Try, «I'm getting in the habit
of reading great books during my lunch hour,» instead of «I'm trying to stop shopping during my lunch hour.»
I did that my whole life before I converted to the convenience
of reading great books on my iPhone and Kindle.
Not exact matches
The Alchemist is one
of the
greatest books about the entrepreneurial journey I have ever
read.
Many thousands more have
read Stack's
book The
Great Game
of Business (Doubleday - Currency).
There is some analysis in there but I think we want people to get to the end
of this
book and be entertained, informed, feel like they've
read a
great book.
I learned to draw by emulating the likes
of John Romita Jr., John Byrne and Marc Silvestri, and I'm pretty certain comic
books contributed a
great deal to my
reading ability.
Russia is a
great country
of 142 million people, clever people, people that
read books, who like theater.
Soon droves
of students will be issued
reading lists, inventories
of books they are told to they need to
read to learn how to become the best, the
greatest, or as successful as (fill in famous name here).
Here's an experience I've had over time that I'm guessing you can relate to: many
of the
books I've
read that have taught me the most or had the
greatest impact on me do not appear on the recommended lists
of business luminaries, famous authors, or Hollywood stars.
For instance, if you're running a Facebook page that features children's
books and you run across a
great list
of 100
books every child should
read, you may be tempted to just post a link to that list as a status update.
If becoming a
great negotiator takes more
of a commitment than
reading a
book, then certainly no quick hit list
of tips is going do the job, either.
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.
Yes, you'll need to have captivating visuals and a clear message with
great content, which you can
read all about in the aforementioned dozens or hundreds
of books and articles on ecommerce.
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.
Reading a lot
of books is prerequisite to being a
great business owner, or
great at anything.
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.
«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.»
It's been awhile since I've
read it, but I think Michael did a very good job
of explaining this in his appendix to The
Great Rebalancing
book.
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
I blew through the
book quick because it was a
great read with lots
of helpful advice that I plan on putting to use.
This is
great stuff and completely concurrent with a
book I am
reading by David Meerman Scott, «The New Rules
of Marketing and PR».
What I think is really interesting because what we are doing right now I was
reading a
book called Buffett the making
of an American capitalist a
great book by the way.
«Active Value Investing has the hallmarks
of all
great investing
books — easy to
read, humorous at times, and, most
of all, it demonstrates Vitaliy's investing process in terms accessible to the novice and expert alike.
All
of these
books are
great reads and can add tremendously to your trading knowledge and performance.
I have been following the slow and arduous acceptance
of author Michael Fumento's central thesis presented in his
book The Myth
of Heterosexual AIDS and in his series
of articles in The New Republic and in Commentary with
great interest... So I was extremely pleased to
read your editorial position concerning AIDS.
Here's what Jean Yarbrough
of Bowdoin, the distinguished author
of pathbreaking
books on President TJ and President TR, wrote: I
read this post with
great interest, as....
I'm enjoying
reading «small giants» a secular business
book that argues againt the «grow or die» received wisdom through a study
of businesses that turned down opportunites to grow in size and profits in order to be
great at quality (http://www.anglicancelluk.org/blog/p,12/).
the bible was written by man, god writes in your heart, it is more work to find and
read the writings
of god in your heart but there is no
great book, no sermon, nothing
of the works
of man that can take it's place
Reading Phylis Tickles»
book the
Great Emergence which traces through history 500 year cycles
of re-formation
of organized religion.
I've
read Mr. King since «Carrie»... some
of his
books are
great, some not - so -
great — but usually all are GOOD.
«
Great potential for growth in the Baby Boomer market,» one
of the
book's memos
reads, «but will require awareness campaigns to promote the concept
of «guilt,» which 53 — 68 - year - old respondents to a survey reported they are «less likely» or «unlikely» to experience.»
I've been keeping busy, preparing for classes that were supposed to start yesterday,
reading a
book for a review due at the end
of the month, shoveling the driveway (the first one on the block to do so, with the only emulator being the ex-Marine across the street), and watching DVDs we rented in anticipation
of the
great blizzard
of 2011 (8 inches
of snow and ice!).
For instance, I might have
read her
book quite carefully and nevertheless, in an attempt to survey a
great deal
of material, failed to note something significant» and in this case that is just what happened.
Jon Krakauer's «Under the banner
of heaven» is a
great book on the subject; the mormons don't want you to
read it.
In her latest
book, The Death and Life
of the
Great American School System, she charges that the state
reading and math tests mandated by the No Child Left Behind Act lower the bar, produce inconsistent results, lack content, promote cheating, and encourage teachers to waste time on test - taking strategies.
I'm curious after
reading your «critique»
of a
great book.
And I
read his
book and I agreed with a
great deal
of it.
This
book speaks about the subject
of Calvinistic influence in the church today, it is a
Great read.
First
of all, I could listen to her
read the phone
book, she has such a
great voice.
«
Reading this
book was one
of the
greatest graces
of my life.»
(Not a
great month for
books for me in terms
of my «fun»
reading.
Or are you
reading the
greatest fiction
book of them all, the bible.
Sorry about the tangents, but it's always a
great point in a post to quote the
great Thoreau, I think he captures the heart
of what I desire in all humanity: «A truly good
book teaches me better than to
read it.
He even
read sections
of it to his dying father and spoke
of the
book being «a
great strength to me.»
This
great little
book is a quick
read, and is full
of humor (
great for us guys), and is chock - full
of ideas
of how to date your daughters, what to avoid, topics to discuss, and even has a list to get us started
of the «Top 15 Daddy Dates.»
I can not say the
book is
great literature, but it is a good
read, and it provides a powerful feel for the day - by - day pressures exerted by a regime bent upon extinguishing any independent force
of possible opposition, and especially any force appealing to an authority transcending the state.
I think the whole
book of romans is a
great book to
read about faith and grace Jeremy, I am sure I may frustrate you at times, but just understand all this interaction is growing me.
But a friend
of mine at work gave me a
book today called The
Great Derangement, and although I'm already
reading several
books (see my
reading list to the right), I decided -LSB-...]
Ironically, as I was
reading this
book about how to live as Christians in a post-Christian era, I ran across an exchange between atheist Christopher Hitchens (author
of the best - selling
book God is Not
Great) and Suchin Pak (correspondent for MTV news).
Though these types
of books are a
great way to grasp all the various views and approaches on a particular topic, I find them difficult to
read.