Sentences with phrase «of great books out»

I am a book lover too... lots of great books out there for kiddos.
There are a lot of great books out there, including books geared towards people going through or thinking about divorce.
There are a lot of great books out there, including books geared towards people going through or thinking about divorce.
There are plenty of great books out there on global warming, all full of dismaying facts and figures.
There are a lot of great books out there, so even making it onto a shortlist is an achievement... (but I would say that because Please Release Me made it onto a shortlist or two * grin *).
Aside from that, I know of no magic bullet, but after three and a half years of writing for a living, I can think of worse ways to spend my time, and I'm always extremely grateful to my readership, because there are any number of great books out there, and I'm fortunate they're reading mine.
There are TONS of great books out there chock - filled with writing advice.
There are a lot of great books out there to guide you through the process.
There are a lot of great books out there that will help you meet cougars and attract them.
There's lots of great books out there for kids on grieving, some of which we have.
There are lots of great books out there for families planning to homebirth, too!
There are a limitless number of great books out there.
Yes the book is great, but there is a lot of great books out there

Not exact matches

Content That Converts by Laura Hanley is a great book for B2B companies looking to get out of direct selling or warming up the leads before calling.
But according to a new book titled Forest Bathing that's out in April, the benefits of spending time among trees are even greater than even these impressive benefits.
Before the great recession, in 2006, Lou Uchitelle sent out a warning about the terrible costs of layoffs in his book The Disposable American: Layoffs and their Consequences.
In his new book, The Idea Factory: Bell Labs and the Great Age of American Innovation (Penguin), Jon Gertner vividly tells the story of the transistor, as well as the dozens of other innovations that rolled out of Bell Labs.
Getting someone to act and to do is far greater impact on my legacy if people go out and succeed instead of buying another one of my books.
There are plenty of five - minute podcasts out there, and if you can't sit and read a book, they can be a great way to learn while doing brainless work, says Saranya Krishnamurthy.
You can find lists of all - time - great business books everywhere, but for my money, the most seminal one came out in 2001.
From great online content to endless book recommendations and must - read lists, most of us struggle to fit in all the reading we want to do rather than locate cool stuff to check out.
BACK in 1995, Nicholas Negro - ponte in his book Being Digitalsuggested the greatest single obstacle to the roll - out of the information economy was the vast army of digitally homeless CEOs and senior managers.
I think Buffett wrote a bunch of letters that were compiled by Lawrence Cunningham that get (ph) into topics, and that was laid out and I always assign that in my class which I just think is a great, great book and you mention my three books three times and so you have to read those too.
«I got wiped out personally in 1968, which was the last really crazy, silly stock market before the Internet era... I became a great reader of history books.
That being said, you can still get some great value out of 100,000 points, especially if you book a category 4 property and maximize the 5th night free perk.
«The Retail Revival is a critical read for all marketing professionals who are trying to figure out what's next in retail Doug Stephens does a great job of explaining why retail has evolved the way it has, and the book serves as an important, trusted guide to where it's headed next.»
I just got listen to this podcast great info much appreciated you mentioned the book think grow rich I have read part of it so far what I have got out of that book is desire determination and to never stop alot of the stuff that got talked about I had herd of but never of it actually being done by someone big help
As arguably the greatest Investing Mind of the last century, I've taken a leaf out of Charlie's book and picked up biographies on some of his heroes over the last year including Lee Kuan Yew, Albert Einstein and Charles Darwin.
In surging, gold blurted out the Deep State Central Planners» strategy for dealing with the Great Financial Crisis: the hyperinflation of bond, equities and real estate prices via the hyperinflation of both official and totally clandestine, off - the - books money supply, in order to create the hyperinflation of tax revenues desperately required by the government to forestall its fiscal collapse.
We recommend you take the weekend to go through the «greatest trading books ever written» instead of wondering what Mt. Gox's trustee will do with the 16,000 bitcoins he transferred out of the defunct exchange's cold wallets, for the first time since February.
check out the great reviews and discussion of the book over at Patheos: http://www.patheos.com/Find/Religion-and-Faith-Book-Club.html
