Sentences with phrase «editing books by»

It's better to first get experience editing books by working with self - publishing authors.
She has edited a book by His Holiness the Dalai Lama and was expedition writer for Alexandra Cousteau's 2009 Expedition: Blue Planet.
For an insight into the deeper mysteries of copy - editing, get yourself a copy of The Frugal Editor by Carolyn Howard - Johnson or, if you're in a hurry, try Author's Quick Guide To Editing Your Book by Kristen Eckstein.
Editing tools edit a book by working with algorithms that flag potential issues in the text and suggest context - specific corrections for grammar, spelling, and vocabulary.
It's the kind of work editors used to do on the manuscripts they acquired: what Maxwell Perkins did when he edited a book by Hemingway or Fitzgerald.
He has also edited books by Philip - Lorca diCorcia, and Maurizio Cattelan.
They write books, edit books by outside authors, and in their spare time write online articles and blogs, develop legal forms, and create the legal content of Nolo software.

Not exact matches

(You'll find Goron's piece in a very good book called Ethics in Practice: Lawyers» Roles, Responsibilities, and Regulation, edited by Deborah L. Rhode.)
In an essay in Five Good Ideas: Practical Strategies for Non-Profit Success, a 2011 book edited by the Maytree Foundation's Alan Broadbent and Ratna Omidvar, Saul instructed his fellow non-profit leaders to «embrace your inner entrepreneur.»
A new book edited by the cultural historians Celeste Olalquiaga and Lisa Blackmore, «Downward Spiral: El Helicoide's Descent from Mall to Prison,» aims to bring its mysterious history to light.
This book by Doudna, who co-discovered the Crispr gene editing technology, and biochemist Sternberg «is a unique look at how Crispr is changing science.
There are actually electrodialysis plants around the world, according to Desalination: Trends and Technologies, a 2011 book edited by Michael Schorr, on desalination.
He is determined to work it out so he can get the book written and edited by the end of March.
Traditional publishing is a slog — find an agent, pitch a book and if it's picked up by a publisher, sign away the rights to your work, then spend years doing edits and waiting for the book to slot into a publishing schedule — and the majority of these people don't score a deal, because most entrepreneurs «aren't in a position to be commercially published,» says Sattersten.
A new book on the Canadian workplace — Work on Trial: Canadian Labour Law Struggles, edited by Judy Fudge and Eric Tucker — provides an engaging and accessible account of various labour battles in the courts over the past 85 years involving human rights, employment fairness and union recognition.
Here is the link to buy a new book, Canada After Harper, Â edited by Ed Finn and with an introduction by Ralph Nader, just published by Lorimer.
In 2003, I edited the revised edition of Benjamin Graham's classic text, The Intelligent Investor, which Warren Buffett has called «by far the best book about investing ever written.»
Best - sellers, classics and works offering new insights, these books are authored, co-authored or edited or co-edited by current Rotman faculty, and are currently in print and offered for sale.
Annotated and edited for a contemporary audience by Rich Dad, Poor Dad and Three Feet from Gold co-author Sharon Lechter, this book — now available in paper — is profound, powerful, resonant, and rich with insight.
The Bible is a book, and was «edited» by humans for the telling of a good «story», as with any «good book» there can be many (mis --RRB- interpretations of the text.
You say you obey god and not men, but I would be willing to wager that you use a book written, translated and edited by man to determine god's likes and dislikes
It's a collection of books written, assembled, edited and redacted by other people, FFS.
@bigred... the bible was written by MEN and edited and abridged by MEN who had / have an agenda to dominate and persecute others for their benefit... jesus and God had / have NOTHING to do with a book.
A book, written by greedy patriarchal elite, re-written, edited to fit the cultural norms of the day says so... so why not buy it hook, line, and sinker?
(By the way, a book written two thousand years ago, in a dead language, that got edited three hundred years after its parts were written, and also conflicts with itself, is not evidence... any more than Spiderman comics are evidence that there exists a man with Spidey senses).
