Not exact matches
Bloom's own review
of Wieseltier's
book, in the New York Times, is revealing in this connection: «One parts from Wieseltier with gratitude, but confirmed in a conviction he does not share, which is that the God
of Akiba [ben Joseph], and
of all the orthodoxies, always
exacts too steep a price for the Sanctification
of His
name.»
Stories such as those in the
books of Ruth, Esther, Judith, which are nowadays taken as fictional rather than historical, use not only plenty
of proper
names, but often supply unnecessarily
exact details.
In fact, it was one
of the better ones, tied with the phoenix order (that's the directly translated
name, I don't know the
exact English
name), and only being outstanding by the 1st
book.
To be fair, readers often struggle to come up with the
exact title or author
name of a new
book generating buzz, so expecting them to remember the publisher as well might be asking a lot.
On a trip through Wales more than a decade ago, the border town
of Hay - on - Wye — where some 30 used bookstores live cheek by jowl — beckoned irresistibly, while on another U.K. trip, a
book - loving friend and I tracked down an old manor house cum used bookstore in the middle
of nowhere in, I think, Buckinghamshire, stuffed to its Victorian rafters with well - priced reading treasures (I have forgotten its
name and
exact location, and a Google search has come to naught, suggesting that this magical place is long gone — or perhaps only appears one day every hundred years like Brigadoon).
So long as the file you have uploaded across all platforms uses the
exact same title and author
name, all sales are reported for that
book regardless
of the identification number used to list it.
So, Amazon came out with a revolutionary device by the
name of Kindle, which is allowing people to read the
exact same content that are present in their
books and magazines on a 6 - 7 inches
of screen.
Booking a trip for someone can be tricky; do you know the
exact spelling
of their
name on their passport?