And the last book of the Bible prophetically pointed to the gradual depletion of religion, that is false religion, by its members at Revelation 16, which says: «And the sixth one (of seven angels) poured out his bowl (symbolizing God's anger) upon the great river Euphrates, and its water was dried up, that the way might be prepared for the kings from the rising of the sun.»
A book called Disinformation, co-written by General Pacepa and the American professor of law Ronald Rychlak (best known for his book Hitler, the War and the Pope, a well - researched defence of Pius XII's record during the Second World War), which spells out these revelations at greater length, is «dubious at best» — or at least, the bits written by Pacepa are: the reviewer NCR admits that «what Rychlak contributes, drawn from his earlier work on Pope Pius, appears solid».
The great challenge, the one that took me a book to articulate and which I suspect will take me a lifetime to work out, is to hold every piece of my faith experience in love, even the broken bits, even the parts that still cut my hands and make them bleed.
One of my greatest delights of parenting is holding a title out to a child with the words, «I remember loving these books when I was about your age.»
My book was never intended to be a polemic against complementarianism, (the word is only used once in its 315 pages), so I don't spend a great deal of time fleshing out all the nuances and differences of the movement, though conversations in response to the book have revealed these nuances and differences to be many.
And, as Jean - Louis Brindamour, who developed Pyramid Publications» religious program, points out, «The phenomenal growth of sales so far tells us that time and a determined public will eventually force even greater space for such books where they do not yet appear.»
I think if these people had worried less about what others might be sharing, and just stayed focused on getting their own book done, maybe we'd be talking about how great their book is because it would be published, rather than all the lives they destroyed in trying to control others and make sure none of their ideas leaked out.
Furthermore, although we recognized that much of what was worked out in the later book was absent from the former, we read the former in light of where we understood it was tending, namely, the system that we identified as Whitehead's great achievement.
Perhaps the greatest pleasure of releasing Searching for Sunday last month was introducing you to my sister, Amanda Opelt, a singer / songwriter out of Boone, North Carolina whose album, Seven Songs, serves as the perfect companion to the book as it features an original song for each of the seven sacraments.
There are lots of really great books out there, and you can't fault the publishing industry for only publishing books that sell in a day when people are reading only 2 or 3 books a year.
And, indeed, in further oracles of his book Amos introduces some nameless nation of his age in a role of divine judgment that implies the Lord's dominion far out also into the midst of the great powers of the time.
So sacred was it held to be at the time of the making of the Code of Manu, greatest of the law books, that it was therein decreed that a lowly Sudra, i.e., low caste man, who so much as listened to the sacred text would have molten metal poured into his ears, and his tongue cut out if he pronounced the sacred words of the holy Vedas.1 «Whether such laws were ever actually enforced may be doubted.
In the middle of the century just past, Mayne Reid was the great writer of books of out - of - door adventure.
I have already picked out two more of your artworks to use on my next book:)-RRB- Keep up the great work!!
However, I agree that my review might have been overly hard on his book, which, in covering a great deal of ground in relatively few pages, has the virtues of brevity and conciseness» virtues I failed to point out the first time around.
There are some great resources out there for helping people harmonize faith and science: The Language of God by Francis Collins (one of my favorite books on the topic), Coming to Peace With Science by Darrel Falk (which several professors told me has been especially helpful for students), Saving Darwin by Karl Giberson (which I am currently loving), and The Lost World of Genesis One (which we will discuss next week).
I recall the reaction of a priest friend to a text setting out the conservative version of Anglicanism, one which espouses fidelity to the monarchy, to the liturgical tradition of the Book of Common Prayer, and to the rural pastoral tradition, of such great comfort to the people.
Jesus - fully human and fully god, why do you think God would humble himself and be with his creation (total love), when sin entered the world we were seperated from God forever, God pure, and humans tainted, the only way was for God to send Jesus to pay the price of sin, he took the sting out of death, and bridged the gap for humans and heaven, there is no greater sacrifice, God loves all of us, I was an unbeliever, but came to the truth - read the book of John and make up your own mind - so many people taint Gods word, but the Holy bible is the truth and it will set you free.
I think it's the greatest book in the world but I didn't find that out until the Holy Spirit started revealing some things and every time I read it and He doesn't I don't get nearly as much out of it.
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