In Don't Know Much About the Bible the world's most owned,
least understood book is approached with Davis's trademark question / answer format and witty, learned insights.
Not exact matches
And just for the record, although I would agree with Marcussen that the Sabbath command is still relevant for Christians, there is a lot in his
book that I personally disagree with, or at the
least, that I
understand in a very different way than Marcussen does.
The distinguished Cardinal Schönborn is frank in the Foreword of this
book: «the period following the Second Vatican Council was one of confusion in... the Church,... not
least in the educational sphere... teachers, professors, and administrators lacked an adequate
understanding of their role as evangelists, charged with transmitting the faith to the next generation.
It was my
understanding that the Islam is supposed to be an abrahamic based religion, that believes, at the very
least, that the Old Testament
books, especially the Mosaic Law is from God, so how is that the Qu «ran is considered to be the only true word of God?
For example, if leaders are learning from the experts in the field, they will be in a better position to challenge pastors to read at
least one recommended
book a year that will help them better
understand the dynamics of abuse.
Among all of the prophetic
books, that of Jonah has been generally
least understood.
Probably that approach would be the opposite of the «Man, Can, Plan»
books — and I entirely
understand if you would prefer that route — but I thought I'd at
least mention this «other» side of cooking, because it would demystify much of the process.
But who needs to make good sound decisions based on at
least a basic
understanding of your own physiology, birth, and the interventions involved, and their risks and benefits, when you could sit in an echo chamber all day and blame obstetric intervention and read the same five
books to each other?
My feverent hope is that more people will read this
book and either not feel so alone in their quest to do what is so normal for their children, or will at
least come to
understand a little better why those of us who nurse long - term do so.
Mark Rank, PhD, the Herbert S. Hadley Professor of Social Welfare at the Brown School and co-author of the influential
book «Chasing the American Dream:
Understanding What Shapes Our Fortunes,» finds in a new study that there is a 1 in 9 chance the typical American will join the wealthiest 1 percent for at
least one year.
Happily for this reader, the bulk of the
book centers not on the courts but on politics and democratic values, at
least as the author
understands them.
If you decide to indie publish,
understand the business of publishing enough to at
least tell the readers (with your price) that your
book has value.
I think one of the purposes of using Ginny's voice throughout the
book was for the reader to gain a deeper
understanding of the autism spectrum (at
least Ginny's place on it) and interacting with someone who is on the spectrum.
That means
book publicists» phones are ringing more often than before — not necessarily with tons of viable
book promotion projects, but still, most authors
understand that, if they want their
books promoted, they have to do it themselves or hire a
book publicity firm to do it for them (or at
least to partner with them to conduct a
book promotion campaign).
Hi Deb, thank you... and it's probably best not to talk about it... the
book... at
least not now... as it always takes much longer than most people
understand.
Once the
book is completed and a reader
understands the full plot as well as the means of its development, perhaps one would be drawn to pity or sympathy for Arthur or at
least empathy.
At
least the traditional
book selling industry
understands product placement, the psychology of color and makes finding a new
book a social experience, rather than a solitary one.
, there's an
understanding at
least of the fact that $ 12.99, $ 13.99, and $ 14.99 ebook prices are being pinned on the majors»
books by their own publishers in full knowledge (if not admission) that these are not «popular prices» for digital reads.
At
least when buying the
book copies from publishers, I
understand the costs of licensing, translating, adapting, lettering, printing and then distribution, all while trying to keep the costs as low as possible for buyers.
As a businessperson — and if you're publishing
books, you're a businessperson — you need to
understand these decisions at
least well enough to know how they'll impact you.
I
understand budgets all to well, but if your serious and believe in your
book, then you'll come to value why you need at
least, a professional
book cover design.
I
understand a TOC in non-fiction
book because usually those chapters have titles, or at
least subtitles.
@Shelley, I sure hope that's how it goes, but unlike the person who bought my
book on Nook, and only be able to lend it one time, my title through this would be lendable forever through that library — at
least, that's how I'm
understanding this.
We
understand that it's easy these days to produce fine looking bound
books, but presentation is the
least of our concerns when making decisions about the merits of a work.
It was my
understanding publishers need a
book to sell at
least 5k copies within the first three months to be considered successful, and to consider re-signing the author's next
book.
It's an
understood truth in the publishing industry that every author — indie or traditionally published — is going to have to take on at
least some responsibility for his own
book promotion.
Uncharted Hope is the fifth
book in a series, and it is one of those series that you'll
understand and appreciate better if you've read the earlier
books first (at
least The Land Uncharted).
I certainly feel much more knowledgeable about the genre and best practices after reading the
book... at
least enough to
understand their questions and to point them in the right direction with Stahle's guidance.
Or at
least some of the elements, I
understand that your
book has to be uniquely yours.
In addition to coaching the craft / industry side, she breaks down in easy to
understand language the retail side of the
book culture offering best practices for signings based on over 100
book signings in 10 years, including at
least three yearly multi-author signings hosting with over 50 authors each time.
Generally, a rating of at
least 4 stars or higher is what we like to see, but we
understand that
books sold at reduced prices for extended periods sometime get reviewers who really weren't the target readers, and they leave poor reviews.
So to people who
understand the nuance of the various industry statistics — all incomplete in some fashion or another — that implies that if your methodology is so completely wrong on print
books, that it's wrong (or at the very
least dubious) on everything else.
To
understand this, you should read at
least one good
book on investing — preferably a few.
At the very
least, by reading their
book you should come away with a far better
understanding of how the Social Security system works, and how you can work it to your financial advantage.
Save at
least 10 % of your income, make sure you have proper insurance, and invest only in things which you
understand are a few keys from that
book.
When you realize that most of those airlines allow you to use their miles to
book award flights with at
least a dozen different partner carriers, you start to
understand how this one credit card is the gateway to a staggering array of award travel opportunities.
«Perhaps the most insidious and
least understood form of segregation is that of the word,» Rankine writes in her
book Citizen: An American Lyric (2014), which has been a touchstone, since its publication, for many artists working with poetry.
Was there anything within those
books, which I
understand are at
least in part California State Supreme Court decisions?
I would like to improve
understanding of the science, and your claims notwithstanding, I mostly do --(at
least the readers of my
book think so!).
So the accusations of mis - spending need to be taken with a grain of salt, at
least until someone goes through the First Nation's
books, which I
understand have been opened to the public for quite some time.
I
understand most of a list like this, and how some of these phrases could cause confidence problems with coworkers; but there are two phrases included here, at
least in my
books, that are essential to a healthy work environment: «try» and «I don't know».
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That
book could prove interesting to you, at
least with regard to
understanding what you are looking for a therapist to be able to do with you.