I actually researched this and learned he was so nervous
doing book events he would drag a writing friend to sit up front with him.
We work with a variety of education, charitable and literature organisations, and would love to hear from you if you're
doing book events that you think we could get involved with, or if you'd like to work with us in some other way.
Unless a book has incredible advance sales or the author is very well known (and many times not even then) bookstores are not going to contact an author to
do a book event.
So she asked about a deal; Tuesday night, she'd
do a book event.
Now I bet you thought I was going to suggest that Hemingway didn't have to show up and
do book events.
Take time to engage with readers —
do book events, talk about individuals you meet and how they've inspired and flattered you.
For the best social media person I know, or to book me to
do a book event, book club or to speak, contact Hal at
Not exact matches
I have a children's
book coming out next spring and I'm so nervous about
doing events with kids; kids aren't polite in the way that adults can be.
We meet fans at
book signing
events, and they'll come up to Yo and say, «I want to be a YouTuber when I grow up,» and it's like, «OK, but
doing what?
As your business grows so
does your address
book, your LinkedIn profile, your networking
event invitation list and your lack of free time!
Many people who use their knowledge for consulting business ideas work from the comfort of their homes and diversify later on, if they so choose, by selling
books, attending speaking
events, holding online courses, and even
doing podcasts.
Grondin has
done substantial archival work to settle what the
book's jacket calls «the facts of Gadamer's life»: upbringing, schooling, teachers, degrees, appointments, major publications, and other signal
events (Gadamer's early illness, his two marriages, his arrest by East German police).
KPFA Radio in Berkeley said they «had
booked this
event based entirely on his excellent new
book on science, when we didn't know he had offended and hurt - in his tweets and other comments on Islam, so many people.
While I
do not consider myself an expert on all the religious writings of all of the main religions in the world, I have read most of the main religious texts for most of the main world religions, and while it is not uncommon to find violent
events being described in these other religious
books, no other set of religious writings comes even close to describing the violence and bloodshed that one finds within the pages of the Hebrew Scriptures.
Although the press kit
does not mention it, an excellent
book on the
events that served as the basis for Moore's novel was published in 1996: Memory, the Holocaust, and French Justice: The Bousquet and Touvier Affairs, edited by Richard J. Golsan (University Press of New England).
Here is what I
did take away from the
book, which I think is a valuable insight: The Book of Revelation is not just a prediction about future events which will happen during the Tribulation and Millennium, and therefore, has little - to - no impact on our lives to
book, which I think is a valuable insight: The
Book of Revelation is not just a prediction about future events which will happen during the Tribulation and Millennium, and therefore, has little - to - no impact on our lives to
Book of Revelation is not just a prediction about future
events which will happen during the Tribulation and Millennium, and therefore, has little - to - no impact on our lives today.
Even if we accept the highly questionable proposition that the Big Bang had to have some intelligent designer behind it, how
do we get from there to the Bible, a
book written by ignorant men on one planet 13,400,000,000 years after the
event?
In their view,
books stressing contingency «offer a way forward, beyond the «old political history» and the new «social and cultural history» by a reunion of process and
event,» In other words, what Individual people
did — perhaps especially people who filled leading public posts — may be as genuinely significant as the ordinary forces acting upon ordinary people.
The first part of the
book is about transforming the practice of baptism and the Lord's supper to something that more accurately reflects the symbolism and significance of these
events when they were first
done by Jesus.
Tom, your «Truth» comes from a collection of
books written by people who didn't personally witness the
events they wrote about, not to mention claimed to be fact by the very people who wrote it.
Last time I checked, God didn't really need corporate sponsors like Amway, nationwide insurance, and the
books, DVD's, CD's, clothing, jewelry, an other products being hawked by the speakers at these
events.
And the
book certainly
does offer some fascinating insights - what it is like to be on duty at the Vatican over Christmas, to be guarding the Pope when he is at his prayers, to be in attendance at one of the great
events that are televised worldwide.
So in an attempt to figure out what God might be trying to
do in my own life, I have been
doing a lot of thinking about the
book of Job, and the
events it describes.
First, I
do believe that the
events described in the
book of Job truly
did happen in history.
Arguments based on your version of a
book compiled from dozens of sources hundreds of years after the
events they claim to relate and for many parts of which contradictory evidence is a «plenty (No historical evidence whatsoever of an Exodus, for example plus we now know the Egyptians
did not use a slave - based economy for construction as one example.
By focusing on what I didn't have (more speaking
events, more
books sold, more dollars raised) I missed a chance to be faithful with what was in front of me.
This is true, not because it contains, as it
does, more exalted religious ideas than any other
book, or expresses them better (this would be an explanation of the Bible's superiority, not of its uniqueness), but because it stands in a unique relation to some unique and supremely significant
events.
