Sentences with phrase «much as the author»

You need it as much as the author of this article needs a remedial grammar course.
Clearly I was paying attention as much as the author.
It's a complex issue and I feel that the lack of support hurts bookstores as much as authors.
Amazon is not paying them as much as authors directly.
But no one cares about an author's book as much as the author does.
Because the short story submitted by the author 10 years after starting, was of publishable quality in the top end market, and the first story submitted 10 years prior, as much as the author thought it was great, wasn't.
But an editor can now care about the work almost as much as the author.
You may think that the big companies vet quality, but they really don't rely on that as much as author platform and the ability to sell books they invest in.
But they don't attract them even remotely as much as authors do.
Since translators carry the risk of sales just as much as the author does when working indie, the risk has to be compensated with higher royalty rates when paying lower flat fees up front.
A good story, told well, packaged properly, and read by people who will love it as much as the author does.
This is, sadly, is not always reality, as much as authors like to believe it.).
If a reader fails to do that, well, they carry part of the burden for reading «bad» literature as much as the author for putting it up for sale.
Indie authors have to do everything they can to market their works; the charities usually don't benefit as much as the author.
Mehus - Roe: What we've found during these start - up self - publishing years is that authors who publish independently need a platform as much as authors being traditionally published.
Quibble: My main difficultly with the book, is that much as the author tries to simplify the concept of complex simulations, is that in the ninth part of the book, he seems to overly encourage use of his own software.
Develop has now contacted Epic's VP Mark Rein for a comment about the article, who says that Epic is worth twice as much as the author suggests.
She recognizes that, much as the author John Logan has pointed out, «to be civilized is to know where you belong in the continuum of our art and your world.

