Sentences with phrase «great books at»

Stop by for great books at bargain prices!
Fortunately, reading great books at home — and seeing reading as a jumping off point for the exploration of the world, is the best place to start.
I also find a lot of great books at thrift stores for a dollar or two each.
Great books at great savings with teacher support included.
He is also known for using quotations from the Great Books at meetings and constant self - promotion.
A great book at that if you count it by numbers printed.
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.
Many of these steps may seem like small steps which can be skipped, but all of them are essential to ensure you have a great book at the end of the day.

Not exact matches

Since everyone at the outset is doing multiple jobs and since you can't be everywhere at once, you've got to trust your people to do the right things in the moment, since there's no rule book, no time for extensive preparation and instruction, and there's rarely a second chance to make a great first impression with a lot of new and prospective customers.
Beijing has proposed greater oversight on wealth management products, estimated to be worth some 29 trillion yuan ($ 4.39 trillion) outstanding at the end of 2016, with 80 percent off the books.
Mostly, though, Cooked is a book about great food and how to make it at home.
We aren't self - aware enough to notice that a two - hour strategy session leaves us tired and exhilarated the same way a great exercise class does, while two hours at a desk balancing the books leaves us drained and cranky.
Reading a lot of books is prerequisite to being a great business owner, or great at anything.
Tom is also a two - time author, including How Clients Buy: A Practical Guide to Business Development for Consulting and Professional Services (2018) and Bread and Butter, a critically - acclaimed book that describes his work at Great Harvest and how he and his team created a nationally recognized corporate learning community and culture of best practices using collaborative networks.
I have taken issue with some of Robert Kiyosaki's teachings for years and have found it difficult to explain to people how it is a great book but a horrible one at the same time.
Now in her ninety - first year, the Professor Emerita of Economics at McGill University has published a new book entitled From the Great Transformation to the Great Financialization: On Karl Polanyi and Other Essays
Author or contributing author of dozens of scholarly and practitioner articles, books and programs, Richard's work has been described by various faculty at Harvard, Yale, London Business School and elsewhere as «great & much needed,» «wonderful and pragmatic,» «thorough» and «nothing short of remarkable,» as well as by Fortune 500, NYSE, FTSE and other company leaders as «leading edge,» «ground - breaking,» «valuable guidance,» «indispensable,» «compelling» and «exceptional.»
Here, he takes a page from the book of another investor great, Peter Lynch, who as a fund manager at Fidelity urged investors to invest in companies that make products they know and like.»
And then I read a book by Brian McNiven, called A Great Company at a Fair Price.
«Active Value Investing has the hallmarks of all great investing books — easy to read, humorous at times, and, most of all, it demonstrates Vitaliy's investing process in terms accessible to the novice and expert alike.
These are some great books — been looking at buying a couple of them for some time now.
It would be great to see the author maintain an up to date set of data (or at least checked links) on his website for the book and guarantee to do this for as long as the book is on sale at least.
Meanwhile, metal stocks are selling at an even greater discount, my calculations show, with the S&P Metal and Mining Select Industry Index trading at close to book value and barely 11x earnings.
Book review: Behemoth: A History of the Factory and the Making of the Modern World Joshua Freeman's book looks at the rise, decline and possible fall of the great institution that is the production lBook review: Behemoth: A History of the Factory and the Making of the Modern World Joshua Freeman's book looks at the rise, decline and possible fall of the great institution that is the production lbook looks at the rise, decline and possible fall of the great institution that is the production line.
Through his «Market Wizards» books, he has given an inside - look at what makes a trader great.
(Musk slipped at least one reference to the book into the software of the Tesla Model S.) As a teenager, Vance writes in his biography, Musk formulated a mission statement for himself: «The only thing that makes sense to do is strive for greater collective enlightenment.»
I'm enjoying reading «small giants» a secular business book that argues againt the «grow or die» received wisdom through a study of businesses that turned down opportunites to grow in size and profits in order to be great at quality (http://www.anglicancelluk.org/blog/p,12/).
Waugh fans have long indulged friendly arguments about the master's greatest work; a recent re-reading of The Sword of Honour Trilogy (Everyman's Library) persuaded me (again) that these three books easily stand with A Handful of Dust and Brideshead Revisited at the summit of Waugh's achievement, even as they brilliantly lay bare the European cultural crisis that was vastly accelerated by World War I.
