Sentences with phrase «how different book»

I can't say how different Book of Demons would be if we kept on working on it after launch without all the new tools that help players communicate with us.
These can be a great way to get a feel for how different book clubs run and how you'd like yours to be.
I loved working there, but it also reminded me how different the book process is from house to house.
I learned how the author's work is «exploited», how different books work in different markets, the attention to detail needed in contractuals and tracking rights, about translations and the excitement of the Brazilian market.

Not exact matches

«Initially when I started to write this book it was going to be about how to avoid awkwardness, but the book became about something totally different.
The other day, a thought came to my mind: «How many different books are there in the world?»
«This is one of many entries in the book that shows how different cultures approach death.
And what we realized was that we had 20 years of data — about why customers buy, how they buy, what they read, how they read and why they're reading it — that could make a physical bookstore just a different and better place to discover books.
What attracted me to the book was an interview I read with Vance in which he described how liberal whites went so far to ensure they never offended any people of color or people with different sexual orientations but were quick to pass judgment on people from flyover states.
The book exemplifies how people have gained and lost power throughout the ages, which is what I find really interesting: Learning from iconic figures from past centuries and applying them to our drastically different, hyper - modern business models of the present.
Maybe it's different in the world these people live in — where it's all about getting wantrepreneurs to click on their posts, buy their books, and attend their seminars — but let me explain how it works in the real world.
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«Repeatedly, and in different ways, throughout this book, you actually demonstrate with a generous mix of insight and proven examples, how» dog - eat - dog» marketing simply isn't necessary; how ethical marketing is not only easier to implement but far more effective!
What's so great about the book, and what makes it different from the countless other books and articles written about the «Oracle of Omaha,» is that it offers readers valuable insight into how Buffett actually thinks about investments.
«What we try to do in the book is really break it down, and look at the market from all different angles, and see how investors are best served in playing the market, «says Comes, who adds that headlines about defaults and municipal bankrupcties actually can be a positive for investors.
The book then walks through different aspects of how to identify «quality».
Write it down in a book and then when you get together with your quiet moments, say to yourself what could I have done different, how come I went wrong, where did I go wrong?
It's funny how most all those books were written by men in different time periods, and yet there stories all go back and match those of the ancient Egyptians.
Of course you can be proven wrong... your holy book was written by man, no god involved; thus your belief is based on the fairy tales told by men who saw a gullible fool a mile away - see, how easy that is??? As for the actual number being only 1.6 billion, sorry the stats say different and your opinion on who the actual number includes is moot.
It's silly) And since the belief and the book can be used to justify evil actions, then it's really about how YOU interpret the belief, because others can interpret it in a completely different way and act «immoral» by their exegesis.
How is it that this apparent divine (or divinely inspired book, depending on which Christian one listens to) is so susceptible to different interpretations?
Great post, and the really disproportionate thing about it is this is all done using the «law» demanding the tithe when not one New Testament book endorses this model (The reference in Hebrews was not to establish tithe as it was to establish Jesus in a different order, and his comments in the gospels was to people living under the law)... how is it that no other «law» is preached with the same force and conviction as tithing?
If God, by the most wise and holy counsel of His own will, freely, and unchangeably ordained the precise wording of Bel and the Dragon, the action - packed sequel to the Book of Daniel, then how is this different from inspiration, where he is said to have «out - breathed» or «spoken» his Word to the prophets and apostles?
In this one (http://www.patheos.com/blogs/tonyjones/2014/03/06/how-mark-driscoll-gamed-the-publishing-game/), he drew attention to how «Mark Driscoll and his church hired a firm that used a thousand different credit cards and thousands of individual names — the names were supplied by the church — to drive Driscoll's marriage book onto the bestseller lists.»
Each chapter of the book takes a different aspect of these ideas and suggests how that could be done, for example within the categories of communion, forgiveness, education and art.
As New Urbanists came to realize that existing zoning ordinances, street design manuals and housing industry practices were all impediments to making traditional towns and neighborhoods, they began developing new kinds of zoning ordinances; found sympathetic traffic engineers to help write a different set of street design standards; renewed the practice of creating high - quality pattern books to guide home - builders; and learned how to persuade lending institutions of the economic advantages of financing traditional neighborhoods.
First, it is trying to articulate how contemporary rock seems to be in a pattern of Perpetual Repetition, but how that mode is different from the Retro Rock and Roll stance that arose in the late 70s / early 80s — this is very much a response to, or a working out of my own thinking in the light of, Simon Reynolds» fine book Retromania.
He knows how much the different versions of the first edition of Ulysses cost in francs, pounds, and dollars, how much Eliot received from all sources for publishing The Waste Land and how that compares with the per capita income of the United States at the time, and how much Ezra Pound's first book had increased in value by 1924.
(Note how utterly different in style and theme from the John who wrote the Book of Revelation.)
But it is different from me saying, I know how the waves are written about in the book, the books says they are from the moon's pull, and the waves of the book are exactly as I describe them.
How can the treatment of matters so different within the compass of one short book be justified?
There is a partial parallel in Book 11, but notice just how different it is:
We criticize the near east for wanting to put their holy book into the government, but how are we different if we keep bleating that we need God in our congress halls?
Second, if you still want to know how we are to regard those Other books, I can tell you only one thing: a different voice is to be heard in them than that which we hear in the Bible.
Throughout this book, one truth reasserts itself again and again: How profoundly different John Woolman was from you and me.
How I work that out will have to wait for a different post (or book, more likely).
The author reviews two books on the subject discussing the cultural patterns and problems of first and second generation Koreans, how they are different from other ethnic groups and the problems of assimilation into American culture.
I had a fascinating conversation with Max Stackhouse of Andover - Newton Seminary who felt that one of our greatest needs in the subject area of this book was for an examination of the history of preaching on certain texts as the «Rich Young Ruler» to see how sermons related to different contexts.
I wrote something about that last year, and my basic question was «how can it be that intelligent and sincere people, reading exactly the same book (the Bible) end up with completely different conclusions?»
If you substitute «gay» in this scenario for any other teaching in the Book of Discipline, how is it any different?
Just as there are parties today, writers of New Testament books had to think how to describe Christian faith to people from two different religious traditions.
Critical thinker, You study a little science and suddenly you feel you have it figured out, Your meaning of life and the after life is based on other men's hypotheses, Yet it makes such good sense to you that you make a life choice based on it, then you stand up and criticize a person whose made a life choice based on A holy Book written 2000 years ago, When it comes down to it how are you any different, Your choices based on science which changes daily and theirs on the prophets.
I heartily enjoyed reading this book in which author Jo Swinney tells how 11 different couples journeyed, sometimes despite the odds, towards marriage....
So how do we perform worship in an electronically mediated environment who style and values are different from those in our «Book»?
I don't usually like how - to - do - church books, but this one is different, offering a believable and inspiring alternative to our industrialized approaches to church, which tend to emphasize quantity over quality and programs over people.
I have recently interacted with two different authors, and I was struck by the radical difference between how the two authors approached me to help them with their book.
He turns to books by Northrop Frye and Susan Rubin Suleiman as sources which complement each other, offering critical insight for careful reflection on how persons from different perspectives can begin to understand one another.
Considering how many different denominations there are in Christianity, all interpreting the SAME BOOK in different ways... I'm glad I'm not a part of that cult anymore... Christianity is the biggest mess ever conceived by humanity.
How is me giving you a book reference different than quoting the bible as a legitimate authority?
So how does the book do in recognizing the different values of different men?
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