Not exact matches

«Customers are buying into the concept and the message of the company as much as they are buying the product,» observes Debra Lynn Dadd, author of the book Home Safe Home, and a SoapWorks endorser.
Jerry McAdams, author of The Reward Plan Advantage, suggests that you focus as much on explaining your incentive - pay system as you do on designing it.
Traditional answers often focus on various sectors and involve more or less hand - wringing about their rise and fall, but according to the author of a forthcoming book on entrepreneurship and economy, there is another, better way to view our economy — as one single ecosystem, a sort of one - sector economy that interacts as a unit much like a forest and which should be nurtured as it grows and recycles itself.
Neon Roots has worked with more than 100 clients, and that roster includes companies such as Spotify and Epson, and figures such as Snoop Dogg, for whom they created the much - lauded cannabis - culture app Merry Jane, and author - speaker Tony Robbins.
As much as we may loathe the behavior of the expert flimflam man, we also have to admire his grasp of human psychology and skills of persuasion — skills it's possible to use for far more admirable ends, according to author Alexa ClaAs much as we may loathe the behavior of the expert flimflam man, we also have to admire his grasp of human psychology and skills of persuasion — skills it's possible to use for far more admirable ends, according to author Alexa Claas we may loathe the behavior of the expert flimflam man, we also have to admire his grasp of human psychology and skills of persuasion — skills it's possible to use for far more admirable ends, according to author Alexa Clay.
As Richard Settersten, author of Not Quite Adults: Why 20 - Somethings Are Choosing a Slower Path to Adulthood, and Why It's Good for Everyone, has said: «the media focuses so much on coddled kids, but there's a huge, invisible class of young people that's just not part of our public discussion and who are really in dire straits.»
As the network seems poised for change — recently, LinkedIn announced that it will soon allow anyone to publish content on its platform (much as LinkedIn Influencers do now)-- I talked with David Gowel, CEO at RockTech, and author of The Power in a Link: Open Doors, Close Deals, and Change the Way You Do Business Using LinkedIAs the network seems poised for change — recently, LinkedIn announced that it will soon allow anyone to publish content on its platform (much as LinkedIn Influencers do now)-- I talked with David Gowel, CEO at RockTech, and author of The Power in a Link: Open Doors, Close Deals, and Change the Way You Do Business Using LinkedIas LinkedIn Influencers do now)-- I talked with David Gowel, CEO at RockTech, and author of The Power in a Link: Open Doors, Close Deals, and Change the Way You Do Business Using LinkedIn.
Kris Krane, author of the See Change report, said that some entrepreneurs paid as little as $ 40,000 while others paid as much as $ 500,000.
Much venom is being spewed on the blogosphere as to whether the 26 - year - old untried author is deserving of such a deal.
«Trump tried to get as much newspaper coverage as possible [early in his career], always pushing his Trump [brand] and the adjective «billionaire» attached to his name or «successful real estate developer» and «rich,»» says Gwenda Blair, author of «The Trumps: Three Generations of Builders and a President.»
His biography contains elements of an epic novel: growing up the son of a jailed Trotskyist labor leader in whose Chicago home he met Rosa Luxembourg's and Karl Liebknecht's colleagues; serving as a young balance of payments analyst for David Rockefeller whose Chase Manhattan Bank was calculating how much interest the bank could extract on loans to South American countries; touring America on Vatican - sponsored economics lectures; turning after a riot at a UN Third World debt meeting in Mexico to the study of ancient debt cancellation practices through Harvard's Babylonian Archeology department; authoring many books about finance from Super Imperialism: The Economic Strategy of American Empire [1972] to J is For Junk Economics: A Guide to Reality in an Age of Deception [2017]; and lately, among many other ventures, commuting from his Queens home to lecture at Peking University in Beijing where he hopes to convince the Chinese to avoid the debt - fuelled economic model off which Western big bankers feast and apply lessons he and his colleagues have learned about the debt relief practices of the ancient civilizations of Mesopotamia.
I tell you the above not to self promote, but as an example of how much the authors of this book care about you.
Dan Lyons, an author who was briefly a Valleywag writer, said what Mr. Thiel did «sets a scary precedent,» but «my guess is that most people hate Gawker as much as he does, so he probably ends up looking like a hero among his own crowd.»
He is the author of a motivational book, «Delivering Happiness: A Path to Profits, Passion and Purpose,» and is much taken with the work of the Harvard economist Edward Glaeser, whose writings promote cities as incubators of creativity and profit and who proposes an ideal density - to - productivity ratio of 100 people per acre.
When a couple of Canadian economists published research (pdf) last December showing that using an alternative methodology yields much better productivity growth rates, StatsCan was quick to reject it, even though one of the authors, Erwin Diewert, a professor at the University of British Columbia's Vancouver School of Economics, is widely regarded as one of the world's finest brains in the field.
Author or contributing author of dozens of scholarly and practitioner articles, books and programs, Richard's work has been described by various faculty at Harvard, Yale, London Business School and elsewhere as «great & much needed,» «wonderful and pragmatic,» «thorough» and «nothing short of remarkable,» as well as by Fortune 500, NYSE, FTSE and other company leaders as «leading edge,» «ground - breaking,» «valuable guidance,» «indispensable,» «compelling» and «exceptional.&Author or contributing author of dozens of scholarly and practitioner articles, books and programs, Richard's work has been described by various faculty at Harvard, Yale, London Business School and elsewhere as «great & much needed,» «wonderful and pragmatic,» «thorough» and «nothing short of remarkable,» as well as by Fortune 500, NYSE, FTSE and other company leaders as «leading edge,» «ground - breaking,» «valuable guidance,» «indispensable,» «compelling» and «exceptional.&author of dozens of scholarly and practitioner articles, books and programs, Richard's work has been described by various faculty at Harvard, Yale, London Business School and elsewhere as «great & much needed,» «wonderful and pragmatic,» «thorough» and «nothing short of remarkable,» as well as by Fortune 500, NYSE, FTSE and other company leaders as «leading edge,» «ground - breaking,» «valuable guidance,» «indispensable,» «compelling» and «exceptional.»
I also find it fascinating that so many of the great Investors find similar value in much the same authors, such as Benjamin Graham and his brilliant book, The Intelligent Investor.
Unfortunately, most e-publishers are pretty hush - hush about the amount of money their authors receive in royalties, but it's safe to say that it's probably more than mainline publishers offer, but not as much as you'd get from publishing your book yourself.
Both the Bush and Obama administrations have relied too much on endless and unproductive diplomacy and commissions, and have failed to take the concrete actions advocated by the likely GOP nominee, Mitt Romney (as well as this author and other economists).
He is editor of the Prudent Speculator and author of The Buckingham Report (as much promotional as informative).
As for the claim that some narcissism is healthy in a competitive society, the authors argue that «it would be better for everyone not to concentrate on self - feelings — positive or negative — quite so much
The authors all have mentioned real places, and real people, considering thats about as much as the bible has, I think its safe to say that they're equally valid as well.
Much better to do exactly as the author has said, and let the person get off their chest whatever needs to be dealt with in those final moments.
I love how some take the words of one supposed «theologian» to another and then tells everyone not to listen to their pastor who has probably had as much experience (if not more) with biblical interpretation than this author.
But your knowledge of science is so much less than so many Catholic Priests such as Gregor Mendel (1822 - 1884) the father of modern genetics, Georges Lemaître (1894 - 1966) the person who proposed the Big Bang Theory and Stanley Jaki Born in Hungary, he earned doctorates in Systematic Theology and Nuclear Physics, is fluent in five languages, and has authored 30 books.
Further, again, the Author of this article (after whose viewpoint I structured my argument) also takes the much more strict interpretation as described.
Surprisingly, Maine makes little of these scenes: Noe (the author uses the spellings employed in a pre-King James translation) is portrayed in the opening sentence as glancing «toward the heavens, something he does a lot these days,» but aside from the implication that he may be looking for further divine clarification and not just the promised rains, we don't see him musing much.
I'm much happier to read primary sources as evidence (even though the choice of excerpts lies with the author), as I find this more convincing and usually more entertaining.
Dr S Radhakrishnan, however, adds that «The rishis are not so much the authors of the truths recorded in the Vedas as the seers who were able to discern the eternal truths by raising their life spirit to the plane of the universal spirit.»
It is perhaps his most universal book, for it is as much about the reader as it is about the author.
The ethical mandate underlying my friend's imagery is a familiar one: the earth «belongs as much to those who are to come after us as to us,» British author John Ruskin pointed out.
This alone merits attention — as there is much talk about the relative dearth of Catholic authors today — but Trower's life and work offer something more, as they speak to questions that are currently circulating within the Church.
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