As the text is
read back the book pages will actually turn, following the text.
Not exact matches
I
read the actual
book a few years ago, and it's definitely one that I wish I could go
back and tell my seventh - grade self is worth
reading, especially since I liked «Brave New World» so much when I
read it in high school.
My advice to every entrepreneur is to make time to step
back, reach for a
book, and incorporate
reading into your values and your everyday work.
Looking
back to the early days of my first startup attempt, I think something that kept me going was that I continually
read books about startups and entrepreneurs and watched as many interviews of founders as I could find.
One of them was Frank Ogden's The Last
Book You'll Ever
Read, notable not just for its breathlessly loony take on what the next century held for us, but also for including a complete digital copy of itself on a floppy disk stuck to the inside
back cover.
I come
back to this
book almost religiously every few years if only to find aspects of it that escaped me in previous
readings.»
Looking
back at my dad I thought about how lame a blue vase was, and how
reading a
book to get one was even lamer.
There are scientifically -
backed reasons to
read entrepreneurial
books.
Every
book I
read I fold key pages and later go
back through and transfer the information to note cards I organize by theme in card boxes.
«In 30 years» time, as technology moves forward even further, people are going to look
back and wonder why offices ever existed,»
reads the epigraph quoting Branson in the last chapter of the
book.
The other day I
read an interesting
book called Entrepreneurial DNA, by Joe Abraham, the founder of BOSI Global, an operating partner to venture -
backed and owner - operated companies.
Because this
book is so well organized, it is quite easy to go
back to using it as a reference
book once you have completed
reading it cover - to - cover.
;) Let's
Back To The Future of Business > after the clic» bip
read the message in the
book of Brian Solis!
Read this
book a couple of years ago and refer
back to it for guidance / inspiration (when the whole world seems to be going passive - tracker gaga).
Back in 2012 I finished
reading a very interesting
book called, «The Ivy Portfolio».
Now, I didn't get to see Tony Hsieh when he spoke at the Reno PRSA
back in January, and i haven't
read his
book «Delivering Happiness: A path to profits, passion, and purpose,» but i am aware of their general strategy.
As I recall, Plymouth actually stayed rather small and insular for some time while the Boston Bay Company took off with their colonies in what's now called Boston, New Bedford, and I believe the Cape Ann area but I'd have to re-
read a
book I
read while going to school down on Cape Cod a few years
back.
any idiot that brings up the crusades saying it was the christians has no clue about history the christians were fighting to take
back land stolen by murder and war perpetrated by muslims and islam
read a
book idiot
I wanted to get
back to the
book I was
reading and become engrossed in the story.
I challenge you to
read a nonfiction
book named A Divine Revelation of Hell by Mary Baxter from front to
back.
Back during the (George W.) Bush Administration, I spent (or rather wasted) some time
reading books and articles written by journalists who were suspicious (I hesitate to say paranoid) about those suspicious and paranoid fringe religious kooks (theonomists and theocrats) who threatened to take over....
what if I
read the
Book of Mormon, and ask God in prayer if its true... and... He (God) comes
back to me, with a big resounding... «No..
While you wait for the fish to come to you, you can sit
back in your boat, relax, and
read a good
book.
Holiness for me was found in the mess and labour of giving birth, in birthday parties and community pools, in the battling sweetness of breastfeeding, in the repetition of cleaning, in the step of faith it took to go
back to church again, in the hours of chatting that have to precede the real heart - to - heart talks, in the yelling at my kids sometimes, in the crying in restaurants with broken hearted friends, in the uncomfortable silences at our bible study when we're all weighing whether or not to say what we really think, in the arguments inherent to staying in love with each other, in the unwelcome number on the scale, in the sounding out of vowels during bedtime
book reading, in the dust and stink and heat of a tent city in Port au Prince, in the beauty of a soccer game in the Haitian dust, in the listening to someone else's story, in the telling of my own brokenness, in the repentance, in the secret telling and the secret keeping, in the suffering and the mourning, in the late nights tending sick babies, in confronting fears, in the all of a life.
