Sentences with phrase «books it works quite»

I'd never thought to apply this to my own books, but my books work quite well in a package deal.
For print books it works quite well.

Not exact matches

«Find a way to read around your schedule and your life situation,» says Foroux, who suggests you could read on the train, while waiting at the doctor's office, while breastfeeding your baby (I can personally testify you can get through quite a lot of books this way), or during breaks at work.
There are quite a few people out there who've said that A.I. is an existential threat: Stephen Hawking, astronomer Royal Martin Rees, who has written a book about it, and they share a common thread, in that: they don't work in A.I. themselves.
There's nothing quite like walking into a sales meeting and giving the client a book you wrote — especially when it's relevant to the work you're pitching.
... yeah suzy and others... I just happen to realize that when monkey devolving didn't quite work out on paper it all changed to single cells and from the slime off of the worlds garbage can and so on... I just happen to know more than you think... In another ten or twenty years the science books will all have a new teaching... the Bible has been around and hasn't changed one word in over two thousnad years..
Of course, you'd have to be a delusional fool to believe that either book is anything but the work of man, and thus, it really doesn't matter what it says or what emphasis / spin you put on certain aspects of it, even if you use words like «quite clear» to make yourself sound authoritative.
How to Be Here: A Guide to Creating a Life Worth Living by Rob Bell:: I deeply appreciate Rob Bell's work and usually enjoy his books quite a bit but this wasn't one of my favourites.
The Book of Joshua makes it clear that the Israelites get to the murderous work of genocide and become quite efficient at it: And all the cities of those kings, and all the kings of them, did Joshua take, and smote them with the edge of the sword, and he utterly destroyed them, as Moses the servant of the Lord commanded.
I just wan na say weather what proof you have or evidence every religion book, scriptures, and testamony might know how the world will end but does nt know cause if everybody knew what day it was going to happen they would do all the things that people are doing following this man like quiting jobs and all that because in the bible under «THE CALL TO READINESS «it says God or jesus does nt want you to worry about when the world will end but the do want you to keep busy and continue to work hard JUST LIKE GOD DID TO CREATE the world so i do nt think noone should buy into this and it shouldnt be advertised cause thats not what GOD or JESUS would want because when he rises unexpectedly key word unexpectedly his joy and his welcoming would be him nknowing that the creatures aka as us humans have been following his will and working hard!!!
Not only are graduate theological schools producing more theses and dissertations on Wesleyan subjects, but Methodist periodicals (Quarterly Review, Methodist History, Proceedings of the Wesley Historical Society) are increasingly printing their articles, and new publishing enterprises are emerging to take up their longer monographic works (among these are Zondervan's Francis Asbury Press imprint, Abingdon's Kingswood Books imprint, and Asbury Theological Seminary's new series in Pietist and Wesleyan Studies) These scholars are quite likely to be found in the Wesley Studies Working Group of the American Academy of Religion.
These books have been superseded, quite rightly, by much contemporary work.
I've done quite a lot of work on apologetics on both the book or Mormon and the Koran, and the Koran is easier to dismiss actually.
It's said quite clearly in the Book of James: «Faith without works is dead.»
An additional reason, though, is that the work has some flaws of presentation which, again unluckily, but also partly arising from inexperience (it was my first book), occur quite early and so might easily lead some to stop reading further.
But if this book can meaningfully be called a work of «theology,» then I am quite at a loss to imagine what a work of «atheism» would look like.
I've only had the book a couple of days and have been out at work most of the weekend, but have already made quite a few of the recipes.
I found the first book frustrating because most of the recipes were quite involved and used ingredients which weren't alway readily available, so I thought that this book with its Every Day title was going to be an easier way to cook healthy after work each day.
The working title is Simply Vibrant, which quite accurately describes what the book will be all about.
He's quite enamored with the new book Our White House (an amazing resource, by the way), and worked on his sketch of all of the presidents, stopping at Jimmy Carter when he ran out of room on the page.
The most precious item in my studio is probably a sketch book that I created in 2000 — work from this was used in a Scottish Higher exam paper and I've always been quite attached to it.
We have bought a few natural books on breastfeeding that our little 21 - month old loves to read... she's still nursing and doesn't quite understand that animals can get milk from their mommies too... but we're working on it:).
Not only have I tried her methods in the past and found them to be quite effective, but I found that some of her methods in her latest book were things I was already doing and have worked very well for us!
Every child learns differently, so this book didn't quite work for us.
