Sentences with phrase «books along the street»

Well, take your car or van and sell the book along the street, invite readers to buy your love story on the occasion of The Saint Valentine day.

Not exact matches

«With a new supplement that tackles the increasingly complex world of derivatives, along with the book's classic life - cycle guide to investing, A Random Walk Down Wall Street remains the best investment guide money can buy.»
Rue Cler is a cobblestone street filled with bustling bakeries, delicatessens, fromageries, and wine shops along with cafes, flower shops and even a book store and a post office.
As part of the complex, a circulation road would be placed along the north side of the site and would extend from the Book Road entrance to the access road off 95th Street.
Ms. Lisella is the author of three books of poetry, including the recently published Thieves in the Family (from NYQ Books), along with Amore on Hope Street (from Finishing Line Press) and Two Naked Feet (from PWP Books), which were both nominated for Pushcart Prbooks of poetry, including the recently published Thieves in the Family (from NYQ Books), along with Amore on Hope Street (from Finishing Line Press) and Two Naked Feet (from PWP Books), which were both nominated for Pushcart PrBooks), along with Amore on Hope Street (from Finishing Line Press) and Two Naked Feet (from PWP Books), which were both nominated for Pushcart PrBooks), which were both nominated for Pushcart Prizes.
As a child, Cabral loved reading books and watching documentaries about science, and she enjoyed «identifying plants, even those that grow along the streets,» she recalls.
Gandhi read a particular section of this book wherein the author walks by an armed forces draft as it is being held along a Russian street.
Hit up one of Lakeview's vibrant commercial districts, located along Belmont Avenue, Lincoln Avenue, Southport Avenue, Clark Street, Halsted Street or Broadway Street, where you'll find vintage shops, esoteric book stores, alternative clothing boutiques and offbeat home décor.
That's when the idea to create a «little black book» for women on the internet hit me like lightning one afternoon while I was walking along the streets of Manhattan and I immediately began work on creating the database.
I'd get up early to catch a train to Walton - on - Thames and then the bus along the high street to the red - brick Victorian fortress, where I'd stamp and shelve books all day, and then reverse the journey, riding back into the city on half - empty trains running against the commute.
Throw in some good wine, walks along the pier, sultry Spanish street names and delicious tacos, and I hope to transport readers to a summer of romance — where they can relax under the shade of their own backyard tree, eat pistachios in the heat and get wonderfully lost in a book...
According to an article in Thursday's Wall Street Journal, I, along with thousands more, have been «hyped» into buying and reading the just - published book, The Story of Edgar Sawtelle, the debut novel by David Wroblewski.
The «simple way» is to buy own books and sell them along the streets... Can, for example, Lulu.com make a deal with LaFeltrinelli.it stores to let readers to order one lulu's author book and then the reader can go to the bookshop to get the ordered book?
One of our clients, Michael Bungay Stanier, has sold over 200,000 copies of his book The Coaching Habit since it launched early in 2016, landing on the Wall Street Journal and Amazon bestseller lists along the way.
Just book your rooms at Hotel Excelsior and you'll find yourself in a truly medieval place, along with its stone walls, towers, narrow streets and magical atmosphere.
It's been nearly fifteen years since that night, when together we watched as daylight outlined the roofs of the neighboring houses along Bowthorpe Road, the smokestacks of the crematorium in the cemetery across the street, the piled books and papers of my messy room.
Here, the cobblestone streets mix with gleaming buildings, and you'll find a fun array of art galleries, boutiques, clubs, and cafes, along with some famous icons — Powell's City of Books, anyone?
To explore this town's narrow streets, it's best to park the car and stroll along on foot to discover all the great finds, including beautiful art, handmade jewelry, clothes and books.
Located right in the city center along the main street, guests looking to be right in the heart of it all will want to book a stay at the Tudela Bardenas in Spain where comfort and convenience come first.
Her four previous books form a permanent record of the temporary habitats that Manhattan's homeless individuals created for themselves in public parks, vacant lots, abandoned buildings, along the waterfronts and beneath the city's streets: The Tunnel: The Underground Homeless of New York City (Yale Press and Schirmer / Mosel, Germany); Fragile Dwelling (Aperture); Transitory Gardens, Uprooted Lives, co-authored with Diana Balmori (Yale Press); and Glass House (Penn State Press).
Margaret Morton's photographs of the dwellings that homeless individuals have assembled in public parks, vacant lots, along the waterfronts, beneath the streets, and in the abandoned buildings of New York City are combined with oral histories in Glass House, her book about thirty - five young squatters who set up a highly structured community in an abandoned glass factory; Fragile Dwelling (Aperture Foundation); The Tunnel: The Underground Homeless of New York City (Yale University Press and Schirmer / Mosel, Germany); and Transitory Gardens, Uprooted Lives (co-authored with Diana Balmori, Yale University Press).
Upcoming exhibitions include artist's books created by juniors in the Program in Visual Arts along with work by students in fall photography, video and graphic design courses running January 14 through February 10; a reception will be held on February 4 from 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. with an accompanying film screening of fall semester student work from 4:30 to 7:00 p.m. in the James M. Stewart ’32 Open Studios November 18 Theater, also at 185 Nassau Street.
Smithson fed on the clashes of style, form and meaning found along his rambles through the city; from the downtown kiosks hawking porno magazines and comic books, to the movie houses of Forty - Second Street with their «low budget mysticism of horror films,» to the mineral displays at the Museum of Natural History, and across town to the Met's Byzantine paintings and the «cold glass boxes» along Park Avenue.
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