I do reject the bible or any other religious books written by man, edited man, changed by man and interpreted (over and over) by man.
I'm so glad that, as a Muslim, I don't have to actually defend the so - called «Bible» which is actually a collection of books edited over and over again by many people.
The Oxford Illustrated History of Christianity edited by John McManners Oxford University Press, 724 pages, $ 45 This is a handsome book, and a weighty one, too, at over seven hundred glossy pages.
The Oxford Edition of the Works of Robert Burns, Volume I: Commonplace Books, Tour Journals, and Miscellaneous Prose edited by nigel n. leask oxford, 512 pages, $ 200
There is widespread agreement with the view presented in the article on homosexuality in Baker's Dictionary of Christian Ethics (edited by Carl F. Henry [Baker Book House, 1973]-RRB-, which declares that «those who base their faith on the OT and NT documents can not doubt that their strong prohibitions of homosexual behavior make homosexuality a direct transgression of God's law.»
All you have is a book that was cobbled together from old myths and edited by men who had a personal stake in what was included in that book.
This book is a collection of selected Middle Eastern folk histories eventually written down by people who lived well after the time of Jesus, and has been selectively edited since that time.
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).
I haven't mentioned Meanwhile There Are Letters: The Correspondence of Eudora Welty and Ross Macdonald, edited by Welty biographer Suzanne Marrs and Macdonald biographer Tom Nolan (the most touching collection of letters I've read in years), or the latest volume in The Complete Letters of Henry James, or Catherine Lampert's superb Frank Auerbach: Speaking and Painting (which the painter Bruce Herman will be writing about for Books & Culture), or James Curtis's fascinating and beautifully produced William Cameron Menzies: The Shape of Films to Come.
Finally, the books I'll be citing the most include Discovering Biblical Equality, edited by Ronald Pierce and Rebecca Grootuis, and Gordon Fee; Colossians Remixed by Brian Walsh and Sylvia Keesmat; and Man and Woman, One in Christ by Philip Barton Payne.
The present volume is really a collection of studies, and it might easily have grown to twice its size if other topics had been included: for example the miracle stories — I should have liked to examine Alan Richardson's new book on The Miracle - Stories of the Gospels (1942)-- or a fuller study of the so - called messianic consciousness of Jesus, the theory of interim ethics, the relation of eschatology and ethics in Jesus» teachings — see Professor Amos N. Wilder's book on the subject, Eschatology and Ethics in the Teaching of Jesus (1939)-- the influence of the Old Testament upon the earliest interpretation of the life of Jesus — see Professor David E. Adams» new book, Man of God (1941), and Professor E. W. K. Mould's The World - View of Jesus (1941)-- or sonic of the topics treated in the new volume of essays presented to Professor William Jackson Lowstuter, New Testament Studies (1942), edited by Professor Edwin Prince Booth.
in the newly published book Marriage, Health, and the Professions, edited by John Wall, Don Browning, William J. Doherty and Stephen Post.
The past two years have seen the appearance of an informative Encyclopedia of the American Constitution (4 vols., edited by Leonard W. Levy [Macmillan]-RRB-, several outstanding studies on its intellectual background (including Forrest McDonald's Novus Ordo Seculorum: The Intellectual Origins of the Constitution [University Press of Kansas] and Morton White's Philosophy, The Federalist, and the Constitution [Oxford University Press], at least one pathbreaking effort to trace the document's role through the years (Michael Kammen's A Machine That Would Go of Itself The Constitution in American Culture [Knopf]-RRB- and a gaggle of good books on its religious themes (see Martin Marty's review in The Century [«James Madison Revisited,» April 9.
These letters, along with more than twenty more, have been compiled in a book entitled Letters to a Future Church, edited by Chris Lewis and published by Intervarsity Press.