I've been keeping busy, preparing for classes that were supposed to start yesterday, reading a book for a review due at the end of the month, shoveling the driveway (the first one on the block to do so, with the only emulator being the ex-Marine across the street), and watching DVDs we rented in anticipation of the great blizzard of 2011 (8 inches of snow and ice!).
check out the great reviews and discussion of the book over at Patheos: http://www.patheos.com/Find/Religion-and-Faith-Book-Club.html
Religious people the world over are great at picking and choosing what they want from their various books of magic spells.
During the mashup of songs from Coloring Book, Chance, along with Kirk Franklin, employed a full gospel choir, at one point leading the crowd in a worshipful rendition of «How Great Is Our God.»
In worship, art, architecture, literature, communal life, language, beliefs, moral values, models of a virtuous life, views of the past, the persistence of an aristocratic culture» in all of these aspects of life, a profound and far - reaching transformation of the society was underway, and the book would have benefited from greater attention to at least some of them.
a cursory look at amazon will show you there are a great number of books about atheism spanning a wide range of topics under that heading.
And the last book of the Bible prophetically pointed to the gradual depletion of religion, that is false religion, by its members at Revelation 16, which says: «And the sixth one (of seven angels) poured out his bowl (symbolizing God's anger) upon the great river Euphrates, and its water was dried up, that the way might be prepared for the kings from the rising of the sun.»
A book called Disinformation, co-written by General Pacepa and the American professor of law Ronald Rychlak (best known for his book Hitler, the War and the Pope, a well - researched defence of Pius XII's record during the Second World War), which spells out these revelations at greater length, is «dubious at best» — or at least, the bits written by Pacepa are: the reviewer NCR admits that «what Rychlak contributes, drawn from his earlier work on Pope Pius, appears solid».
The great trick that humans developed at some point in the last few hundred thousand years is the ability to circle around a tree, rock, ancestor, flag, book or god, and then treat that thing as sacred.
(* we have the Gateway to the Great Books (set)-- thrifted — and if you can find used at Amazon or on ebay, highly recommend.
At any rate, Deleuze himself invites the comparison, referring to Process and Reality as «one of the greatest books of modern philosophy,» and linking his own use of «descriptive notions» to that deployment of «empirico - ideal notions [which] we find in Whitehead» (cf. D&R 284).
Lest it appear that this book proposes to substitute piety and devout words for action, let it be said at once that only by a great deal of determined action can even a minor dent be made on the evils just mentioned.
Despite concerns with some of the authors» theological opinions, this book has a great deal going for it, and at 136 pages the authors have done extraordinarily well to cover so much important material so clearly and thoughtfully.
A great book on this topic is Partners in Marriage and Ministry, by Ron Pierce, professor at Biola.
At the moment of writing this book, for example, we know that the Communists hold as slave laborers in Siberia great numbers of wretched human beings who are treated with deliberate brutality.
So then, at the Great White Throne Judgment, if their names are not found in the Book of Life, it will show them to be unsaved and worthy of partaking in this particular judgment.
Daniel T. Rodgers, in his book The Work Ethic in Industrial America 1850 to 1920 University of Chicago Press, 1978), enlarges upon Weber's original thesis, suggesting that «at the heart of Protestantism's revaluation of work was the doctrine of the calling, the faith that God had called everyone to some productive vocation, to toil there for the common good and for His greater glory.»
It seems to me that now, more than at any time in history, the church looks like the great multitude described in the Book of Revelation — a multitude from every tribe and nation.
Or such at least is the claim of those who defend the canon of great books.
Jesus had a cousin... named John... who spent a great deal of time pointing to everyone else in his last book of Revelations, making sure that nobody ever pointed the finger at him.
And I have admit that I always give the «lawyer's argument» for the great book I'm teaching, while often merely alluding to criticisms both tentative and pointed.The Catholic approach is not appropriate for a teacher at a non-Catholic college, and my approach usually has the effect I can't completely explain of making my smart Christian students more Christian.
By the way, Hawking's book is a great example at how David's passionate view that Science is adjusted to reflect flaws and contradictions is nonsense.
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