Sentences with phrase «latest book makes»

These resources include three New York Times best sellers Getting the Love You Want, Keeping the Love You Find, and Giving the Love that Heals, their latest book Making Marriage Simple (2013), and six other books and manuals and out - of — the - box programs.

Not exact matches

He's known for his writing on race and politics — so it makes sense that his latest project, a comic book series for Marvel called «Black Panther,» is about the first black superhero in mainstream U.S. comics.
Citing concerns about giving Google «a significant advantage over competitors,» a New York federal judge shot down a settlement that would permit Google to make millions of books accessible online — the latest setback in the Internet behemoth's six - year - long legal battle over its digital library.
Free your mind Don't be afraid to give your product away, Chris Anderson says, you'll figure out how to make money later The secret to success in the digital age is giving people what they want — literally, says Chris Anderson, the editor of Wired and author of the controversial new book Free: The Future of a Radical Price.
In her latest book, Women Who Work, she revealed that she had initially resisted making her family life public, but gave in after she understood that photos of them would be available to the world whether she wanted them to be or not:
Their latest book is a new edition of Making Money with Your Computer at Home.
His latest book is Business Brilliant: Surprising Lessons From the Greatest Self - Made Business Icons.
David Patchell - Evans, GoodLife's 57 - year - old founder and CEO, is making the rounds, enthusiastically meeting with new and potential members and signing free copies of his latest lifestyle book, The Real Sexy, Smart and Strong.
For his latest book, journalist Malcolm Gladwell makes the case that it might be.
Belsky's latest book is Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes — And How To Correct Them: Lessons from the Life - Changing Science of Behavioral Economics.
In the latest Jack Reacher book, The Midnight Line by Lee Child, Reacher is forced to make a decision without having all of the facts.
Lisa's latest book, Selling with Noble Purpose: How to Drive Revenue and Do Work That Makes You Proud, details just how far passion can push you in business to achieve the revenue and income one desires.
But I won't be making that play myself based simply on a seasonal trend in DIS stock that was highlighted by Brooke Thackray in his book Thackray's 2017 Investor's Guide.Figure 1 — Is latest dip in DIS a buying opportunity?
Linda's latest book is Economorphics, a guidebook to the megatrends changing the world and the ways that you can make them work for you.
All those religion books that were written thousand years ago by people who had no idea about other cultures or how could they make sense one thousand years later are no better than cartoons.
Later, I did a whole series on «Gospelism» (Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6) in which I argue many of the points that Scot McKnight made in his book, but which he referred to as «Gospeling.»
You also have to consider how many additions were made to the very original books that eventually were ruled in as canon hundreds of years later.
A little later, packing up his manuscripts, Ford happened to see «the page and the very commended phrase «old - eyed», and to notice that somehow in the rounds of fatigued retyping that used to precede a writer's final sign - off on a book in the days before word processors, the original and rather dully hybridised «cold - eyed» had somehow lost its «c» and become «old - eyed», only nobody'd noticed since they both made a kind of sense.»
Wright's books have a way of making sense to me later, when I'm doing something other than reading them - like the laundry.
Some bits are rather too American: in the clothes section I at first wondered what «jeggings» were (latest fashion: a mix of jeans and leggings - rather ugly, actually, and the author of the book thinks so too) and talk of «dates» made me think at first of dried fruit rather than of young men.
Werner Jaeger, who has written the classic history of the idea of paideia, [2] pointed out in a later book on Early Christianity and Greek Paideia that Clement not only uses literary forms and types of argument calculated to sway people formed by paideia but, beyond that, he explicitly praises paideia in such a way as to make it clear that his entire epistle is to be taken «as an act of Christian education.»
It's an issue that has been rekindled recently by Stephen Hawking's latest book The Grand Design, which takes the view that God is somehow made redundant by the laws of physics.
Brian's latest book, We Make the Road by Walking, releases today!
What it took for granted in the way of earlier tradition and interpretation, and what it undertook to do in the way of further interpretation, combined to make it for all later Christian doctrine and devotion one of the most important — in some respects one of the most fateful — books ever written.
As our review of Alister McGrath's latest book in this issue implies, he, along with many other contemporary science and religion writers, fails to make this discernment and thus, whilst making numerous helpful points, despairs of inferring properties of God from looking at nature.
The point the late Dr. Peck makes in his book is that «the lie» evil is the bad that's hidden (ie.
To speak for a moment of the general argument of the Intelligent Design movement before getting specifically to Professor Johnson's latest book, I would like to make the following point clear.
