I'm at the airport in Houston, waiting for my connecting flight back to Portland (after spending a few
days talking about book marketing in Cleveland).
Not exact matches
«The first few
days were to capture people's reactions and get people to start
talking about the
book.
In a recent interview for Knowledge@Wharton the co-founder of microlending site Kiva
talked about her new
book Clay Water Brick: Finding Inspiration from Entrepreneurs Who Do the Most with the Least and shared stories from the early
days of her paradigm - shifting startup.
The
book of Mark
talks about people like the Pope (and every
day hypocrites), Mark 7:6 - 8.
We're
talking about 10
Books a
Day for a Week.
Oh let's
talk about all the LIES the churches are spreading these
day shall we... hint... it's in this section and then pick up a history
book.
In my
day job as the editor of The Englewood Review of
Books, I've staked my life and work on the hope that reading carefully and well will undoubtedly transform us, reforming the ways that we think,
talk about and live within this wondrous web of life that is God's creation.
As many authors can attest, however, after a few months of
talking about your
book topic,
day after
day after
day, you get the writer's equivalent of the late - night giggles.
We will look at much of this imagery in a later post when we consider the violence in the
book of Revelation, but the imagery is only brought up here to show that when Jesus
talks about the flood in Matthew 24, He likens it to a similar form of world - wide judgment that falls upon the earth at the end of
days.
Celsus devotes a large chunk of his
book to
talking about the attacks made by the Jews of his
day on Jesus:
I was
talking to these churchmen
about apocalyptic and I did this liberal arts, comparative, secular review of the
Book of Daniel, the
Book of the Apocalypse, and he was wrong and these people and Montanus, they were wrong, on and on and on and on; four
days of listening to these wrong prophecies that described the history of Christian apocalypticism.
Every now and then I'd
talk about my dream of writing a
book about my experiences in Dayton, and one
day my husband Dan said, «Why don't you stop
talking about it and just do it?
There have been times when I've wondered if all the hours I'm pouring into this next
book, a
book about the Bible, will be relevant when all anyone's
talking about these
days is politics, but then I remember that this is the creative ground I've been called to cultivate, so I will trust my Maker with the yield.
And of course, popular author and speaker Eric Metaxas published a
book just last year that, in part, catalogues modern -
day miracles that happen around the world (And RELEVANT
talked with him
about it).
You're the second person in less than three
days I've heard
talk about this
book, and it's definitely on my amazon.com wishlist:) the scones look great, and i have some fig jam in the pantry that i made in the start of fig season.
Every sport
book today is computerized, Back in my
day money always moved the line if a player was respected, and if the squares tossed enough money on a game most
books would move the line a little, However the big
books would just sit and even take layoffs from the small stores, They knew even if the squares got hot in the end the juice would eat em up.Gone are the
days when Billy Walters and his crew would move the line 3 and 4 points, I'm
talking sides not totals, Forget
about what they did to the horseshoe with totals in the NBA, Back then you could catch small non computerized stores with bad lines to begin with, imagine a three point move and the small store or corner bookie is off on the line a few points to begin with, I could catch some game with 6 and seven point advantages, with computers today if you can catch a half or one point advantage your lucky.Even if you know the group moving the line most of these store move the lines on air, when I say air they just watch the screen from D.B. And move the line before they even get hit, Hell even the big stores have the sharps on small limits per call.
There has been much
talk about Arsene Wenger's woeful record against Jose Mourinho's Chelsea sides, despite both managers saying that games are won on the
day, not by the history
books.
I bought
books on mountaineering, and I spent one whole
day in Zurich trying to buy climbing shoes, but nobody knew what I was
talking about.
Hamilton later made another reference to a potential future
book in which he reveals everything: «I get excited
about the thought that, one
day, I can
talk about this year,» Hamilton said last week.
Either it's a big
day for the
books, which is reason to celebrate, or they get clobbered and decide to drown their collective sorrows and
talk about that 3rd and 7 that could have turned the whole
day around if that F!
In the early
days he cheered with me upon obtaining each new client, he listens when I need to
talk about a rough
day and he still wants to know when I am writing my
book (that is on the bucket list).
All the doctors
talked about in this article (and their
book about sleep) is how to get your baby to sleep longer, never once did they mention the important reasons why a baby wants and needs to breastfeed frequently both during the
day and at night.
Two
days after I had the pleasure of interviewing Paul Tough
about his thought - provoking new
book Helping Children Succeed, I gave a
talk about the explosion of new science showing us how listening changes the brain.
The other
day I was reading a
book about happiness and the author, Amit Sood, was
talking about making a gratitude inventory.
The great thing
about that
book is that it
talked about nap schedules and how to look for the signals in your children
about when they're tired and how to work that into their
days so that you can be flexible with what your child needs and that's really hard when you have three at the same time but it made us able to come up with a way to have a daily schedule that allowed for having naps and we were really strict
about you know, we have to do naps.
«Mrs. Q's Fed Up blog (that became a
book) had a premise: One picture, every
day, showing how awful her school lunch was; she posted the picture, and
talked about [the food].
