Sentences with phrase «by the little book»

Readers familiar with Leithart's lively pieces in these pages will not be disappointed by this little book.
He's written The Little Book of Hygge followed by The Little Book of Lykke (today's focus).
And most importantly, all along this process, you will be mentored by an Our Little Books Publishing Consultant so you don't feel like you are doing this alone!
I'm starting to become fascinated by the little book - like but useless things software designers are putting in to make book readers feel comfortable.
Of course it was nice when Life On Purpose was an award winning finalist in the Self - Help: Motivational division of the Best Books 2007 Awards sponsored by USA News being beaten out by a little book entitled The Secret.
In the 1970s and «80s she became part of the L = A = N = G = U = A = G = E movement and began her most well - known series, The Clairvoyant Journals (1974), followed by Little Books / Indians (Written 1977 - 80); Nijole's House (1980); Spoke (1981); Sixteen (1982); Written In / The Zero One (1984); Weeks (1986); Silent Teachers / Remembered Sequel (1989 - 91); Page (1990); and We Speak Silent (1993 - 4).

Not exact matches

Bill Palmer of Commercial Casework leads employees through a little book called The Yo - Yo Company, published by Springfield Remanufacturing Corp. (800 - FUN2PLAY).
When President Trump has his physical exam on Friday, there is little chance he will repeat the same story within a span of 10 minutes or fail to recognize old friends, as the explosive new book «Fire and Fury» by Michael Wolff asserts he has done in the past.
«Boeing's book of business wasn't hurt by a little wage inflation or modestly rising interest rates or margin calls in the financial markets.»
«In The Little Book of Behavioral Investing, expert James Montier takes you through some of the most important behavioral challenges faced by investors.
One of Shahid's first tasks was getting Malala's story told in a book, called I Am Malala: The Girl Who Stood Up for Education and Was Shot by the Taliban (Little, Brown and Company, 2013).
A little - known reservations and booking system used by more than 120 airlines is delaying flights at airports worldwide.
This burst of candor may strike the reader as disarming or annoying, but either way, by the standards of the countless books that offer business or self - help advice, it's startling: The whole premise of such titles is that you know very little, and whatever you think you know is dead wrong.
According to 2009's «The Little Book of Curses and Maledictions for Everyday Use,» by Dawn Rae Downton, the actor who played Superman as an infant in the 1978 film, Lee Quigley, died at age 14 from inhalant abuse.
«If Deadpool's campaign was an off - the - wall, over-the-top cross-platform marketing bonanza, Batman v Superman's is a by - the - book, cover - all - bases exercise that feels a little... rote,» observes a recent story in Wired.
Lots of little gems in this book, including the fact that a spouse must be married at least nine months before being eligible for survivor benefits (unless the death is ruled «accidental» by a faceless panel of S.S. bureaucrats).
This 236 - page book, published this year by John Wiley & Sons, demonstrates that Green values, strong ethics, and a cooperative philosophy are cornerstones of success, and provides a roadmap on how to not only run your business in alignment with these values, but how to creatively harness the marketing advantages of that stanceoften in ways that cost little or nothing to implement.
In order to stimulate the creation of a series of Canadian venture investment funds, at little cost to government, CATA proposes that the federal government borrow a page from the Israeli play book, with the structure proposed by VC expert Stephen Hurwitz6.
This incredibly simple site seen little focus from the owners in the past few years and generates a healthy profit by referring users to book ferry trips.
Liquidspace, for example, lets mobile workers book free and for - fee space by the hour, with little or no advance warning.
See also «The Little Book That Makes You Rich: A Proven Market - Beating Formula for Growth Investing (Chapter - by - Chapter Review)» for a review of Louis Navellier's 2007 bBook That Makes You Rich: A Proven Market - Beating Formula for Growth Investing (Chapter - by - Chapter Review)» for a review of Louis Navellier's 2007 bookbook.
Years back, I was amazed at the claim made by Joel Greenblatt's book The Little Book That Still Beats the Market [Emphasis Mine] Can you spare three hours to learn how to beat the marbook The Little Book That Still Beats the Market [Emphasis Mine] Can you spare three hours to learn how to beat the marBook That Still Beats the Market [Emphasis Mine] Can you spare three hours to learn how to beat the market?
The bank's overall results are boosted by trading / asset management, which is half of the bank, but precious little vigorish is coming from the loan book.
And by the way, I've never read a single book by Dawkins you stupid little fuck.
I've also just read an unintentionally (perhaps) a little bit funny blog by Rod Dreher wondering why his (really, really profound and beautiful) Ruthie book hasn't been picked up by Walmart or embraced by evangelicals....
By your OWN little book of fairy tales, your «god» is the most power hungry of all.
This classic Catholic outlook is clearly voiced by Chesterton in his splendid little book on Thomas Aquinas, wittily entitled The Dumb Ox.
