Sentences with phrase «little book whose»

Not exact matches

We are in the position of a little child, entering a huge library whose walls are covered to the ceiling with books in many different tongues.
I will, if I may, quote what I said about modalism in my little book on the Apostles» Creed, whose title you quote.
While I am on the subject of the publishing industry, let me make one little tiny suggestion to publishers and book agents: Please, out of respect and courtesy to the authors who submit books to you, don't you think it would be wise to create a little form letter that you send to authors whose books you reject?
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.
It must be said that it is a book whose rhetoric is flawed, and one finds it more than a little strange that the beautiful precision and economy that generally mark his prose in his work for The New Yorker and in his major books at so many points in his latest work give way to a profusion of jargon and a bloatedness of syntax that disfigure the whole.
Flo Braker is one of those amazing bakers whose books get a little overlooked I think because they are not super sexy and full of amazing photos (although they do have some center photos).
Katsoris, whose last 3 books in his Loukoumi series (www.loukoumi.com) have benefited the Hospital, met a beautiful little girl named Alivia.
Theo Brown, an Australian whose book describing his life with sharks will be published next spring by Little, Brown & Co., found that he became the instant life of a shark party when he played the even rhythms of waltzes underwater.
Gates's remark brought to mind a host of high - flying Internet businesses from a few years back whose would - be tech - titan executives made overnight fortunes by selling stock in companies that gave away services online with little regard to balancing the books short term.
But perhaps this book can help you get away from it all, if only for a little... View Details The Cancer - Fighting Kitchen, Second Edition: Nourishing, Big - Flavor Recipes for Cancer Treatment and Recovery by Rebecca Katz (Author), Mat Edelson (Author) This new and revised edition of the IACP award - winning cookbook brings the healing power of delicious, nutritious foods to those whose hearts and bodies crave a revitalizing meal, through 150 new and updated recipes.
But, when your mom is Reese Witherspoon, whose effortless makeup looks and side - swept bangs that have inspired us all at some point to book a salon appointment, your outlook is probably a little different.
So to give audiences a little more time to enjoy the ride screenwriters (which include Sullenberger, whose book Highest Duty was used as inspiration) added an antagonistic National Transport Safety Board (NTSB) investigator, Charles Porter (Mike O'Malley).
The Art of Technology competition was judged by popular children's illustrator Jonny Lambert, whose books, including his latest, The Little Why, is an Early Years education staple.
Yet little fresh thinking about the fundamentals of special ed has taken place in the past decade, save for the indefatigable Miriam Kurtzig Freedman, whose forthcoming book, Special Education 2.0: Breaking Taboos to Build a New Education Law, will outline a new way forward.
License Continuation Post-Termination: This sneaky little clause can wreak havoc for those whose self - published book has been picked up by a traditional publisher — meaning that the self - publisher can keep selling your work for a full year after you've terminated your contract.
Editors whose only claim to fame are credentials in one form or another, maybe they've written a slew of books, and are affordable to new authors, should only be considered by authors for whom their writing is little more than a hobby.
It seems to matter little, since almost everyone whose getting the book either in retail will go to websites such as Amazon or in wholesale to Ingram's database.
Narrated by the dog, Enzo, whose highly intelligent voice reminds me a little of Brian on «Family Guy,» this funny but touching story will be available in paperback on June 9 and would make a nice summer book club selection (if your book club members are dog lovers; I'm afraid mine are not).
As a traditional and mainly self - published author whose books have sold over 850,000 copies worldwide, I think that I know a little bit of what it takes to be a success as a writer.
I'm here today to tell you about a wonderful new opportunity for all of you sad, little self - publishing authors out there whose books no - one's ever heard of.
Tiffany Baker, whose debut, The Little Giant of Aberdeen County, was a bestseller, proves with her third book that she is a novelist with staying power.
This is the company, elsevier, with spectacular profit rates, whch gets its material (papers, books) which have mostly been produced at public expense (university salaries, public research grants), do very little actual editorial work (one usually has to supply papers charts etc «print ready»), get academic reviewers to review the books and papers free of charge (well, paid for by universities or they do it in free time), depend on journal editors whose time is paid for by (generally publicly funded) universities, then sells the journals to the same universities, sometimes for subscription prices in the thousands of dollars.
