As far as creating opportunities for dialog within your faith communities, I'd recommend starting with a book club,
perhaps around a book like Trouble I've Seen by Drew Hart, or The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander, or Assimilate or Go Home by Danielle Mayfield, or Forgive Us by the authors mentioned above — something that's not directly about this election or this presidency, but that addresses issues related to justice.
Not exact matches
Perhaps the most thought - provoking element in this
book is Larrimore's emphasis on the importance of Kant, more than Leibniz, as the hinge
around which the history of theodicy revolves.
Perhaps Wilkinson is an author working on a book about the «Child with Apple» painting (seemingly the MacGuffin of the movie that ties all the characters together) and perhaps during the 1960s he was interviewing the now older Zero Moustafa as he's really the only living person to have been around during its
Perhaps Wilkinson is an author working on a
book about the «Child with Apple» painting (seemingly the MacGuffin of the movie that ties all the characters together) and
perhaps during the 1960s he was interviewing the now older Zero Moustafa as he's really the only living person to have been around during its
perhaps during the 1960s he was interviewing the now older Zero Moustafa as he's really the only living person to have been
around during its theft.
Though the late - 19th century setting of Jules Verne's
Around the World in 80 Days is an important character (and
perhaps the most important one), the
book has a kind of timeless, universal appeal that made a film version in the»50s relevant and entertaining and could make a new adaptation feel the same.
As your booth browser gives your
book the once - over, she still may not be interested for herself, but
perhaps it's the perfect gift for her friend's birthday, just
around the corner.
I have a hunch, though, that some kind of screening process will evolve among
book reviewers,
perhaps around some version of nepotism / networking — either where outlets within certain «elite» lit communities will begin reviewing talented self - published people who are also connected with the same communities — or sufficient numbers of intrepid bloggers will have the tenacity to weed through the jungle and sniff out the good stuff to review, creating a critical mass of well - reviewed, non-tradionally published authors.
• Summer's right
around the corner, and if your vacation plans are still up in the air,
perhaps Book Patrol's What to Read Where travel guide will inspire you to settle on your destination — and your summer reading pick.
I'm one of those people who loves collecting
books but I've heard a lot about kindle from my friends and thought
perhaps it will easier to carry it
around while travelling.
-- Formatting HTML newsletters — Formatting
books for Smashwords — Research about the business side of being an author (e.g., how Street Teams work, how to market a
book in a foreign language, podcasts that might be a good fit to have you as a guest, etc.)-- Scouting for bloggers to send
book review requests to — Pitching to those bloggers and tracking responses — Formatting (and
perhaps light editing) of blog posts, or organizing content — Managing your Street Team Facebook group (posing questions to keep the group engaged, answering questions, sharing upcoming news, etc.)-- Creating box sets in Scrivener from individual novels — Moving works translated into a foreign language from Word into Scrivener — Scheduling tweets and Facebook posts (ones that don't require your direct input or engagement with your audience)-- Transcribing audio interviews or notes — For non-fiction authors, VAs can do an enormous number of tasks
around webinars or other training you offer (e.g., planning and
booking the event, scheduling guests, managing registration lists, dealing with the back - end technology, creating and proofing slide decks, sending out advance information packages to the trainees, and then sending out follow - up information to the trainees, etc..)
Perhaps Walden
Books would still be
around today.
I may get
around to buying the
books and reading them eventually,
perhaps used copies to save a few bucks, but if they were available right now on a subscription based service, I would go out and read them all within a few months because it would be easy and the ones I liked I would purchase new hard copies of.
but
perhaps overly complex in parts... I enjoyed the
book for the most part but got a little bogged down with the jumping
around from different time periods and places and also by the different ethnic groups in India, Pakistan and Afghanistan (Christine E).
In the case of a YA novel or children's
book, look
around for be age - appropriate relatives, neighborhood kids, or the children of your friends — or
perhaps you know a teacher or librarian who would be willing to read some or all of it aloud to students and collect feedback.
Books are
perhaps our best friends and with them
around, one can never be lonely.
My
book is
around nine months late to publication, but
perhaps it needed that extra time to get to the place it is now in.
NY Times forgot that they had a meandering article about how a lack of
book cover images makes ebooks terrible
around 6 months ago (
perhaps 12).
Now
perhaps I'm missing something, maybe there really are hordes of parsimonious consumers spending hours wandering
around high street
book stores, scanning barcodes and checking the prices against Amazon in the hope of saving themselves a few quid.
For a print version, authors will receive 10 % or
perhaps a round sum like $ 1 per
book whereas self - published authors, depending on their pricing model receive
around 30 % per printed
book sale.
But not so well - known authors —
perhaps believing that what the famous do is what they should do, too — may decide to frame their content
around a
book - driven model, as well.
And then I remembered, I had an agent, a great agent, I wrote great
books (so all the rejecting editors told me) and yes, you are right, self pub has given my stories a voice and an ear and the chance to be read, when they otherwise would have still been gathering dust on my hard drive, yet, on the other hand this is hard, REALLY HARD, it is SO hard to find your way to a readership as a SP, with limited funds (dwindling)... and the glimmer of trad pub — with their power to splash your name
around established circles of readers, and their ability to secure a great number of reviews where, as a self pub, doors have been slammed in my face — becomes temptingly shiny again, (it's like childbirth, you forget all the painful stuff with time)... and it all gets very tempting... almost tempting enough to consider sacrificing one work JUST one artistic premise for the trade off of visibility... and then
perhaps, just
perhaps THEN, my SP efforts will finally sprout wings... but then I hear you and other say, it wasn't worth it, you'd never do it again, and I sigh... And then I wake up the next morning and think of packing it all in, and going to work for Walmart and steady shitty pay... lol And then along comes this blog post.
My next
book comes out in a few weeks and I'm going a different formatting route (
perhaps — in discussions with a house) and some cool options are
around with regard to formatting now (discussion links, videos, etc) so I'm exploring that.
Perhaps book yourself into your hotel's spa for a relaxing treatment, or take a stroll
around the extensive gardens.
To use portions of a
book, referenced in a bibliography, as part of a technical background summary, but without putting quotes
around specific phrases from that
book is
perhaps a bit sloppy.
The Surface
Book 2 13 remains
perhaps the most innovative convertible 2 - in - 1
around, with a tear - off display that seems like something from the Jetsons and some of the best performance you'll find in a 14 - inch or smaller machine.