Sentences with phrase «most about this book»

What I loved most about the book is J.D.'s raw honesty about his childhood.
What I love the most about this book is that it doesn't just focus on linking but forming relationships with businesses in your industry.
What I loved most about this book was the author dared to integrate humility, art, and even humor into the very tough questions he was asking in the aftermath of the Haitian earthquake.
What I liked most about this book is that every woman can benefit from the information provided, regardless where they are in their pregnancy or their nutrition knowledge.
One of the things I like most about this book is that it's not just a collection of preserving techniques.
What I appreciate the most about your book is the explainations of why because this has enabled me to use the 20 years of baking knowledge I've acquired and incorporate it with this new manner (for me) of preparing delicious dishes.
What I love the most about this book is that it re-uses certain ingredients and recipes, which makes everyday cooking so much more easier.
What I loved most about this book is the stories.
One of the things that parents love most about their books is that no program is either proscribed or prescribed, but rather, parents are urged to develop their own routines based on their own family's personalities and preferences.
What I liked most about the book is that it doesn't shy away from addressing the real - life challenges that can trip up the best - intentioned parent, whether it's the growing influence of peers as a child moves into elementary school, the «I don't need your advice» attitude of the high schooler, or the scheduling conflicts that can make healthy, communal eating seem impossible.
What I liked most about this book is that every woman can benefit from the information provided, regardless where they are in their pregnancy or their nutrition knowledge.
What I love most about this book is how it puts the care in the hands of the patient and disease firmly under their control and empowers them to get their life back.
What I really like most about this book is that the images are not limited to just paintings, there are dolls and even matches dressed and turned into crazy cult art.
What struck me most about the book was the status of the teaching profession before Shanker and his colleagues won the right to collectively bargain in 1960.
The thing I like most about book launches is they're one letter away from the word «lunches.»
What I like most about the book is it breaks down the writing process using a «scientific» angle... can you explain that further?
This wasn't at all my normal reading material but that's what I enjoy most about Book Browse.
I've come to the conclusion that what I loved most about this book was the uniqueness of each character and the very descriptive settings.
One of the things that I liked most about the book was that she wanted the reader to define success for himself or herself.
As an avid reader myself, all those infinite possibilities for getting lost in «something else» is what I love most about books, and especially about romance fiction, which is so rich in variety and so strong in emotion.
One of the things that I like most about her books are the way she always mentions someone who has been a prominent characters in one of her previous novels.
I'm not sure what I liked the most about the book, the hopefulness of it, the description of «life» in Here, the love the characters had for one another, or the realness of the story.
Take a minute and think about what you loved the most about the book.
The thing that I like most about the book is O'Shaughnessy use of data to slaughter several sacred value investing cows, one of which I mentioned yesterday (see The Small Cap Paradox: A problem with LSV's Contrarian Investment, Extrapolation, and Risk in prac...).
The thing that I like most about the book is O'Shaughnessy use of data to slaughter several sacred value investing cows, one of which I mentioned yesterday (see The Small Cap Paradox: A problem with LSV's Contrarian Investment, Extrapolation, and Risk in practice).
Yet one of the things I appreciate most about your book is that, far from a hagiography, it is a very critical biography.
«What I like most about the book, in comparison with the various IPCC tomes, is the ease with which one can get a quick overview of contemporary research in many different climate - science fields.
Here is my top ten list of what I like most about the book.
«Perhaps the thing I liked most about this book was the confidence the author gave me as soon as I started it.

Not exact matches

Instead, he's a believer in «Small Data,» the title of his new book, which he describes as a method that's about «infusing creativity and preserving the instincts» of entrepreneurs, which he says can be their most valuable assets.
But while male billionaires» reading choices get plenty of press coverage, we hear relatively less about the books that have been most inspirational for super successful, but slightly less high - profile women — the kinds of books that are most likely to provide similar wisdom and mental nourishment for the generation of leaders coming up behind them.
«When I think about how I understand my role as citizen, setting aside being president, and the most important set of understandings that I bring to that position of citizen, the most important stuff I've learned I think I've learned from novels,» he recently told The New York Review of Books.
Instead of being universally good at book learning, Bryant observed that most if not all were fiercely curious about the world around them.
«In the middle of the 20th century, it was the most famous, the most admired, the most widely respected company in the world,» says Quinn Mills, professor emeritus at Harvard Business School and the author of «The IBM Lesson» and other books about the company's history and culture.
Haile: The book that taught me the most about strategy was The Innovators Dilemma, by Clayton Christensen.
Most authors think the purpose of the introduction is to lay out and explain everything the author will talk about in the book.
As William Strauss and Neil Howe put it in their seminal book Generations (almost anybody pontificating about generational cohorts is channelling Strauss and Howe, even if they don't realize it), «More than anyone, they have developed a seasoned talent for getting the most out of a bad hand.»
«Some of the most significant ideas come about when someone sees a problem in a new way — often by combining disparate elements that initially seemed unrelated,» writes marketing and strategy consultant Dorie Clark in her 2015 book, «Stand Out: How to Find Your Breakthrough Idea and Build a Following Around It.»
How to Fix the Future is a truly important book and the most significant work so far in an emerging body of literature — others of note are Tim Wu's The Attention Merchants and Zeynep Tufekci's Twitter and Tear Gas — in which technology's smartest thinkers are raising alarm bells about the state of the Internet, and laying groundwork for how to fix it.
To emphasize this point, in the past year I've published a book, spoken at Google, maintained one of the most popular business podcasts on iTunes, and am having serious conversations about creating a television show about my life.
The book is about Alex Ferguson, the former manager for Manchester United soccer club and the most successful coach in all of professional sports.
If you're like most people the answer is, you sit at your desk and daydream about a big change — that artisanal food business you've always wanted to start, the book you could write, that round - the - world trip haunting your bucket list, or the career - transforming master's degree you really should pursue.
«When I think about how I understand my role as citizen... the most important stuff I've learned I think I've learned from novels,» Obama told The New York Review of Books.
What most people forget, however, is that Newton worked on his ideas about gravity for nearly twenty years until, in 1687, he published his groundbreaking book, The Principia: Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy.
While not all gossip is bad — one can share secrets about wonderful things like a suspected pregnancy or job promotion — Epstein points out that «useful gossip is, in the minds of most people, not what gossip is really about,» and so the majority of the book focuses on the more naughty kind of tattling, the kind that makes your heart beat faster when the subject of ridicule comes around the corner.
Because as much as Gossip the book is about the popularization of back - fence talk and the search for a reason why one of the world's most compelling pastimes is so pleasurable, it's also about admitting that people just can't keep secrets; they don't want to, and we might as well embrace the fact that they'll keep fewer and fewer in the future unless we collectively settle on some new etiquette.
The most successful people often are serious about self - improvement, which can come in the form of a good book.
You Can Negotiate Anything, probably the most entertaining of the books, skips any allusion to scholarship about the human tendency to defer to authority, instead citing an old Candid Camera episode in which a surprising number of highway drivers confronted with the sign «Delaware Closed» actually turned around.
«In most of the Western world, salary just isn't something people feel comfortable talking about,» writes researcher David Burkus in his 2016 book «Under New Management: How Leading Organizations are Upending Business as Usual.»
But what really impresses me most are the leadership qualities he talks about in his book Principles: Life and Work.
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