Sentences with phrase «perhaps write a book about it»

Do you know if David Blatner or Anne - Marie Concepcion plan to include this here or perhaps write a book about it?

Not exact matches

Edgar S. Brightman, who had himself been working for many years on the development of a nontraditional view of God, rejected Hartshorne's panentheism but praised other aspects of his view of God.35 Reinhold Niebuhr wrote a brief but very sympathetic review, 36 and John Bennett claimed that Hartshorne's was perhaps the best hypothesis about God available to contemporary theology.37 D. C. Macintosh found the book «exceptionally penetrating, stimulating, and instructive,» but by accusing Hartshorne of being too rationalistic he touched on what has been one of the major differences between Hartshorne and most other Whiteheadian theologians.38
I'll never forget what a priest wrote in a book about learning from your dreams: Perhaps, in your recurring nightmare of being chased by a monster, the monster is you!
thank you, thank you, thank you for: — maintaining such a consistently wonderful blog that brings me a little joy with every new post — writing in a completely endearing way that makes you feel like a far - away friend (slightly creepy, perhaps, but true)-- coming to vancouver to speak about and sign your book, which is exactly as beautiful and chock - full of deliciousness as i could have hoped.
There is a manner of writing, employed by the best reporters when they go book - length, which implies that the writer knows at least as much about his subject as God does, and maybe a little more — perhaps because God knows when to avert His gaze.
Share new information: You might like to share some up to date information with your mother or mother - in - law - in - law by commenting enthusiastically about a new book you have discovered or perhaps some written information or research that reinforces what you are doing.
Perhaps one day in the not - too - distant future, Crystal will write her own book about her open adoption experiences.
I'd love to have the chance to research and write a book about one of the things that fascinate me: perhaps the growth of the labour movement in the north east as the industrial revolution gathered pace, or the later history of imperial Rome.
Perhaps I am a little biased, having written a book about them, but I think these animals deserve at least one day of celebration.
You could write a book about the studies of ginger and the possible effects on the human body (perhaps preventing cancer; fighting gastrointestinal issues), but for purposes of this post... Ginger is antiviral and antibacterial food and it is also anti-inflammatory and has antioxidants.
* If you would rather spend your time writing / typing about fashion than read a fashion book or watch a fashion film, perhaps you need to create an editorial calendar.
No, Brother Juniper has decided that he's going to write the world's dullest book about this quintet of unfortunates so as to perhaps accidentally ken the mysterious workings of the Almighty in the small lives of small people.
You could also have them write down, or talk about, the reasons why they enjoy the book; perhaps they have a favourite character or like the story's theme?
If you are an MD but you wrote a book about tulip arranging, perhaps it is not necessary to use space on the back cover.
And... is it possible that you would perhaps someday write a post about your experiences self - publishing this book?
Perhaps there are bloggers who write about your book's topic and you can be interviewed by them, or your topic might be perfect for talk radio.
Opening a Twitter account, starting a fancy looking Facebook page and perhaps designing a new website, and maybe get back to using your blog, which you had forgotten all about while getting your book written and published.
When we publicize and blog about self - published authors we should note that at least right now they fascinate us not because of their talent but because they're underdogs, writing risqué books, and achieving unheard - of monetary success... Perhaps the digital age will produce e-editors, e-agents, and e-publicists that specialize in bringing e-literature, rather than just e-books, to a reading public ready for more.
Fans of this year's remarkable Astonish Me shouldn't miss Shipstead's 2012 debut, Seating Arrangements, perhaps the smartest book ever written about the leadup to a wedding.
Perhaps the best book ever written about professional golf, Feinstein's year - in - the - life look at the PGA tour gets inside the heads of the competitors, transforming them from plaid - panted zephyrs to the kind of multidimensional characters you expect to find in good fiction.
Our reviewer writes, «Home Is Burning is perhaps the funniest book about dying I've ever read... [Marshall] takes an unflinching look at how real families fall apart — and pull together — in their own ways.»
I have much to learn, but seeking out information when I am perhaps not ready to implement it can make me feel overwhelmed (should I really be worrying about how to implement Facebook ads when I am still writing the first book?!)
Since all the advice, from this podcast and every author I've heard who has had success outside Amazon is to «write in a series with first book free,» it seems unwise to me to worry about placing a solo book elsewhere until the sequel is out — perhaps even 3 or 4 sequels.
The author bio on the back cover of your book needs to cover a lot of ground in a few words: publishing credits, writing degrees earned, perhaps something fun about yourself.
Perhaps you'll build the next big thing, add a feature your users have been waiting for, or write that book you've been thinking about for years.
Meanwhile, I'm going to steal this first Monday spot to write about other things, probably not cabbages and kings, but perhaps some observations about writing and the writing life, book promotion (or the lack thereof), new books on these topics, or just about anything else that might pop into my head.
As for readers and fans of the Dylan Hunter books, perhaps you'll enjoy a bit of background about how I got started writing these tales.
Perhaps about the book that I'd finally mustered the courage to write just this year?
Do you rewrite the history books, inserting the female artists where they belong, or do you write new books about women artists, perhaps reinforcing a marginalized status?
«Each of the essays accompanying the artists is thoughtful... There is an intimacy about the writing, and the artists, that one does not expect from a large, heavy [book]... Perhaps this is the element that lifts the book beyond a standard survey.»
How to See seems pitched for a general audience, or perhaps an audience of art students: «The idea for this book is to write about contemporary art in the language artists use when they talk among themselves,» Salle says in his introduction.
Would I care most about their experience as an attorney, experience and results handling similar types of cases, firm's reputation in the legal community, do they teach other lawyers that area of law, other achievements, perhaps writing relevant articles or «the book» in the field of law?
Perhaps it was this book that led me to one of my writer heroes, Lewis Thomas, who was a biologist who wrote great essays about medicine and science.
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