Sentences with phrase «even writes all of her books»

She always uses fountain pens (except in banking or legal documents) and even writes all of her books longhand with pen and ink.

Not exact matches

«For years, I've been saying Steven Pinker's The Better Angels of Our Nature was the best book I'd read in a decade,» writes Gates, who is clearly a long - time Pinker fan, but he continues, «his new book, Enlightenment Now, is even better.»
The idea of a paperless office seemed like a joke, and there was even a book written about it, «The Myth of the Paperless Office,» which theorized that certain human characteristics made going paperless an impossible feat.
(She even wrote a bestselling book on the subject: 2009's The Whuffie Factor: Using the Power of Social Networks to Build Your Business.)
The brother and sister writing team of Kathryn and Ross Petras have even written a book on this topic called You're Saying It Wrong.
Book review: Need, Speed, Greed: «Thanks to the globalization and Googlization of the world economy,» writes Economist correspondent Vaitheeswaran, «clever ideas from every corner of the world now have the chance to be taken seriously — even if they come from people without fancy credentials.»
Buffett has said the best investment he ever made was not a stock or a bond or even in real estate, but buying a copy of The Intelligent Investor, a book written by Benjamin Graham.
Even more impressive is the fact that this is the first ever book that takes a case - based approach to entrepreneurship written by, for, and with insights from some of the most successful entrepreneurs in the world.
He gave himself a comic - book type persona, embraced his crimes, even wrote a book about his exploits called «Secrets of a Superthief.»
To beat roulette, Thorp invented new applications of probability theory and even wrote best - selling book Beat the Dealer — the first book to mathematically prove that the house advantage in blackjack could be overcome by card counting.
We even wrote a best - selling book on the topic of platform digital transformation, Modern Monopolies.
In fact, he even wrote a book of the same title: The Behavior Gap: Simple Ways to Stop Doing Dump Things With Money.
Lowenstein also wrote a book I like even better — one of my all - time favorite business books: When Genius Failed, which was the story of the LTCM collapse.
I once found a old book that said gay marriage was good for the soul, it had a lot of outdated infromation in it and im not even sure who wrote it.
The bible is no different that any other bunch of books written by man and even excludes the writings that didn't sell at the time.
In an earlier writing Milosz had shown himself to be aware that this was the key insight of Job, even if, in the poet's version of the story, God says things that are rather more severe than anything to be found in the book of Job.
People of all ages in every country in the world can recite the entire book exactly the way it is written without even looking at it.
You really need to look up the definition of statistics because you have no idea what that even means, 2nd it's not a statistic it's a fact, in 2600 BCE The book of the dead was written and on chapter 125 7 of the commandments were written before Christianity was every thought up.
At Psalms 139, the man David was inspired to write that «your (God's) eyes saw even the embryo (comprising 56 days) of me, and in your book all its (the human body) parts were down in writing (our DNA), as regards the days when they were not formed (before becoming a fetus), and there was not yet one (complete organ) among them.»
Seems that maybe there was also a lot of translation that occured before the books even took written form, as these tribes had traditions of passing on information orally, before writing and scribing started to take hold.
Or how was a man named David, a simple shepherd at one time some 3,000 years ago, able to specify that we are formed by means of a set of detailed instruction within our DNA, that makes each of us unique, saying: «Your (God's) eyes saw even the embryo (up through 56 days after conception) of me, and in your book (the instructions in DNA) all its parts were down in writing, as regards the days when they were formed and there was not yet one (organ) among them»?
And it's unlike any other book I've ever written, for in addition to the memoir, it includes original poetry, short stories, soliloquies, and even a short screenplay — all aimed at capturing the wonder and beauty of Scripture, while honoring the best in biblical scholarship and acknowledging the challenges of its most difficult passages.
Even a book written by Wendy Doniger, could not rankle a Hindu, that book went on to be published successfully without any kind of opposition.
St. John at the end of his Gospel, remembering perhaps the third verse of his first chapter, makes a charming acknowledgment of this necessary incompleteness: «And there are also many other things which Jesus did, the which, if they should be written everyone, I suppose that even the world itself could not contain the books that should be written
Physics and chemistry can not completely explain the activity of writing a book, even in principle.
Since Deane - Drummond writes thematically, it is possible to follow this book even if it is read in a series of short sittings.
I know I didn't blog much this year — most of my energy has gone into book writing, preaching, and even my e-newsletter.
Even as early as his 1845 Essay on the Development of Doctrine, written while he was still an Anglican but already more than halfway out the door (he became a Catholic while the book was still in the printery), he was defending the idea of infallibility, and precisely as a bulwark against infidelity in all its forms:
