She points me, for example, to an essay in The Guardian, What's
the definition of a great book?
If you think about it, that's the very
definition of a great book club read: a book that others want to talk about, debate about, and bond over.
Not exact matches
Definition of CULT 1: formal religious veneration: worship 2: a system
of religious beliefs and ritual; also: its body
of adherents 3: a religion regarded as unorthodox or spurious; also: its body
of adherents 4: a system for the cure
of disease based on dogma set forth by its promulgator 5a:
great devotion to a person, idea, object, movement, or work (as a film or
book); especially: such devotion regarded as a literary or intellectual fad b: the object
of such devotion c: a usually small group
of people characterized by such devotion
The potential rewards
of designing flat screens, suitable for devices as diverse as high
definition television and electronic
books, are so
great that in many countries flat screens are an issue
of national pride.
In the
book, we talk about a variety
of ways and we've studied a lot
of great teachers who support the acquisition
of vocabulary during the reading, whether it's through jotting a note or dropping in a
definition or doing a little bit
of practice during reading with a particular word.
This is a
great way
of releasing self - help or business seminars, recordings
of live presentations, audio dramas, and children's stories — especially if these are audio titles that aren't part
of the «traditional»
definition of audiobooks (i.e., a recording
of someone reading / performing the actual text
of a
book.)
What is the
definition of «a
great book» in your mind?
There's a lot in the Kindle that's
great however, like long pressing to see the
definition of a word you aren't familiar with, as well as a wide range
of parental options so that you can share with a child but keep your
books separate.
MY EXHIBITIONS are non-linear narratives, where the juxtaposition
of each image together tells a specific story, like Scott McCloud's
definition of comics in his
great book Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art (1994).