With this set of 7 high resolution professional book mock - ups you are sure to impress your audience and help
them imagine holding your book in their hands.
Not exact matches
Atheist Terry Eagleton wrote a review for the London Review of
Books entitled «Lunging, Flailing, Mispunching» that began with the memorable quote: «
Imagine someone
holding forth on biology whose only knowledge of the subject is the
Book of British Birds, and you have a rough idea of what it feels like to read Richard Dawkins on theology.»
I can
imagine how rewarding to be close to
holding the
book in your hands.
If you like this author, you might also consider her recently released
book, Breastfeeding Solutions (an FAQ reference
book just for moms), or the Breastfeeding Solutions mobile application for smartphone users to make searching for answers even more convenient (just
imagine scrolling through the App with one hand, while
holding your nursing baby with the other!).
Made from natural, vegetable tanned leather that looks better over time, whether totes, clutches or shoulder bags, these are generously proportioned and are super versatile: I can
imagine the totes
holding everything from school
books to groceries; overnight clothes for an evening with the boyfriend or carry - on essentials when travelling.
Matheson's
book is a direct response to the Jackson tale, one that you might
imagine was typed at least partly with one hand, the other
held in the air with the middle finger pointing upwards.
There's something divine about
holding a
book in your hand; the faint scent of ink and paper, the whisper of a turned page, the weight of a
book clasped to your chest as you
imagine the world woven from its words.
So
imagine the shockwave in present - day Trondheim, Norway, when the curator of the museum
holding the
Book of John is brutally murdered, her skin flayed from her body.
I bet you can already
imagine the potential that a service like this
holds for self - publishers (like you) who want to get their
books discovered and build their audiences.
It was set in Neo-Paris (Paris in the year 2084), so you can probably
imagine the sorts of modern video game art that this
book holds.
Amanda Beckmann's beautifully rendered artworks are like spending a long, lazy afternoon in the best vintage store imaginable, leafing through dog - eared
books and magazines, stroking old silk Rooster ® ties and the Bakelite cabinets of vintage radios, picking up gold - leafed barware and
imagining the cocktails they
held.
I get excited when a
book I've been waiting for hits the shelves so can't begin to
imagine how exciting & special
holding a
book you created must feel.