It is the largest print run of the year for Lagardère SCA's Hachette Book Group, whose Little, Brown imprint is publishing the book in the U.S. while a sister division publishes it in the Book Group, whose Little, Brown imprint is publishing the book in the U.S. while a sister division publishes it in the book in the U.S. while a sister division publishes it in the U.K.
Tiffany Baker, whose debut, The Little Giant of Aberdeen County, was a bestseller, proves with her third book that...
Yanagihara, a former Penguin employee whose current day job is working for Condé Nast Travel, just made the Booker longlist for her second book, A Little Life.
The book is composed of short vignettes, some only a page, each a wonderful little appetizer describing in gorgeous prose a city of fantasy, a city whose design speaks to an aspect of the human condition.
Their Little Free Libraries non-profit venture was inspired by Andrew Carnegie's support of 2,509 free public libraries in the late 1800s / early 1900s; by Miss Lutie Sterns, a librarian whose «traveling little libraries» delivered books to 1,400 locations around Wisconsin during that same period of time; and the more recent «take a book leave a book» movement in cafes and public sLittle Free Libraries non-profit venture was inspired by Andrew Carnegie's support of 2,509 free public libraries in the late 1800s / early 1900s; by Miss Lutie Sterns, a librarian whose «traveling little libraries» delivered books to 1,400 locations around Wisconsin during that same period of time; and the more recent «take a book leave a book» movement in cafes and public slittle libraries» delivered books to 1,400 locations around Wisconsin during that same period of time; and the more recent «take a book leave a book» movement in cafes and public spaces.
For indies this is a possibility; for authors whose books are being uploaded by a publisher, not so much, since they have little control.
Candace C. Davenport is a published author whose love of writing led to co-founding a small independent publishing company, Our Little Books.
With many books generating more than a tenth of their sales through Amazon alone, where trade publisher muscle carries little or no weight, one wonders what the trade publishers have to offer authors whose books aren't destined to become fiction bestsellers.
ALTAFF will host «Celebrating Southern Writers» Saturday, June 25, from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m., with Kevin Wilson, author of The Family Fang (Ecco, 2011); John Hart, whose books have been translated into 26 languages and published in more than 30 countries; Kathleen Kent, author of The Heretic's Daughter (Little, Brown, 2008); Jennifer Niven, author of Velva Jean Learns to Drive (Plume, 2009); Tayari Jones, author of Leaving Atlanta (Warner, 2002); and Pat MacEnulty, author of Wait Until Tomorrow: A Daughter's Memoir (Feminist Press, 2011).
The story serves as little more than a reason for Death to fight and scramble his way across several different worlds that in turn serve to show the undeniable talent of Joe M, a comic book artist whose talent shines through in every stunning locale.
First established in the late 19th century, photoarchives were much - needed resources for scholars whose art history books often had little to no illustrations.
Rodney Graham: A Little Thought tracks the career of a brilliant, idiosyncratic artist whose work spans a range of media including photography, film, book works, installation and pop music.
In those three decades, a great deal has changed in legal practice (I describe many of these changes in my book The New Lawyer, whose second edition comes out this summer)-- but little has changed about law school.
I read a lot of fiction: Richard Ford's award - winning Canada which actually has very little to do with our country; Rachel Joyce's delightful The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry; Nobel Prize winner Isaac Bashevis Singer's A Crown of Feathers and his Enemies: A Love Story; M.G. Vassanji's wonderful The Book of Secrets; Israeli - Arab writer Sayed Kashua's biting but hilarious Dancing Arabs; Ian McEwan's masterful The Children Act whose protagonist is a 59 year - old female judge; Richard Wagamese's beautiful Keeper»n Me; and Philip Slayton's naughty and fun Bay Street: A Novel (lest people think it a work of non-fiction).
(The strategy here would be to find one in the phone book whose location is a little too inconvenient to have to drive to every week, but not too far from the part of town you are willing to drive to weekly.
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