I would say just
talk to them
about the potty read up on babycenter
about the different things to help the process along because even if they are not
talking that much they still may give off many non verbal clues of having to go potty.However if they are really not ready try potty training keep a onesie on in the
day time with their clothing and a blanket sleeper on at night that way they hopefully won't be able to get to the dirty diaper before you.My dd is 19 months as well and I have been training her sort of by letting her sit on the potty I have only let her use the one that goes on the big toilet but she peed in it once and she often will say she has to pee when in the bathroom but will sit and not do anything and get little pieces of tissue off the roll and push it into toilet this is her renditon of wiping even though the tissue does not really come in contact with any areas that need to be wiped I have slacked off on the training because she can not pull her pants up and down which is on the list of things kids need to be able to do to go by themseleves.Maybe just get them a few
books and videos and a potty chair and
talk to your dd's and see what happens you may be surpised.HTH
Our bedtime routine now (at 3.5 years) is: 7 pm - final play in the playroom with a five minute timer on my phone 7:05 - bathroom and pjs 7:10 - read a
book and
talk about our
day a bit, answer questions or concerns
about the next
day 7:20 — Facetime with both sets of grandparents 7:28 — final kisses, turning on the closet light and sound machine, tucking in her and her doll
Last Friday, seven
days before his departure from the White House, Obama sat down in the Oval Office and
talked about the indispensable role that
books have played during his presidency and throughout his life.
As Krauss's insightful
book shows, these
days we really can
talk with scientific rigour
about the history and even the prehistoric origins of our universe.
You may find yourself working in the vicinity of other people — the one who leaves the lab a mess, the one who
books the key piece of equipment for 3
days solid and then doesn't use it, the one who
talks too loudly
about inappropriate things in the communal office — but this isn't the same as working with other people.
Mark Anderson, author of the
book The
Day The World Discovered the Sun,
talks about the transit of Venus coming up on June 5th or 6th in different parts of the world and how it will be of use to astronomers searching for exoplanets
With a transit of Venus coming up on June 5th or 6th in different parts of the world, Mark Anderson, author of the
book The
Day The World Discovered the Sun,
talks about the great efforts to track the transits of Venus in the 1760s and the science they would produce
In part 1 of this special Darwin
Day podcast, celebrating the 200th anniversary of the birth of Darwin on February 12th, Richard Milner performs part of his one - man show
about Darwin; Scientific American Editor in Chief John Rennie and Darwin descendant Matthew Chapman read from The Origin of Species; and Chapman
talks about his
book 40
Days and 40 Nights,
about the Dover intelligent design trial as well as
about his efforts to get presidential candidates to discuss science — a project called ScienceDebate
In part 3 of this special Darwin
Day podcast, the Reverend Thomas Goodhue, executive director of the Long Island Council of Churches and author of the
book Curious Bones: Mary Anning and the Birth of Paleontology,
talks about Anning and how religion informed Darwin and the scientists who led to him.
A few
days later, [MIT climate scientist Kerry] Emanuel got a call from [House Science Committee Chair Lamar] Smith, who wanted to
talk about the
book.
In Amanda de Cadenet's new
book, It's Messy ($ 27, amazon.com), the host of the celebrity interview series The Conversation writes candidly
about her own life story, from her
days as a teenage
talk show host to becoming a mom at 19 to her high - profile marriage — and divorce, by the time she was 26.
Hello, in BLS
book, when you
talk about sets from 4 to 6 repetitions on
day 1 (for ex) and then you will do the same exercise on
day 4 or 5, but you recommend 8 to 10 repetitions, that would be with a lighter weight?
Most of the
books and articles I've read
about creating a morning routine
talk about «thinking
about what you need to get done that
day» and «spending 30 minutes of quiet time meditation» or even «follow the exact same routine at the same time each
day.»
Just four pages into our Cellulite
Book - of - the - Month (BOTM), the author already touched on several important cellulite subjects we could
talk about all
day.
Whether it's sex, reading a
book next to your partner, or taking half an hour to lie in bed and
talk about your
day together, give it a shot.
And also, on your recipe
day 2, step 4 — she said not to fold it that way on the «turn» (to be exact, she said «if somebody told you to do the «
book», they don't know what they're
talking about» lol).
It's so fun to go through old
books like that,
talking about the good old
days and the memories that come with it.
I'm
talking about begging my mom to take me to the library and then coming home with 6 or 7
books that I would finish within a few
days.
While reading the
book, they
talk about how your body functions on the food you eat and effects your energy levels and cravings through out the
day.
However, in between snowstorms, I had the opportunity to spend a few
days in New York City, where I appeared on NBC News to
talk about my new
book, The Rules of Netiquette: How to Mind Your Manners on the Web.
No matter what
book, movie, show, or game you're obsessed with, you got ta admit, if you're single, there's nothing better than meeting someone who has a similar, unique interest and who you can
talk to
about it for hours (or
days or weeks or months or years).
In her
book, The 30 -
Day Love Detox, Dr. Wendy Walsh warns against
talking about sex on a first date because,
We'll be
talking about dating during Valentine's
Day as well as learning
about relationship issues covered in his
book.
There's been a lot of
talk about comic
book movie fatigue these
days, but the people at Marvel Studios clearly aren't letting that affect their productivity, because just like fellow Disney - owned company Pixar, they've continued to deliver the same high - quality films as when they started.