I still have some of these books from when I was a child and the rest are relatively easy to
find at libraries or from used book sellers.
Found it at a library book sale for $ 1.
Quick question (I love your cookbook by the way,
I found it at the library and as a vegan with Celiac Disease, it's a Godsend!)
But alas,
I find myself at the library quite often in the cookbook section looking for something new to try.
I had
found it at the library while researching Scandinavian food, and this dish — chanterelles and potatoes with lemon and dill — was one of the first recipes I featured on the blog.
You might
find it at your library.
I tried to
find them at my library and even Jackson Hole, Wy Library but neither have anything from you.
The reintroduction process is a bit complicated to outline in a blog post — but I have instructions in my patient education handouts (for sale $ 85 — with much more than just the re-introduction phase), OR in my book, the 21 day tummy — which you may be able to
find at your library or via kindle.
Shockingly, most people in Germany haven't even heard of Auschwitz and there's nary a book on the concentration camp to be
found at the library.
I have also on - sold (for credit) many used books that I bought because I couldn't
find them at a library and only wanted to read them once (Dan Brown springs to mind!)
Dozens of other books can be
found at libraries and bookstores, so you are likely to find one that meets your pocketbook and your training philosophy.
I read every book I could
find at the library (which was probably 1... maybe 2) and followed every blog that had anything to do with the topic.
If you don't want to buy a book and can't
find them at your library, there are also some free ebooks (which could be more like pamphlets, let's be honest) available through his website TheStreet.com.
I have not read Mary Kay Andrews books before, but after the last post that she did I began checking to see what I could
find at the library.
Not exact matches
Then a master's student
at the University of Quindío in Colombia, Gomez
found a thesis in a
library that he liked and decided to forward the article to colleagues by sharing it on the website Scribd.
Using a glacial early Internet connection, from his bed he tapped into the databases of university
libraries; through supporters
at St. Joseph's University in Philadelphia, where he had been studying for a master's degree before his accident, he secured interlibrary loans of hard - to -
find medical publications.
«In retrospect, I am not surprised
at all to
find them trashing scientific
libraries,» he said.
That video and scores of other videos comprise his
library of edifying, educational and inspirational content about entrepreneurship — all available
at Valuetainment, a media brand he conceived and
founded.
Congrats on
finding an available computer
at the
library.
It doesn't matter if he
found his place
at a church, a
library or an alligator farm... he
found a place that makes him feel happy and fulfilled despite his disability.
The Ptolemies
founded the university, the museum, and the
library at Alexandria and built the lighthouse
at Pharos.
Browsing the new arrivals shelf
at your local theological
library, you're now as likely to
find titles by the Catholic dogmatician Matthew Levering, the Orthodox historical theologian Paul Gavrilyuk, and the Reformed theologian Kevin Vanhoozer on why we need to continue to speak, with the early Church, of God's inability to suffer — and of God's voluntary assumption of our human nature, in Jesus Christ, in order to share, and thereby overcome, our suffering — as you are to
find another volume on God's suffering in the divine nature itself.
«After thirty - five years of studying and teaching the theology and history of the Church,» writes Eamon Duffy, «I
find myself living more and more out of resources acquired not in the lecture room or
library, nor even
at the post-conciliar liturgy, but in the narrow Catholicism of my 1950s childhood, warts and all.»
Erika Delbecque, a librarian
at Reading University,
found the medieval text buried in a box as she catalogued thousands of items about the history of printing and graphic design the
library's archives.
There is also a fifth, more detached, philosophical way of looking
at these issues without appealing to «direct historical influence» as if it were some sort of causal connection as Lowe claims it is.7 Of course the fourth line and fifth lines are outside ordinary present - day historiographical research, excepting undergraduates in general education courses (who seem inevitably to
find, in spite of the odds in a fair - sized
library, Russell's History of Western Philosophy first, and then cite it liberally).