In a book called «On the Road to Civilisation, A World History» (Philadelphia 1937) it said, «Early Christianity was little understood and was regarded with little favour by those who ruled the pagan world... Christians refused to share certain duties of Roman Citizens... they would not hold political office.»
A good occasion for reexamining the religion and politics of left and right is offered by Richard Rorty's recent little book, Achieving Our Country: Leftist Thought in Twentieth - Century America (Harvard University Press).
One of the sources that helped me discover the humor of Jesus is a little book by Elton Trueblood called The Humor of Christ.
I know very little of Tony Jones — I was vaguely aware of the divorce from internet reports — but I have read books by at least one other EV leader, and had some admiration for them.
Whether it's Daniel's bizarre dream of the winged beast and a prince named Michael who «goes by the Book,» or Mark's «Little Apocalypse,» written after a generation of suffering and perhaps over the rubble of the temple, predictions of the end times and the second coming demand a soul - searching kind of honesty.
I have been reading a little book recently published under the title The Three Ages, by Dr Glyn Daniel.
I suspected I'd get a little pushback from fellow Christians who hold a complementarian perspective on gender, (a position that requires women to submit to male leadership in the home and church, and often appeals to «biblical womanhood» for support), but I had hoped — perhaps naively — that the book would generate a vigorous, healthy debate about things like the Greco Roman household codes found in the epistles of Peter and Paul, about the meaning of the Hebrew word ezer or the Greek word for deacon, about the Paul's line of argumentation in 1 Timothy 2 and 1 Corinthians 11, about our hermeneutical presuppositions and how they are influenced by our own culture, and about what we really mean when we talk about «biblical womanhood» — all issues I address quite seriously in the book, but which have yet to be engaged by complementarian critics.
Our «early traditions about Jesus» (to use the title of a little book by the late Professor Bethune - Baker) are not interested so much in what has been called the «biographical Jesus» as they are concerned with what Jesus did and said as he was remembered by those who believed him to be their Lord, the Risen Messiah, and who were therefore anxious to hand on to others what was remembered about him.
Thanks especially to the critical study of Dr. C. Harold Dodd, as summed up in his notable little book The Apostolic Preaching, we have become familiar with the word kerygma, Greek for «the proclamation»; and taught by Dr. Dodd and those who have followed the line of enquiry which he laid down, we have come to see that this kerygma was the very heart of the earliest Christianity.
Joy: I want to tap into that ever - present source of infinite joy by stopping long enough to find it in the little things — the bird's next in my carport, the Book of Common Prayer, long talks with good friends, the sound of Dan breathing (but not snoring!)
This book is clearly written and with a little effort could be followed by a non-specialist.
Paul Griffiths's sneering review of our book, By Man Shall His Blood Be Shed («Against Capital Punishment,» December 2017), illustrates how much bile — and how little charity — is often to be found in those who speak the loudest of mercy and humanity.
Quirky and perhaps at times a little meandering, it is as though we have joined him in his sitting room and, as he thinks out loud, generously sharing a lifetime of penetrating, logical reflection, he illustrates what he has to say by gesturing to books on the table, pictures on the wall, activities going on outside the window.
When I was a little girl, I vowed to see my first book in print by the age of 10.
All those hours spent reading by dim firelight the same book over and over (the way little children still like to be read to) were to contribute to Lincoln's being the foremost master of prose among our Presidents.
Harriet Beecher Stowe sat in a little church in Brunswick, Maine, and deeply moved by the communion service envisioned the death of Uncle Tom and went out to write her influential book.
Sources of the Self: The Making of the Modern Identity by charles taylor harvard university press, 601 pages, $ 29.95 To describe Sources of the Self as a learned book would be a little like describing Michael Jordan as a skilled basketball player: accurate, but hardly adequate to the....
By following your little book so blindly, you are simply showing how gullible you really are, and unable to think for yourself.
I had first read this little book a year earlier, and remembered being deeply moved by Wolterstorff's reflections on the tragic death of his son Eric.
JDJ, «Smart» isn't learning science from your preacher, or from a book written thousands of years ago by men who know relatively little about the natural world.
The Bible is a book of lies, written by charlatans with an agenda, and it has been used for centuries as a means to oppress innocent people, ratinoalize bigotry, justify wars, and as a hiding place for false prophets who bugger little boys and defraud little old ladies.
Even if those little copper books that have been in the news lately turn out to have something inscribed by the hand of Paul or Peter or John that warns the church to have no buildings, I doubt most groups would leave their buildings.
Years ago Lisa and I read an excellent little book called Codependency No More by Melody Beattie.
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