Sentences with phrase «put boxes of books»

The best part is that you don't have to put boxes of books in your trunk, and drive around the country like some of them did.

Not exact matches

Following Barker Sa Shekhem's logic, one could say that CocaCola doesn't «put» vending machines touting its beverage brands in school hallways, Pizza Hut doesn't «put» branded signage for its Book - It program into school classrooms and Domino's doesn't «put» clearly branded boxes of its Smart Slice pizza in school cafeterias.
I have a few (dozen) more boxes of books to find room for, perhaps a shelf more to build (we put this room together entirely from things we already had or found), and there is the one major design flaw in need of a fix.
Have keepsakes you can put in a baby book or memory box (little blankets, caps, hospital bracelets, footprints and handprints, clay imprints of feet).
You can also try reserving a special toy — or a box of rotating activity books and quiet games — for the older sib to play with while you put the baby down, recommends Dr. Mindell.
Scott's book had me laughing from the introduction, and the laughs didn't stop there; I devoured this book like it was a box of chocolates, frequently putting it down only to laugh so hard I scared a cat out of my lap.
I put this view more gently to Randal Keynes, Darwin's great - great - grandson, who wrote the book Annie's Box — an account of Darwin's family life and of his relationship with Annie in particular — and who gets a writing credit on this movie.
Amazon Marketing Services allows authors to setup an ad campaign for their exclusive titles, one that is designed to put their books in little «ahem» boxes next to customers» selections based on either other areas of interest or the selection of similar titles.
I love the Little Free Library movement where neighbors put up wooden boxes full of paper books to share.
Carolynn continues to find putting together multi-author anthologies and boxed sets to be valuable — she makes money doing it and also gets a lot of new readers checking out her books.
When to put together a boxed set of the early books in a series and using that as another type of Book 1, perhaps with a different cover and blurb to appeal to a slightly different audience.
Inevitably any book is a big box into which you put all your odd material, and the character of Pran going in this slightly quizzical way through life is very like some of my experiences of trying to come to terms with my racial identity.
If any one of your books are «wide» (sold on platforms other than Amazon), you can't put the box set into Select because part of the agreement is that none of the content can be sold anywhere other than Amazon.
(I have since removed all of my books from Select and put the box set on other platforms.)
He pops them out of their packages and boxes, puts the accompanying paperwork (cover letters & PRs) into the book, then stacks them on my desk to be screened and sorted out by me.
Some of the books I'd like to put in a boxed set have already been placed directly on the iBookstore.
If you put a Book 1 into a boxed set, some of the readers may go on to buy your other books, and because numerous authors are promoting the set or anthology, it should get more exposure than it would if you were just promoting your own stuff.
And yes, I did pull that 2004 book back out of the box, wiped the roach turds off of it, completely rewrote it, and put it out in May.
As GigaOM Pro analyst Mike Wolf has described in a number of posts, the company has been putting together the pieces of a «book industry in a box» for the better part of a year — launching new imprints of its own for various different genres, including one devoted to popular thrillers.
Also, I always put a message in the «Didn't Win» box letting the losers know that if they send me an email or sign up for my mailing list, I'll happily send them a free copy of the book.
In her book Dark Matters, Simone Browne explains how the placement of Thomas» Branded Head (2004) in light boxes next to real corporate institutions, such as J.P. Morgan, called attention to the fact that these banks put out insurance policies on slaves.4 Though Thomas certainly uses these corporate aesthetics, they are meant to draw attention to the bodies that have been appropriated by the florescent glare, yet also return agency to the subject — calling attention to the hypocrisy evident in the system of production.
To put you in context, this is in my view a good book for those among us who were fascinated by the «fragmentation of international law «debate starting (or at least becoming one of THE topics) in the 2000s; who have perhaps read Koskenniemi's report for the International Law Commission or other literature on the topic (legal pluralism, Pauwelyn's Conflict of Norms, you name it); who find themselves now stuck in one of the boxes and / or compartments of international or EU law; and who probably would love an update and overview over where we stand today.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z