By all means, if I
find any youth -
at - risk with a computer
at home, prisoner with Internet rights, homeless that frequent the public
library internet system, or a mentally disordered person that are allowed the Internet by the county's out - patient facility... then by all means, I will mention to them about the free (NakedPastor) site.
One of these is the recently
founded Charles H. Spurgeon Center for Biblical Preaching
at Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Kansas City, which owns more than six - thousand books from Spurgeon's personal
library.
but i know i have a book
at my home
library that has a passage, however the more i look into it, i
find that only the romans would have used anti jewish type words untill the latter years when semitic ideals became known as only jewish ideals..
G. E. Lessing (1729 - 81), a leading figure in the German Enlightenment,
found the manuscript in the
library at Wolfenbüttel, on his appointment there as librarian in 1770, and published parts of it as «Wolfenbüttel Fragments by an Unnamed Author» between 1774 and 1778.
In October of 1454, Aeneas Silvius
found himself
at the famous Frankfurt book fair, no doubt on the hunt for special treasures for his great
library.
I am pretty sure it was from and old candy cook book
at the
library we near where we lived, WAY back before we even had kids... (on DogHillKitchen - who's site I just
found and it is GREAT!
I
found a great book
at the
library called Savory Baking by Mary Cech, Chronicle Books, 2009 with lots of interesting suggestions for making traditionally sweet baked goods into savory ones.
I was looking for a good dark bread to have with my corned beef and literally stumbled over your blog, then
found your cookbook
at my
library, wonder what hole I've been in?
At that time the World Wide Web was not up and running, so I had to do the research the hard way — by going to
libraries, going to the stacks,
finding books — especially in the QK 99 section on herbal medicine — and looking up all the various terms for chiles in the indexes of the books.
I
found it along with other fabulous cookbooks and vegan lifestyle books
at my local
library.
For anyone looking for resources for vegan food, check out (online): compassionatecooks, ohsheglows, vegweb.com, plantpoweredkitchen, onegreenplanet.org, to name a few, and you can even
find vegan cookbooks
at the
library.
I lived mostly on pasta and peanut butter because the few vegetarian cookbooks that my mom could
find at our local
library contained hard - to -
find international ingredients and meat substitutes (like tofu) that were not readily available in our area.
When I'm
at my local
library or bookstore, you can most often
find me in the cookbook section.
This is the first recipe of yours I made after accidentally
finding your book
at the
library.
As the crowd of 80,000 roars for the Sooners on Saturday, the Oklahoma students
at the
library — all four of them —
find schoolwork more engrossing
I think the media
find Arsenal so boring they are just trying to wake up the Gentry sipping tea and browsing highbrow magazines
at the
library
So he was probably here somewhere, and there I was, dressed like a derelict and making my way up the steps of the
library's Hope Street entrance
at 4:35 p.m. I did a quick circuit of all the rooms and
at once
found Gordon Brooks standing in the social sciences department.
It feels like Bradley instructors are a dime - a-dozen there are so many of them (you
find signs for classes
at every grocery store,
library, and public forum.)
Some of our ideas were:
finding a new park to play
at, going to the
library to explore, and going outside to take pictures.
Find copies of our monthly magazine
at libraries, grocery stores, public and private schools, preschools, day care centers, medical offices, hospitals, retail locations and other family - friendly sites.
You can
find our monthly issues
at convenient locations such as schools, day care centers, public
libraries, doctors» offices, restaurants, recreational facilities and grocery stores.
At the
library the other day Melany picked a CD off the shelf of the
library, I brought it home to
find the audio CD from the cartoon movie Curious George of all things.
After patting yourself on the back for
finding free fun
at the
library, you can splurge on nearby Pequod's Pizza.
In fact, if you go to the
library or browse the shelves
at Barnes & Noble or check out Amazon's best - sellers in the parenting genre, you will
find a predominance of popular, punishment - based, obedience - focused parenting guides.
Find a text - free storybook
at the
library or alternatively use a story book that your child does not know.