Sentences with phrase «end reader like»

If you were already considering a high - end reader like the Kobo Aura One, I prefer the Voyage for Amazon's content ecosystem.

Not exact matches

They initially targeted urban millennial women, but the audience has grown to include a broader demographic (20 percent of Skimm readers are male), no doubt a reason why, when they closed their Series A funding at the end of last year, they raised more than $ 6.25 million from investors like RRE, Greycroft Partners, and Homebrew, as well as big names like Irving Azoff, the former chief executive of Ticketmaster, and even Chelsea Handler.
Email readers will need to come to the site to watch the video: And if you fascination with quantitative managers doesn't end there, we highly recommend checking out Scott Patterson's The Quants which focuses on the likes of Jim Simons (RenTec), Ken Griffin (Citadel), Cliff Asness (AQR) and more.
How about peter Cashmore of mashable, Markus fried of plenty of fish they are not hard core affiliate marketers they are just give their readers, helping them to learn something new, engage and meet new people like Markus is doing and the end result is they are the top adsense earners in the world making more than any other so - called pro bloggers in the world.
It's no secret to Dinner - Mom readers that a sweet ending is considered an essential part of a delicious dinner... at least by the majority at my house, especially at holidays... like Halloween.
At the end of the day, even though I get these occasional «dislikers» or upset people, for the most part I feel like I have truly wonderful readers.
We aren't sure who started it (as everyone is anonymous) but the majority of readers over there, even the one's who don't blog hop, don't like that is being said because nobody wants anyone injured season ending or in game ending.
(By the way, that's why I ask readers at the end of each post to consider «liking» the FB page — it really does offer «value added» content to the main blog.)
As one of those working on this project, I would like to set out the questions it is raising, put the call out for responses and invite readers to attend the two public debates we are holding after our evidence - gathering phase, which runs until the end of March.
For many readers it was like the end of childhood.
Neither he nor the reader knows how the coalition will end in May 2015, making this exercise rather like a theatre critic writing about an unfinished four - act play that he has only read and seen after just two acts and the intermission.
One of the features I like best about the book is that each chapter beings with an overview, which primes the reader for what's about to be covered, and ends with a comprehensive summary, which consolidates the information.
With that being said though, if any of my lovely blog readers swear by a certain * high end * mascara that you think I'll like, feel free to leave it in the comments below... see how easily I can be convinced here?
Here is what I am loving about your style (I just found your blog over the weekend, so I am a new reader): you consistently put together outfits that look like they are made with high end pieces, even though you have a mix of truly affordable pieces thrown in.
As a reader of a beauty & lifestyle blog you might already know, that by the end of a month we usually like to talk about the most used beauty products and why we loved them so much.
But here's the awesome part, if you feel like you need to get one of your very own, Lexi is offering a 25 % off coupon code for readers, through the end of the year that is!
I hope my readers like the end results!
It took every bone in my body not to top it off with blush pink accents in the end, especially because I knew readers and Pinners would probably like it more, but I stuck with my original goal, and an all - neutral living room I have!
In the end it is even less than a Reader's Digest - like synopsis as it simply skips over entire episodes and rather focuses on events from a handful of episodes from the beginning and end of the season in question.
Without having read the book, I would like to assume that there is some heart, back story, and drive in it that compels the reader to find out how it all ends.
So many news to share with you guys, to begin i want to thank my faithful readers to follow the site and the social media accounts (twitter and instagram), today the site celebrates its 11 years online, and it's because michelle's fan base gets bigger day by day and your support to the site that my interest is still here, i love michelle and her carrer in the same way since the begining, but her choices made me a bigger fan and picked my interest, i'm particulary fan of all her last movies, all her upcoming movies intrigues me, they're all so different and more my kind of movies, the last movie i saw in theaters was OZ, and my two favorite movies of Michelle are shutter Island and Me Without You (not very known, but if you find it, you should watch it, for the story, for Michelle, the music) so i look forward to see her in All The Money In The World (December 27 in france) and The Greatest Showman (End of January), so thank you for your visits, your nice comments, generally i always put a new design for the site's birthday but i didn't have the time, so when we will get a new photoshoot, i will change the design, i like this one very much, and again THANK YOU
I'm an impatient reader and like the sense of different perspectives talking to each other, so I end up reading chapters from different open books at the same time, rather than concentrating on one book at a time.
The story features multiple endings where the reader selects the one they like best.
If the reader feels like the post and the blogger have brought up a good point... PLEASE HOLD UP THE OTHER END OF THE CONVERSATION!
