Sentences with phrase «popular academic books»

Carmen McGuinness is a board - certified behavior analysist (BCBA - D), acceptance and commitment (ACT) therapist, and the author of three popular academic books for families.

Not exact matches

Bernstein holds a PhD in Social Welfare from Columbia University and is the author and coauthor of numerous books for both popular and academic audiences, including his latest book, «The Reconnection Agenda: Reuniting Growth and Prosperity.»
Well, it's an academic book aimed at a popular audience that filled in a lot of holes in my crude system.
The book's enthusiastic reception by popular and (to a lesser extent) academic readers took Kirk somewhat by surprise.
To question his sources is, he claims, unfair to the book that is intended for popular consumption, not academic dissection.
SportsInsights takes an academic view of the sports marketplace, as detailed in our popular and best - selling Sports Investing series of books and our recent article comparing the sports marketplace to the financial markets.
I dove onto counseling, read proflically from academic papers, books and popular work on abuse.
Angst over the landscape has spilled from the academic world of preprints and colloquia into blogs, a number of recent popular science books, and even the pages of the New York Times Book Review.
However, science editors do work on the full range of academic titles, from undergraduate textbooks to research - level books and popular science, so there is plenty of room for creativity.
Should Alice suddenly develop an interest in nutrition today and begin to read popular books on the subject, she would find herself in a bewildering world where small things are made large and large things small, where nutrition commentators engage in much reeling and writhing and where the academic tea party on macronutrient values never ends.
Erik is looking for the following: literary / upmarket fiction with an emphasis on plot (as in, nothing too slow / quiet / static); popular and academic / trade science nonfiction, especially evolutionary biology; narrative history and biography; contemporary culture criticism (think Klosterman); sports books, if it's got a scope that extends past just games and players and into culture / larger issues.
The other is one of literature's great classics, a book that transcended the racism of the time to give an honest portrayal of racism and black - white interaction long before those topics became academic or popular.
While there are of course legitimate academic reasons to study the text and regular folks may just be plain curious about the book, reading Mein Kampf isn't exactly the sort of thing people will want to do on the commute to work - which could be exactly why it's proving so popular in ebook format.
Since I saw the book as a product format losing its primacy in educational and academic markets, it seemed at least polite if not wholly pertinent to ask about the prospects for fiction writing, and indeed the whole marketplace for non-fiction, from self - help to popular history.
3) Don't advertise your book as popular if it is academic.
Just like there are references academic papers and in some popular history books.
Huntington has written many academic and popular articles, as well as two books.
From the beginning, the Osgoode Society has attempted to maintain a publishing balance between books that are «popular» and books that are more «academic» in nature.
Her work has been published in academic journals, edited books, trade journals, and the popular press.
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