While I have no expertise on the Crusades and the Inquisition, I
do know something of Jim Crow, having devoted two years in archives and written a
book about an
event that took place at the center of a Jim Crow time and place.
but thats not what i'm talking about... i am discussing the god you claim to worship... even if you believe jesus was god on earth it doesn't matter for if you take what he had to say as law then you should take with equal fervor words and commands given from god itself... it stands as logical to
do this and i am confused since most only
do what jesus said... the dude was only here for 30 years and god has been here for the whole time — he has added, taken away, and revised everything he has set previous to jesus and after his death... thru the prophets — i base my argument on the
book itself, so if you have a counter argument i believe you haven't a full understanding of the
book — and that would be my overall point... belief without full understanding of or consideration to real life or consequences for the hereafter is equal to a childs belief in santa which is why we atheists feel it is an equal comparision... and santa is clearly a bs story... based on real
events from a real historical person but not a magical being by any means!
Our Prayer
Book says it all, yet how many of us have failed to
do what the Prayer
Book plainly intends — to make this Table and its service, rather than a clerically intended service like Morning Prayer, the chief
event of every Sunday, in order that the people of Christ may be incorporated into Him, find there the strength for life, be taught there the meaning of life, and be sent forth to conform life to the pattern there displayed.
Furthermore, «predictions» in any ancient
book are worthless unless they can name SPECIFIC future
events, names, scores at sporting
events, when to sell or buy stocks, etc., which your worthless tome of a bible certainly
DOES NOT!!!
It is hardly necessary to state here what process thought has to say; and, in any
event, I can refer those who
do not know about it to a recent small
book of my own, entitled Process Thought and Christian Faith (Macmillan, New York, and Nisbet, London, 1968), in which I attempted to give a brief sketch of that conceptuality with special reference to its availability for the enterprise of Christian re-conception.
What the
book does is it helps the reader think of large, and sudden moves in the economy in terms of monetary and banking policy and helps correct for narratives of economic
events that tend to overwhelmingly focus on questions of taxation, spending and labor regulation.
In any
event, and with all respect to a distinguished scholar - cardinal who has been kind enough to praise my own work on John Paul II and from whose
books I have profited over the years, it
does seem to me that Cardinal Kasper's analogy between his proposal on Holy Communion for the divorced and civilly remarried, and the development of Catholic self - understanding that led to Vatican II's affirmation of religious freedom, just doesn't work.
It seems to me that there is an interesting relationship between Reality and Authority expressed in umpiring - is the ump a
book - keeper, simply recording what already exists, or
does he frame the
events to create reality?
A restless maverick driven from place to place by his determination to be part of whatever God was
doing in the world, Bartleman singlehandedly turned the Azusa Street revival into a literary
event of global magnitude by chronicling his impressions and assigning them meaning in a widely circulated
book, How Pentecost Came to Los Angeles.
Do you believe all the supernatural assertions in that
book (the Koran) just because some guy in the 600's wrote down a story of super-natural
events?
In the
event assurances reached Luther through Spalatin, and he
did not send the
book to a printer.
In any
event, my brother
did not publish the
book in print, but an acquaintance prevailed upon him to make a Kindle edition available, and so — if you care to — you can see what I mean for yourself.
I'm reading a
book right now called To Be Told by Dan Allender and it has really helped me view my life as a coherent whole that is going someplace (I don't exactly know where) rather than just a string of
events while I'm in a holding pattern for heaven.
For myself, I
do believe that there was a man named Job, and that the
events described in this
book did happen to him.
The lunch and dinner
events have now sold out but I'm also
doing a talk, Q&A and
book signing in the afternoon of Saturday 30th September at 4 pm.
I'm also
doing a
book signing tonight at Barnes and Noble in Tribeca and I'm excited to meet some of you then — the details for the
event are here if you want to come.
I am the culinary director at
Book Larder in Seattle, and we are very excited to
do an
event with you on your tour.
That said, I was recently at a
book event at a store and the second the author opened up the floor to questions, someone said «I made xyz recipe and it didn't come out!»
I don't think I'm going to
do a traditional
book tour, but I'll definitely be
doing a couple signings,
events.
However, we have definitely addressed the
book supply issue (I will admit to having my first Author Hissy of the tour over it) and it should not be happening at future
events (nor
did it at the last 4).
It was the very first
book event I've
done and they had no idea what they needed, and clearly didn't order enough.
The original purpose for going to Austin was for Vida Vegan Con 2015, but we wanted to get in a little early to
do a
book signing
event at BookPeople and spend some time hanging out in this city I'd heard so much about.
I've been dying to share this recipe with you all summer, but due to a hectic freelance schedule, obligatory summer
events,
book work and house stuff, I didn't get around to final testing until now.