Sentences with phrase «more fake books»

Not exact matches

Amazon is heading to court again, trying to wipe out more fake product reviews for books and products posted on Amazon.com.
On iOS, the app shows you a fake permission popup to access your address book that says «Ok» or «Learn More».
Many many other places, but you won't accept reality I already know... you think the book is more than the product of men's imaginations, so trying to show you where it is false is something you are not willing to hear... you would rather believe the fake pearls men planted in your book.
1) This is not a particularly hospitable place for agnostics 2) Nothing would crush my parents more than learning that their daughter has walked away from the faith 3) I have a book deal with a Christian publisher 4) I want to keep my Christian friends 5) My doubts come and go, so there's no reason to unnecessarily drag the people I love through my drama 6) If I fake it maybe I can convince myself that everything's okay
He pleaded with the government to help the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Authority (DVLA) to bring those issuing the fake licenses to book, urging all applicants to be more vigilant and apply for licenses only at designated DVLA offices.
By attempting a visual equivalent for the catastrophe that Junger described so well in his book, the filmmakers remind us that our imagination's ability to conjure these images is inevitably more powerful than a moviemaker's efforts to fake them.
Inherent Vice has been widely characterized as Pynchon's «most accessible» book — mainly, I think, because it follows a traditional noir narrative more or less so that if you get lost, it's easier to fake it.
For about $ 15 more than just buying the two - disc DVD on its own, you get a little book, a fake feather, scratch and sniff chocolates, and an irregular box to find a place for.
And, if I hear of one more self - published person, with no academic or publishing credits whatsoever, who has no excuse whatsoever for presuming to give anyone advice, who has set up a fake seminar where they're offering «advice for writers,» (and, of course, mentioning their «book» every five seconds) I'm going to vomit.
John Lott used the fake persona of Mary Rosh to anonymously defend his own work and post reviews of his book More Guns, Less Crime [2].
Right now Amazon is cracking down on book reviews from fake sources and family and friends, so it's even more important that your review outreach strategy is solid and that you have enough reviews — 10 - 20 — before you start marketing and promoting your book.
Although Amazon is on the right track, and of course you don't want fake or misleading book reviews (because they lead to MORE negative reviews from disappointed readers), as a professional author you also need to do what you can to counteract Amazon's overzealous review removal policies.
are you saying you would be more likely to buy a book from Apple if they had fake wooden bookshelves in the app?
There's been a lot of controversy surrounding the book, namely that Trump himself has repeatedly tweeted that it's more «fake news» by a «loser» of a reporter.
As someone on the outside of this whole situation looking in, I have to wonder, how can one or two or five «maybe fake» reviews of a book be any more important than the forty or fifty or sixty or more other, legitimate reviews?
I can sort of understand the logic, you don't want writers who know each other writing fake good reviews, and you don't want spiteful writers writing mean reviews just to make another writer's book look bad, but I think Amazon needs to give more credit than that to writers as a group.
They're not like the companies that fake hundreds of positive reviews — instead they want to give you a professional, well - constructed critique of your book that'll be miles more impressive and noteworthy than anything you can find on the standard Amazon page.
I reviewed (and LOVED) her first book The Truth About Faking, and was lucky enough to beta read The Truth About Letting Go — ... Read More
Cultured, shrewd, honest and fit Commissario Guido Brunetti — the more - or - less - ideal man who is the hero of Donna Leon's hugely successful series of 26 detective novels set in Venice — begins her latest book Earthly Remains by faking a heart attack.
Nothing happened for two years after the book came out but then, suddenly last fall, the big three of temperature, GISTEMP, HadCRUT, and NCDC, decided, in unison, to not show this fake warming any more.
Genuine Fake Books wallpaper by Deborah Bowness creates the illusion of more space.
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