Your eyes did see my unformed substance; And in your book they were all written, Even the days that were ordained for me, When as yet there was none of them.
So also, even if someone whose name is written in the Book of Life fails to overcome, this does not mean that their name will get blotted out of the Book of Life.
If a new generation is convinced that the publisher of religious books or journals expects them to hold to the style of their predecessors, they may be even more prone to resist the troubling urge to write.
Moreover — and if this does not confirm my bona fides nothing will — I am even now writing a book called The Gospel of the Trees.
When I wrote Blessed Rage for Order, I did state that even if the arguments for the public character of fundamental theology in that book were sound, those arguments could not determine the distinctive form of publicness proper to systematic theology or that proper to practical theology.
I've never heard of N.T. Wright and maybe he's a quality guy, but it's so typical of scholars to write books containing hundreds or even thousands of pages about a topic the God covered in five to ten chapters.
If every one of them were written down, I suppose that even the whole world would not have room for the books that would be written
There were books in use at the time which instructed letter writers in the art of writing letters, even down to suggestions for which words to use in your letter.
Claiming authority primarily as a «historian,» Lindsell adduces a string of quotations to support his position and then devotes the larger and more controversial part of his book to detailing the supposedly modern declension from this stance in the Lutheran Church — Missouri Synod, among the Southern Baptists, at Fuller Theological Seminary, in the Evangelical Covenant Church, and even among the members of the ETS (the Evangelical Theological Society, whose members are required to subscribe annually to a single statement — that «the Bible alone, and the Bible in its entirety, is the Word of God written, and therefore inerrant in the autographs»).
Even today, feminist students will occasionally accuse me of «male scholarship» because my book In Memory of Her is full of footnotes and written in a «logical - linear» style.
Makes much more sense to believe a book written 1850 years ago by a bunch of goat herders that thought the world was flat and didn't even have the sense not to use their drinking water as the toilet.
Even when I wrote my doctoral dissertation on Buber in 1950, few had heard of him and few of his books were published here.
Though most of what Wright explains in this book he has written elsewhere, this book puts it all together in nice, orderly fashion, so that even if one does not agree with Wright, we can hope that they will now be able to critique his view with understanding.
God defined marriage, eh??? — Well... even if you believe iin the imaginary being... the «Bible» was written by men over many years... in some cases we aren't really sure who even wrote the books that were chosen to be in it (there were a bunch of writings not included)...
All these features are characteristic of the writing of books of revelation and do not require explaining by means of theories of various sources or even of various documents.
One example of the evidence for the Indian apostolate of Thomas is Didascalia Apostolorum (Teaching of the Apostles), a book probably written around AD 250, which says, «India and all its countries and those bordering on it, even to the farthest sea, received the Apostle's Hand of the Priesthood from Judas Thomas, who was Guide and Ruler in the church which he built and ministered there.»
Instead he wrote a book for lay people in which he was much more relaxed and, without criticizing (or even mentioning) his work in Principia Mathematica, laid an empirical foundation for his monumental metaphysical work of Process and Reality.
Despite the withering contempt of experts and allies alike — even the architectural critic Lewis Mumford, letting his unfortunate susceptibility to vanity get the better of him, could not resist dismissing Death and Life as a «preposterous mass of historic misinformation and contemporary misinterpretation» assembled by «a sloppy novice» — this unaccredited journalist - mother, with no college education, no training in planning, and no institutional support, wrote a book that would change the way the world thinks about cities.
In the preface to his five books on The Interpretation of the Oracles of the Lord, Papias referred to «the living and abiding voice» of tradition, which he even preferred to written records.
However, when we look at the book of Ezra — which takes place approximately a thousand years after God spoke to Moses, hundreds of years after many of the Psalms were written, and 400 years before Jesus Christ was born — we see that Zahnd's theory is simply inaccurate, as Israel reinstituted sacrifices to God even before they began reconstructing the temple (Ezra 3).
I do like the progressive Christian stance as you describe it — that there may be error in many of the books of the bible — but that people, even with our limited minds, can strive to see a more perfect vision than what was written.
I remembered Brennan Manning — the man who has translated the love of God in a way that I could receive it more than probably any other writer — was addicted to alcohol and I re-read up one of his last books before he died: «All is Grace: A Ragamuffin Memoir» where he vulnerably writes about what this battle has cost him, even as he experienced the unending and unconditional love of God in the midst of it, how he experienced regret and pain and loss alongside of the love and tenderness of God in this dependency.
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