to spread ideas or start a movement, or create change.»
Cain, a former Wall Street lawyer, has been researching and writing about the subject for years, and her new book, Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World that Can't Stop Talking (Crown), synthesizes much of that research.
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.
About five years ago, Malcolm Gladwell, author of bestselling books like The Tipping Point and Blink, made this prediction, basically writing off the power of social media for businesses: «In about five years, everyone will head back toward traditional advertising.&rAbout five years ago, Malcolm Gladwell, author of bestselling books like The Tipping Point and Blink, made this prediction, basically writing off the power of social media for businesses: «In about five years, everyone will head back toward traditional advertising.&rabout five years, everyone will head back toward traditional advertising.»
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A veteran of the 1977 Seabrook occupation, his first book, written when he was only 22, was about why nuclear power makes no sense.
As the book's title suggests, Rocha believes that successful speaking isn't about conveying power but rather forging a connection.
She is the founder of blockchain communications agency Wordarium.io, and is a blockchain author and speaker currently working on a book about blockchain's disruptive powers.
His other books include Money: How the Destruction of the Dollar Threatens the Global Economy — and What We Can Do About It, co-authored by Elizabeth Ames (McGraw - Hill Professional); Freedom Manifesto: Why Free Markets are Moral and Big Government Isn't, co-authored by Elizabeth Ames (Crown Business, August 2012); How Capitalism Will Save Us: Why Free People and Free Markets Are the Best Answer in Today's Economy, co-authored by Elizabeth Ames (Crown Business, November 2009); and Power Ambition Glory: The Stunning Parallels between Great Leaders of the Ancient World and Today... and the Lessons You Can Learn, co-authored by John Prevas (Crown Business, June 2009).
you can ask questions all you want, test it as much as you like but only you can decide to believe.I have studied hell, read my books about, went to different websites and searched the bible, for a Christian to fear hell is not possible.For one Christ himself said he is the only way to the father.So I think the fear of hell comes from guilt or their power freaks.
... i know your book says don't believe anything else before or after to protect its place in history, but just as you would read greek mythology and have incredulous thoughts about multigods ruling the earth water and the undergrounds, those who are not stuck on your wavelength, read your mythology and think how anyone in their right minds could ever fall for those idolatric stories... your belief in your creationist god is as unfathomable as an adult looking up the chimney and feeling the power of Santa Clause in them... does the power of Santa Clause compel you?
Almost every New Testament book speaks about the power that Christians have been given through the Holy Spirit living in their lives.
William Chip and Michael Scaperlanda renew their argument about the churches and immigration, while Gary Anderson undertakes a critical examination of the important recent book from Kevin J. Madigan and Jon D. Levenson, Resurrection: The Power of God for Christians and Jews.
An Open Doors» worker recounts how he learned about the power of spiritual songs to fortify persecuted Christians in this extract from Anneke Companjen's new book Singing Through the Night.
Since January of 2009, I have been writing a book for non-profits about dealing with leadership and organizational systems where abuse of power is involved.
Like the congregation itself in Hopewell's portrayal of it, the book is unified by its assertions about the power of narrative.
What other writer, having just finished Moby - Dick and standing at the peak of his powers, would have taken in his next book a simple story about a young man's descent in the city and compounded it into the unreadable, pseudo-Hawthornian mess of Pierre?
Those moments of corded pain and joy and helplessness and power revealed more to me about the Incarnation than any book I could have read.
I heard more of their intersecting stories, and when Idelette was done talking about her book, about her passions, I wanted to see her on every stage of every slick Christian conference, to bring some mama - truth, to preach the Gospel of Being With Each Other, but then I kind of had to shrug because part of Idelette's power is that she's outside of that system, outside of that church - marketing world, too busy living the truth of it to package it.
When we finally acknowledge that books and lectures and sermons can not adequately contain what we want to say about God's love and God's mercy, we explode in doxology: «Now to him who by the power at work within us is able to accomplish abundantly far more than all we can ask or imagine, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus to all generations, forever and ever.
It hardly matters what the book is «about,» since it's «about» whatever those in power want it to be «about» at the time.
creationism is far from an adult theory, its a child like story with fantasy elements based on myth and NO science, we always hear about these crazy people trying to outlaw evolution.But has you stated we have billions of years of evidence, thanks for helping us evolutionists out, unfortunately you have none, just a book, no science, no artifacts, no garden of eden, no bones of adam or eve or even the snake for that matter, no ark, no proof of a biblical flood, no proof of a created world by a higher power, no nothing..
For historical evidence of the Bible, just look up in your history books about the Assyrians and Babylonians taking over Israel several hundred years BCE, or that the Romans were in power during the time of Jesus, that they did use crucifixion as a form of execution.
Thankfully, however, there is still plenty of room for some homework — research that will enable a full, frank, and accurate comparison of these revisionist interpretations of the «Power greater than ourselves» phrase with some of the very clear original Big Book language about «that Power, which is God.»
And that is the concept that Bill Wilson spelled out on pages 43, 45, and 46 of the Fourth Edition and earlier editions of the Big Book when Bill spoke of a «Higher Power,» said he was going to talk about «God,» and then defined the «Power» as «God.»
I find the mix of dark and comedic elements in the book of Esther and in the celebration of Purim fascinating, for I think they teach us something important about the nature of power and of evil, something about what it means to relate to forces that seem beyond our control.
There are some really good books around, I have just read «The sublte power of spritual abuse» by David Johnson and Jeff Van Vonderen and just about to read Ken Blues «Healing spritual abuse»
These writers believed themselves to be inspired by the Spirit and called as teachers, and their writings, argues Wright, «were not simply about the coming of God's Kingdom into all the world; they were, and were designed to be, part of the means whereby that happened... Those who read these writings discovered, from very early on, that the books themselves carried the same power, the same authority in action, that had characterized the initial preaching of the «word.»
There just isn't any proof that the bible is anything other than a prejuicial book about men from a certain time who desired power and wrote about a god that wanted them to have power, slaves, multiple wifes and children.
When theologians and others were arguing about the ultimate fate of Scobie in The Heart of the Matter, Graham Greene commented: «I wrote a book about a man who goes to hell — Brighton Rock — another about a man who goes to heaven — The Power and the Glory.
In an appendix to the book Alcoholics Anonymous that was added 16 years after the original printing, Bill Wilson wrote about members who had had spiritual experiences that «with few exception our members find that they have tapped an unsuspected inner resource which they presently identify with their own conception of a power greater than themselves.»
The resurrection comes into this story as an unexpected development, from what the book calls «Deeper Magic from Before the Dawn of Time,» something about which the evil powers know nothing.
It is by no means clear why this egalitarian Eden, which relies wholly on human will power, is less illusory — especially in this blood - soaked century when human capacity is unmasked — than the Jewish apocalyptic hope for the coming of God's kingdom.The value of these books is not in what they say about Jesus so much as in what their saying these things prompts one to think about.
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