So in a post last week, I somewhat casually mentioned the fact the word «vagina» was being edited out of a draft of my new book, «A Year of Biblical Womanhood,» to be released by Thomas Nelson in October.
edited by Mahmoud Sadri and Ahmad Sadri Oxford University Press, 236 pp., $ 50 A book of the «essential writings of Abdolkarim Soroush,» an influential reformist academic in Iran who is sometimes called, in both praise and criticism, «the Martin Luther of Islam.»
edited by Steven M. Avella and Elizabeth McKeown Orbis, 375 pp., $ 50 A very useful book that brings together Catholic documents addressing issues of public life from the American founding to the present.
This summer will mark the release of a brand - new Tolkien book, The Fall of Gondolin, edited by the late author's son Christopher Tolkien.
If you know about it once, you know about it always, or you have to accept that your bible is just a book written by men that has been edited and modified throughout the centuries and has no real bearing.
If you're interested in contemporary / feminist midrash, don't miss The Five Books of Miriam: A Woman's Commentary on the Torah, edited by Ellen Frankel, which offers creative contemporary womens» response to Torah.
Austin, what you have is a book, written and edited by men who lived in a relatively primitive society with the agenda to promote the institution that gave them power.
Julian of Norwich's Showings: From Vision to Book By Denise Nawakowski Baker Princeton University Press, 215 pages, $ 29.95 Meister Eckhart and the Beguine Mystics Edited by Bernard McGinn Continuum, 166 pages, $ 19.95 The Growth of Mysticism: Gregory the Great Through the 12th Century By Bernard McGinn Crossroad, 630 pages, $ 49.50 Jewish and Christian Mysticism: An Introduction By Dan Cohn - Sherbok and Lavina Cohn - Sherbok Continuum, 186 pages, $ 22.50 Praying with Julian of Norwich By Ritmary Bradley Twenty - Third Publications, 184 pages, $ 12.By Denise Nawakowski Baker Princeton University Press, 215 pages, $ 29.95 Meister Eckhart and the Beguine Mystics Edited by Bernard McGinn Continuum, 166 pages, $ 19.95 The Growth of Mysticism: Gregory the Great Through the 12th Century By Bernard McGinn Crossroad, 630 pages, $ 49.50 Jewish and Christian Mysticism: An Introduction By Dan Cohn - Sherbok and Lavina Cohn - Sherbok Continuum, 186 pages, $ 22.50 Praying with Julian of Norwich By Ritmary Bradley Twenty - Third Publications, 184 pages, $ 12.by Bernard McGinn Continuum, 166 pages, $ 19.95 The Growth of Mysticism: Gregory the Great Through the 12th Century By Bernard McGinn Crossroad, 630 pages, $ 49.50 Jewish and Christian Mysticism: An Introduction By Dan Cohn - Sherbok and Lavina Cohn - Sherbok Continuum, 186 pages, $ 22.50 Praying with Julian of Norwich By Ritmary Bradley Twenty - Third Publications, 184 pages, $ 12.By Bernard McGinn Crossroad, 630 pages, $ 49.50 Jewish and Christian Mysticism: An Introduction By Dan Cohn - Sherbok and Lavina Cohn - Sherbok Continuum, 186 pages, $ 22.50 Praying with Julian of Norwich By Ritmary Bradley Twenty - Third Publications, 184 pages, $ 12.By Dan Cohn - Sherbok and Lavina Cohn - Sherbok Continuum, 186 pages, $ 22.50 Praying with Julian of Norwich By Ritmary Bradley Twenty - Third Publications, 184 pages, $ 12.By Ritmary Bradley Twenty - Third Publications, 184 pages, $ 12.95
An awareness of the dearth of serious theological reflection on children was the impetus for The Child in Christian Thought, a provocative and groundbreaking book edited by Marcia Bunge.
The complete correspondence will appear in the coming year in a book edited by the present author and Mark Y. Davies.
You crave punishment because it makes you feel somehow superior, or correct in your discovery of «God's Word» in a book which was written and edited and re-edited (as well as redacted) by countless rulers and scholars along the way, each wishing to have some stake in the claim of the Eternal.
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