There are hints of this all throughout the
books if you go
back and
read them through as adults: we missed them then, we see them clearly once we have seen the world.
I'm concerned about Tony's theology, whose philosophical foundations I criticized pretty consistently while I was involved in EC in 2004 - 7 before bowing out because Tony seemed more into pushing with some arrogance a pomo philosophy he never really studied in school than he was into fostering dialogue (I went
back to just
reading the wonderful
books of Brian McLaren which is how I got involved in the first place).
The one filled with white men, all
reading the same
books, spouting the same talking points, quoting each other
back and forth.
I have
read some
books a while
back by a theologian named Walter Wink (the Powers trilogy) that challenged a lot of my thinking in this area.
That's one of the things I was pointing out to someone who
read a
book on necromancy (long island medium) and was totally sold on everything the author wrote and was now at «peace» from
reading about the endless cycles of death — i.e. soul coming
back as such... dying then coming
back again as another.
One of the pleasures of recording on the inside cover of a
book the date you finished
reading it — I've been doing that now for over a decade — is that, when you return to it, you can instantly imagine yourself
back in time.
Well, its funny because after I got married, people kept quoting my
book [The Irresistible Revolution] to me, and I thought, well, maybe I need to go
back and
read what I wrote!
I ran a poll on Facebook a few weeks
back about how many
books people
read per year.
Also, JW, Stevie has got a point that the no
back light and the e-ink are so that it won't be anything like looking at a computer screen and it's actually as good for your eyes as
reading a regular
book.
An all powerful creator would not make an excuse by putting it
back on the people... wouldn't he search for a way to help them understand instead of accusing them of not having faith... trust must be earned by anyone asking for «faith»... an all knowing god would understand this... if no trust... no faith can be had...
reading a
book does not fulfill even the barest minimum of building a trust which is necessary if you are to ask for «faith».
If I had decided to chime in I would have recommended
reading Ian Bradley's fine
book Abide With Me: The World of Victorian Hymns (1997), where he details the heated debates in 19th century England over whether to have choirs, and if so, if they should be kept at the rear of the sanctuary in order to «
back up» the congregation in its worship rather than being a visual distraction in the front.
Interest in oriental religion goes
back in America to the early 19th century, as we have seen, but never before have significant numbers of people gone beyond
reading books to become adepts and engage in arduous practice.
It all started
back when I was 17 when I
read a
book about hell.
I came across Mike
back in seminary when I
read his youth specialties
books.
It reminds me of a
book I
read by John Ortburg a long while
back that really inspired me — «If you want to walk on water you have to get out of the boat»
Mathew, I have no problem with gays, because everyone on this earth is responsible for his, or her own righteousness, Ezekiel 14 vs. 14 - 21, but how are you able to dispel the old test, is beyond me, for the new test, should fulfill the old, when one
read a
book, they don't begin at the
back of it do they?
Go
read some
books from prominent scientists who lean towards creationism, refute the facts they present, make whatever «excuses» you want, then come
back here and argue with me.
Go crawl
back under the rock you call home and maybe actually learn to
read something worthwhile other than the few
books of the gospels while ignoring the rest of the bible.
I got up this morning and decided I would
read your
book Put service
back into church service.
I remember so clearly when I
read Elie Wiesel's
book Night
back in 2006, and
reading this remarkable section:
Go
read a
book on evolutionary theory (and also look up the definition of «scientific theory» and how it defers from the general use of the word) and THEN come
back here and make some comments.
Read some of N.T. Wright's
books, then come
back and reread Jeremy's post.
please go
read your «good
book» 3 times slowly, then come
back to the keyboard.
I hope you can get
back to me not sure i did this right, but i
read your
book over the summer.
Perhaps go
back and
read some of the
books before Hebrews (especially if you haven't yet) too build your faith and knowledge.
You need to stop being so vindictive towards others, maybe
read a
book, go have sex, whatever you need to calm down, then come
back and realize that no one is attacking you, im sure people are laughing at this conversation, but not because of what it in but just because its pointless, you bring up the same things OVER and OVER again and then accuse me of having spuratic arguments?