These essays are crucial for any assessment of MacIntyre's position: Arguments and observations he makes in his books were often first developed in articles, and defended later in other articles, not widely available.
He affirms that whilst the universe is «as one would expect» an «intelligent creator to make it» we don't have the evidence for an incontrovertible proof - as per the title of the latest book of another prominent contributor to the documentary: There Almost Certainly Is A God.
In his Thursday Column, Rusty Reno comments on a new book by Victor Lee Austin and makes some enlightening comments about authority (later amplified here).
Though not his latest book, How to Know God is his most explicitly theological work and serves as an exemplar of how a version of Vedanta Hinduism (introduced to the West by such exponents as Swami Vivekananda and Paramahansa Yogananda) has been made popular and accessible.
Peters» book (a revision of his first book on this theme, based on twenty - five years of published work) makes especially clear how in all three monotheistic religions early moves, strategies, and interpretations proved utterly determinative for all later developments.
The Pledge of Allegiance says, «One nation, under God...» Read a book make comments later, please.
This is especially true of his latest book, The Bible Tells Me So: Why Defending Scripture Has Made Us Unable to Read It, which released last week and which I highly recommend.
I don't want to make too close a comparison, but my late older brother had a whole two walls of his second lounge room full of books, and I doubt he read half of them.
It was prompted by what he later called «good infection» - being drawn to faith unawares through the friends he made and books he read.
We have a lot of material about Jesus much later than his life, but it would have made sense for Jesus to have written a book.
This is the line taken by what in North America today is frequently described as «process thought»; its greatest exponent was the late Professor Alfred North Whitehead in his works Process and Reality (his book has been re-arranged, and provided with excellent explanatory notes by D. W. Sherburne, under the title of Key to Whitehead's Process and Reality), Science and the Modern World, Modes of Thought, Adventures of Ideas, Religion in the Making, and Symbolism, all of them written after Whitehead had joined the faculty of Harvard University in the United States in the 1920's.
I wish I could get into all the details of what made this book so helpful, but this would require a series of posts that will have to wait for a later time.
The worst perpetrator is, of course, Mary Daly, whose significant work in The Church and the Second Sex (1968) and the even more important Beyond God the Father (1973) has degenerated into her latest effort, Gyn / Ecology: The Metaethics of Radical Feminism (1978); about «Spinning and Witches and Great Hags,» it is a book which makes one want either to laugh or cry.
The bible is a book of made up fictional stories, it's seems hard to believe that a 1000 years later it is still referred to as law by so many ignorant people.
If there was any other book claiming to be the authority on everything that you kept having to make excuses for like «Well, that part is ment as an allegory» or «God years are different than man years» or «Well, its says to not eat shelfish or pork in the hebrew scriptures, but apparently God changed his mind later, but that part about ga y's stays» I don't think anyone would have given it a second look had it not been at the point of a sword.
I think spiritual escapism happens when we stop looking to God and instead start looking for his «benefits», like the latest book on the latest prayer trend by the latest guru that will fix our lives, or the bucket of money that will fall from the sky as we sing (Man, stories like that one you just told make my skin crawl!)
All I can do is quote the late Frank Zappa: «We can't really be dumb if we're just following God's orders — it says in the book here that he made us all to be just like HIM.
In his latest book, historian David McCullough tells the story of The Wright Brothers, who famously made the first successful manned flight with their own homemade airplane.
But what makes Fish's book unique in this regard is not just the way he clearly wants to distance himself from the main implications of his own reader - response criticism: that the reader decides the meaning of a text, even to the point that the text quite disappears (the title of one of Fish's later books in fact plaintively asked, Is There a Text in This Class?).
For many years I made a recipe in that book, later realizing it was called S'Mores by other people.
Her latest book, The Homemade Vegan Pantry shares a very practical approach to stocking your kitchen with the types of things you always wish you'd tried (glorious butterless butter, or maybe your own tofu, for examples) to those you've probably never considered, such as soup concentrates, to make your life easier.
Well, we made it safely late at night to Hotel Christina, which we booked from a travel catalog.
While we were visiting family over the holidays, my father - in - law showed me his late mother's handwritten recipe book, full of authentic Irish recipes that she used to make, like Irish Soda Bread, cornbread, Irish stew, shamrock steak and dumplings, colcannon, leprechaun brew, and lots more!
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