• Reduced overheads and additional expenditures
by suggesting books container buying activities as opposed to single unit purchases.
The staff is happy to help guests shop for the perfect book, either by looking for a desired title or
by suggesting books based on other books guests have enjoyed in the past.
Not exact matches
«Read the
book, So Good They Can't Ignore You [
by Cal Newport],» he
suggested, «and understand how the skills you have built can offer career capital.»
The thing about meaning is that it's best conferred
by giving the topic personal relevance,» explains Page19, which
suggests that for each new
book you ask yourself what you hope to learn, how it might change your life, and why you should bother reading it.
And it was also several years ago that I
suggested you take a look at a
book on statistics written
by a University of Toronto math professor.
Author: Don E. Wilson, David Burnie Hardcover; 624 pages; color photographs Series: Smithsonian Institution Publisher: DK
Suggested Retail: $ 50 This is a giant reference
book of the world's wildlife put together
by the Smithsonian and a group of zoologists.
The concept of positioning was first introduced in the
book Positioning — The Battle for Your Mind
by Jack Trout, and we highly
suggest reading it if you're serious about building a successful eCommerce business.
This pattern, practiced
by modern superconnectors, unfolds exactly as Wharton professor Adam Grant's soon - to - be-released
book, Give and Take,
suggests: Helping others increases net productivity and success for both helper and helped.
Firms could do more to include women among their leadership, Krawcheck said, and she questioned an idea outlined in the bestselling
book by Facebook executive Sheryl Sandberg, «Lean In,» which
suggested women push harder to get ahead.
Reporting
suggests the company did just this in 2013,
by hiking prices on scholarly and small - press
books and creating the risk of a «two - tier system where some
books are priced beyond an audience's reach.»
«I might lose whatever credibility I have with readers if I
suggested flat out that a
book centered around the subject of oil, written
by an economist, was a page - turner, but I am willing to say with conviction that Why Your World Is About To Get A Whole Lot Smaller,
by former CIBC Chief Economist Jeff Rubin, is a fantastically compelling read.
A new
book by Nancy Van Dyken, «Everyday Narcissism: Yours, Mine and Ours,»
suggests...
My recollection is
by this point in the
book he'd had to substitute a proxy scaled market, and argue for the applicability of the measures over short time scales, so this
suggests to me a major re-jig of my portfolio would be premature.
The company has been sitting at a price /
book ratio just under 1 for a few weeks, but a recent pre-announcement by the company suggests that the current Price / Book is closer to.58, suggesting the company is underval
book ratio just under 1 for a few weeks, but a recent pre-announcement
by the company
suggests that the current Price /
Book is closer to.58, suggesting the company is underval
Book is closer to.58,
suggesting the company is undervalued.
Warren Buffett's
Book Recommendations: In 2001 Letter to Berkshire Hathaway Shareholders, Warren Buffett
suggested reading «The Warren Buffett CEO»
by Robert P. Miles to learn about many Berkshire operating managers.
... this
book suggests concrete investing strategies to make Congress's systemic dysfunction work for you, and to hedge the risk and damage that Congress so casually and relentlessly inflicts on your life savings as represented
by your portfolio and your house.»
i
suggest you read a
book upon thermodynamics, or biology, those are always nice, and also help the world
by finding cures to terminal diseases, but i appreciate how kindly you put your statement, but no thank you.
While we can and should continue to mature, I strongly
suggest that those who continue to believe in imaginary beings and tribal myths based on
books of magic / silliness written
by desert dwellers hundreds of years ago have the furthest journey.
In his new
book, «Searching for a Corporate Savior,» Rakesh Khurana of Harvard Business School
suggests that during the 1980's and 1990's, «managerial capitalism» - the world of the man in the gray flannel suit - was replaced
by «investor capitalism.»
Even
by the 16th century Martin Luther
suggested dropping the NT
books of James and Revelations because he felt that they posed challenges to his theological beliefs.
Following strategies
suggested by the
book After the Ball, homosexual lifestyles were mainstreamed.
Some are
suggesting a loose - leaf hymnal and
book of readings and services which would permit tailoring
by local churches.
This is
suggested by the explicit criticisms of Whitehead offered later in the
book.
Perhaps also this
book not only may throw light on the fundamental purposes
by which education should be directed, but may at the same time
suggest the outlines of a relevant and mature faith for modern man — a faith that grows directly out of the daily struggle to make responsible decisions.
He
suggested that I would find some of the answers to my questions in his 1994
book, The Costs of Living: How Market Freedom Erodes the Best Things in Life (Norton, 1994; reissued 2001
by Xlibris).
In his
book Third - Eye Theology (Orbis, 1979) he focuses on the image of the third eye in the teaching of the Japanese Zen master Daisetz Suzuki, who
suggests that the aim of Zen Buddhism is to open up a vision of life that is usually clouded
by our ignorance, a vision that will enable us to see ourselves as we truly are.