Haha with readers like us, you won't end up like one of those publications that don't know what they are talking about!
I do, simply because I don't like the book ending with the last page of the novel and there being no chance to thank the reader.
It's actually a great convenience for any reader to not have a back light, for the lack of a back light means there is no eye strain from staring at a lit up screen for hours on end, like there is on a computer.
I do know why he used so much violence because I believe he wanted the reader to get the feeling of what the violence was like at that time going on for days and weeks withno end to it.
Hornby treats the reader to some marvelously descriptive prose: «Consistency and repetition were beginning to make the lie feel something like the truth, in the way that a path eventually becomes a path, if enough people walk along it» and «Mumbled greetings were formed in his sons» throats and emitted with not quite enough force to reach him; they dropped somewhere on the floor at the end of the bed, left for the cleaners to sweep up» are just two examples.
That way you end up with something like «readers love Winston Pepperjack!
Sure, not everyone cares, and not everyone will like my stories, but I am still moving inch by crawling inch towards that end goal of being discovered by the many readers of the world.
An avid reader herself, Angela Quarles writes books she'd like to read — laugh - out - loud, smart, sexy romances that suck you into her worlds and won't let you go until you reach The End.
I suspect they'll end up just like all those portable digital music players that plugged in like keyfobs — they'll still sell, but the readers that allow a fully integrated content cycle (purchase, transfer, read) will be the ones that most people buy, because for most people, they just want to purchase books in a convenient manner and not worry about how they get onto the ebook reader.
Book strategists insist that the reason these books take off is because, in the case of fiction, readers sometimes just like that quick story, with an uncomplicated plot and a quick reward at the end.
I would like the reader to experience a page turner and at the end, there is more.
Many authors have spoken out on the superfluousness of having an agent take on roles that the indie author can easily fulfill; if ebook platforms like Kindle Direct Publishing were to ridiculously insist that they would only accept ebook submissions from literary agents, that would be the end of indie authors and agents would once again be almost a requirement for authors to put their works in front of readers.
I bought this reader this week - end and I have 28 days to give it back if I don't like it I've played with it and I can give some fair opinions about it.
Second, the book unraveled like a slowly and methodically, leaving me as the reader begging for more, with a knock down twist at the end that I didn't see coming.
Laura Purdie Salas writes verses about things like coming to the end of a book, falling asleep while reading and an avid reader begging for a sequel.
In other words, not a reader app like Stanza, but the end result would be an app that lived on the iPhone with its own icon that looks just like your lulu book cover.
I can't say too much here because it might give away the plot; Where There's A Will has a bit of a double - meaning which I hope readers will realise when they get to the end of the book, and I liked the idea of that which helped me to decide on it, but the other reason I chose the title is because my intention with the series is to use well - known phrases that have some meaning for the titles — the second book is An Eye For An Eye, which should give you some hint of what it's about.
As everyone has different requirements, likes and budgets so we will try to answer which e reader would be best for you and where to get that e reader at the best price in the end.
Quite the contrary, a surfeit of doomsayers saw in the arrival of eBooks and eBook readers — the sales of which dropped by eight million last year — the end of print or at least the demise of given literary forms, like the novel.
They'll make shifts and twists, like a good romance novel needs to do, but will they benefit the reader in the end?
However, it is not a book that all will appreciate - I'm thinking here of readers who like their books to end neatly with all plot elements tidied up and put away.
Like Stead's Newbery Medal - winning When You Reach Me, it will keep readers guessing until the end
Price the first book in your series for free to draw in readers who might end up liking the book and buying the rest in the series.
The reader is treated to a gauzy, dream - like rendering of their encounter, which involves a lengthy, post-coupling account of watching Sheringham dress for a late lunch date with his fiancé as Jane lounges languidly on the still damp bed sheets, aware that their own trysts will end with his marriage in two weeks:
I'm certainly no expert, but pirates typically won't pay for work anyway, so if your work is pirated it will end up in more reader hands than you would have managed alone, and if a reader likes your work they are likely to look for more of it.
Helen Rappaport's book is supported by meticulous research and numerous source documents; she recreates the historical period beautifully... The book excels in informing the reader of the world events, which led to this family's death and the all too momentous events which followed the end of the Romanov's and Russia's history... This is history that reads like an engrossing novel, and once you have made the acquaintance of the four Romonov sisters, you were never, ever forget them.
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