Not exact matches
This is the answer to the third question — what you say is
interesting and valuable to your audience and why someone
in your audience would want to
read this
book.
Even though it's probably a small audience, those who
read the
book will be very
interested in it.
Similar to the free
books in Prime
Reading, this Audible benefit unlocks free full - length audiobooks exclusive to Prime members as well as playlists handcrafted for every
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This is easily one of the most
interesting books I've
read in terms of why ideas «catch on.»
The best - selling
book about baseball stats is a must -
read for anyone
interested in corporate ethical performance.
Then don't force yourself to
read books you're not
interested in at that particular moment.
I
read books about the female brain, met with science and math elementary school teachers and nonprofit educators who were doing programs to get kids
interested in STEM.
The 35 - year - old has many
interests in life —
in high school he played every sport he could try out for, and at home, he'd watch every movie and
read every comic
book he came across — but his chief
interest is simply listening to his mind wander.
So they pulled out all the stops by experimenting with an
in - store cafe, free Wi - Fi, monthly
book swaps, a children's play area, entertainment, more than 200
in - store author
readings a year and community forums on topics of
interest to customers.
While
reading Dweck's best - selling
book, Mindset, I found it
interesting that the same person can have a growth mindset
in one area and a fixed mindset
in another.
If you
read an article, see a new
book, or hear about an organization that a customer might be
interested in, drop a note or make a quick call to let them know.
Let's say after
reading those
books (or not
reading them) you are still very much
interested in having an advisor help you.
Anyone
interested in running a company — high - tech or otherwise — needs to
read this
book.
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If you haven't
read it I would also be
interested in what you think of The Outsiders
book.
I remember
reading in the early 1990s for example a very
interesting book about the US «long depression» of the 1880s and 1890s that began with the September 1873 crash
in the NY Stock Exchange.
Back
in 2012 I finished
reading a very
interesting book called, «The Ivy Portfolio».
The
book is the first by a major publisher with its exposure and
interest to have a time - stamped digest recorded
in the...
Read more»
I started
reading books when my
interest in finance started, around the end of 2015.
I've
read two very
interesting books on this: Jeremy Siegel's
book, The Future for Investors, where his philosophy is
in line with yours.
If you have ever had
in any
interest in real estate, I highly recommend you
read this
book.
I have been following the slow and arduous acceptance of author Michael Fumento's central thesis presented
in his
book The Myth of Heterosexual AIDS and
in his series of articles
in The New Republic and
in Commentary with great
interest... So I was extremely pleased to
read your editorial position concerning AIDS.
After having
read some
books on Judaism, I decided I was not
interested in pursuing what he calls «the lifelong task of learning Torah.»
i
read something
interesting the other day
in Harvey Cox's new
book The Future of Faith.
For those
interested in Gregory's
book, the emergence of modernity, and the modern academy, Pfau's piece is well worth
reading.
If you're
interested in reading well written
books you might as well give it a shot.
The
books are published by the Oxford University Press as a direct response to something that has been worrying educationalists for some while - the fact that boys vastly outnumber girls
in illiteracy rates, and that many start secondary schools with very poor
reading skills and no apparent
interest in acquiring any.
Reading aloud to the children has been like gathering kindling daily — lighting children to
read books on their own, flaming their
interest in books they might have otherwise passed over.
Interest in oriental religion goes back
in America to the early 19th century, as we have seen, but never before have significant numbers of people gone beyond
reading books to become adepts and engage
in arduous practice.
i believe it is worded
in such a way that believers as well as unbelievers will have their
interest piqued to pick up the
book and
read it
in its entirety
in order to find out the answers.
They
read the
book, found typographical errors, and suggested hundreds of changes to help clarify the argument and ideas (If you are
interested in joining a future Beta Reader team, I will announce openings through the email newsletter).
I'll admit I did not
read the
book but was
interested in the responses of the readers.
In light of the
book I am working on, Close Your Church for Good, I was also
interested to
read Bock's views on church leadership and structure.
Unfortunately, it is Lowe's 1962
book that most
Interested people have
read, and his more confident disposition there tends to show up
in the secondary» literature now as definitive intellectual history.
This is the most important
book I've
read in years, and it will be the first I recommend to anyone
interested in bridging the divide between the LGBT community and the church.
But along with the praise, Wilson offers insights about the reasons these
books are powerful: Lewis's generosity toward the authors he discusses, the way he finds passages that make them seem
interesting; his sense of «wonder and enjoyment»
in all he
reads; his willingness to take up the great themes that engaged his authors, to put to work
in criticism his «creative intelligence.»
From Kacie: I've
read your
book and am very, very
interested in the Orthodox church.
Sounds like a
book I might be
interested in reading — the tradiitional roots of Christianity and the changes to the way «church is done»... I am down with the convo.
I studied religions
in college and still
read books about different religions because I think they are
interesting.
If anyone would be
interested in reading a good
book,
read CARIBBEAN by James Michener.
However, I am very
interested in learning more and so which of the above
books about Jesus or god that would be good for me to
read as I am being introduced to Christianity?
She is a bit vague here, but she puts forth some
interesting ideas about how the Emergent Church might come to operate using the basic principles of network theory and crowd sourcing... which is
interesting, but more detailed than I can handle
in a single post — so
read the
book!
Perhaps learning something about an
interest of your spouse or
reading a
book that both of you are
interested in might help.
I am not really too
interested in getting clients, but I do write and want to connect with a
reading audience, so I
read this
book.
Ultimately, Heiser's
book is a survey of the Bible from a supernatural perspective, and if you are
interested in understanding the spiritual real more deeply, this would be a good
book to
read.
The
book, and especially the introduction, should be required
reading for those
interested in this topic.
If you are
interested in understanding the spiritual real more deeply, this would be a good
book to
read.
I
read this
book, not primarily because I was
interested in finding out how the Jewish Rabbinic tradition developed, but to learn what I could about how the Christian scholarly / church tradition is developing.
The
book is somewhat difficult to
read in parts, and so I only recommend
reading it if you are
interested in learning more about what Tolkien though about time.
The nearest I ever came to engaging
in a deliberate act of civil disobedience was about a decade ago when I
read The Great Treasury Raid by Philip M. Stern.1 This
book tells how the tax laws of this country have been manipulated by wealthy people and huge corporations for their own
interests and to the disadvantage of the large majority of less privileged citizens.