And these are a great place to start because if you send a reluctant or struggling reader off to read something difficult while you work, you won't be instilling a love of booksquite the opposite.
Quite the contrary, it is the appropriate role of works of synthesis like Lomborgs book to clarify and place in understandable context the quantitative details that are in the references, not the other way around.
I might not work in a corporate office anymore, but after receiving quite a few requests for some corporate work wear outfits, I decided to film an autumn look book featuring ten different outfits that would work in a corporate setting (with or without tights).
Since the kids work on the breakfast table quite a bit, the gray DIY dresser holds all of their crafts, workbooks, coloring books, etc..
I've had the hardest time finding cardigans that work on my petite frame and while these are still quite long for me, the shoulders, arms and torso fit really well, so it's a win in my book.
Working out of the June Tomkins salon in Ballgunge Circular Road Kolkata, call well in advance to book an appointment as June is quite sought after and her schedule is quite often packed.
I'm a big fan of Stephen King's work, I've been since I was a teenager and I really enjoyed his book so I was quite happy to see that the story would become a TV show.
An adaptation of Bill Willingham's popular Fables comic book series has been in the works for quite some time now, but never really gained traction.
Fans of the Insurgent novel will notice quite a bit of differences between the book, but writer Veronica Roth believes the changes «really work» so I guess we should too.
This newly pieced together version of Clive Barker's own adaptation of his book Cabal, created from footage found on a VHS work print, the «Cabal Cut» of Nightbreed is not quite a «lost masterpiece» but it's interesting to see the painstaking work gone into restoring the film to what more closely resembles Barker's vision.
If you follow our Facebook or Twitter accounts, you're probably aware that we've had another book in the works for quite some time.
When we adapted the books, you would always have to leave out things that you hate leaving out because they didn't quite work within the structure of the storytelling for the movie, or the movie would just be far too long.
In Malcolm Gladwell's book Outliers, he investigates why those with the most intellectual or natural talent quite often don't achieve what their abilities promise them, and for the most part his conclusions come down to class, lower class children often aren't exposed to the information and guidance to succeed in this world, and are instilled with distrust of authority, and without the proper skills to work well alongside others.
The screenplay by Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber (based on the book by John Green), which does such solid work in presenting one character, falters quite a bit when it concentrates on the bond between Hazel and Augustus, which centers on an adventure in Amsterdam to speak with the reclusive author (Willem Dafoe) of Hazel's favorite book about what happens to the story's characters after its abrupt ending.
Starting off with a quite touching look back at Fred Gipson and his book, the documentary then moves on to the movie itself, spending most of the time with the actors as they reminisce about working with each other on set.
This second film is just as long as the first, though, and it doesn't quite finish the second book, which leaves a lot of leftover work for the third and final film of this series.
The dominant theme of this book (and much of her work) is educational equity and how to advance it, but these pages range far and wide, across state case studies, international comparisons, and quite a lot of research.
When we convened my group after the book — we are in the midst of convening a set of working groups on various baskets of possible solutions — we convened one on family structure, and we had people from different sorts of backgrounds, and actually liberals and conservatives in the group all agree this is a problem, but we don't quite know how to fix it.
I've been a big fan of Book Creator for quite some time and have even worked with them to create and host a series of webinars sharing best practices for the classroom.
My daughter has difficulty with some of her multiplication tables and your book has been quite helpful working through those final groups.
My guess is that this works quite well — for simple text - only books with few graphics, no tables, nor complex lists.
For recent books, where the publisher is working from a word processor file, I think it's quite reasonable that e-book editions aren't given their own complete word - by - word proofreading if the file has already been proofread for the paper edition of the book.
Seems like another published work is not quite as snobbish as the «writer» of said article: Merrium - Webster Dictionary's definition of an author is «a writer of a literary work such as a book».
Hawkins is hard at work on another book, although it is quite likely that touring for The Girl on the Train will be keeping her busy for the next several weeks — she'll be appearing at Nashville's own Parnassus Books on February 8.
«We were all working hard towards a different outcome, but the headwinds we have been facing for quite some time, including the rapidly changing book industry, eReader revolution, and turbulent economy, have brought us to where we are now.»
Before creating this challenge, I read a lot of books and did quite a bit of research on what works best for productive writers.
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