For those who are lost, and don't know what's the diff between Biblical Christianity and Roman Catholicism, may I
suggests 2
book that explains it, one is Far From Rome Near To God
by Richard Bennett and Martin Buckingham and second is The Gospel According to Rome
by James McCarthy.
Colson and Eckerd devote the bulk of their
book, the fourth part, to
suggesting ways in which the values
by which people choose to live can be transformed.
I don't know what your viewpoint is on someone being gay and a Christian, but let me
suggest that you read his
book before you talk about the «choice» Wesley Hill made to be gay (he didn't), or how his father was abusive or absent (he wasn't), or how Wesley should just «man up» and fall in love with a woman (he's tried), or get «cured»
by reading the Bible and praying more (he probably reads the Bible and prays more than you or I).
As part of this late exercise in autodidactism, they
suggested that I read various
books — some of which were subsequently acquired —
by formidable chess grandmasters including Nimzowitsch and Alekhine and others who left permanent stamps on the game.
Quentin I. Schultze
suggests that the title of the famous
book by David Stoll, Is Latin America Turning Protestant?
In the Introduction to his
book he mentions, «It will be
suggested in this
book that the founders of the Church were «East Syrian'traders, from the Persian Gulf area, and it will be apparent that a most important feature of its history is the succession of contacts with foreign Christians, drawn to the Malabar coast
by trade.»
I've posted it before but I
suggest Endless Forms Most Beautiful
By S. Carroll or ANY of his
books.
The myth of the divine consummation (found in
books like Revelation in the New Testament and
suggested by the picture of resurrection, as well as
by the «last things») is an assertion that the divine purpose can not fail, that God will take into the divine self what is achieved in the world, and that in some fashion, obviously beyond our imagining, God will be disclosed as all in all.
What escapes Mollenkott is the fact that the hermeneutical principle she enunciates does not
suggest dismissing a passage because of «the hardness of our hearts,» but rather reevaluating it with fresh, exacting, detailed research seeking a thread
by which the «
book hangs together.»
For those that struggle with this subject, I would
suggest reading the
book «The Great Gospel Deception»,
by David Servant.
I recognize the important contributions to the arts made
by organized religion - particularly Catholicism - and yet, to
suggest that people wouldn't have composed music or wrote
books w / o KJV?
In his recent
book, Life, Liberty, and the Defense of Dignity, he offers «four benefits» of mortality: interest and engagement,
suggesting that adding, say, twenty years to the human life span would not proportionately increase the pleasures of life; seriousness and aspiration, proposing that the knowledge that our life is limited is what leads us to take life seriously and passionately; beauty and love, presenting the idea that it is precisely their perishability that makes, for instance, flowers beautiful to us, just as the coming and going of spring makes that season all the more meaningful; and, finally, virtue and moral excellence,
by which he means the virtuous and noble deeds that mortality makes possible, including the sacrifice of our own life for a worthy cause.
I'd
suggest you read some of the
books written
by the American mythologist Joseph Campbell, particularly, «The Masks of God: Occidental Mythology».
As N.T. Wright
suggests in his
book «Surprised
by Hope,» the Apostle Paul certainly liked his metaphors, and might have benefited from such advice.
The idea of preparing the
book was
suggested by Umar and carried out
by Zaid Ibn Thabit, a Qur» an bearer who had attended the last recital of the Qur» an
by the Prophet and a man known for his intelligence, integrity, and competence.
So when physicist Lawrence Krauss begins his new
book by suggesting that to ask «Who created the creator?»
Why has a
book about Jesus (Zealot
by Reza Aslan) which
suggests he was nothing more than a rabble - rouser shot straight to the top of the bestseller charts...
The
books by Murray and the Schorrs are fairly representative of the current state of the discussion, the first pointing to numerous program failures and
suggesting the wastefulness and positive harm of government intervention overall; the second pointing to specific successes, and arguing for the necessity and feasibility of expanded government action building on them.
This project,
suggested to her
by Robert Bly, energized her own writing: «I know that if I had not worked so hard on Akhmatova,» Kenyon remarked, «I would never have experienced that surge of power» that resulted in the poems in her second
book, The Boat of Quiet Hours.
It also reprises some themes from Smith's earlier
books, including the case for postmodernism as an ally of Christianity rather than as a threat, and skepticism about the value of straightforward apologetics — with Taylor, he
suggests that the genre diminishes religion
by reducing it to just another «closed» set of propositions in an age that prizes storytelling and fluidity.
They think of passionate love, perhaps after the fashion
suggested by Dr. Anders Nygren in his well - known
book Agape and Eros, as selfish in desiring a response and damaging in its feeling - tones of high intensity.
I wonder if this isn't because Mission should be placed first, as
suggested by other
books on the market (e.g..
In the «31 million sex slaves» post, I
suggest you start
by reading a few
books.
Taking up where the
book on Wiltshire Church left off, this chapter
suggests ways
by which the congregation itself might, comprehending its own story, better understand its nature, circumstances, and mission.