Sentences with phrase «read over the book»

Well, read over the book and let me know your thoughts.
I am now inspired to read over your book again...
I really enjoy reading over this book.

Not exact matches

Recently when a customer was dropping Lord of the Rings references, the employee on the other end, who had never read the books, tapped a new representative to take over and continue the Tolkien - themed banter.
After reading Lupkin's case study on a network marketing company that grew over seventy - million in sales with his approach, Carter knew it was time for the pair to co-author a book.
Now, 14 years later, I have read over 1,000 non-fiction business, leadership and personal development books, which include over 200 biographies and auto - biographies.
Customers buy three to four times as many books after they buy the Kindle device... That's such a remarkable increase in the amount of book purchasing, it seems pretty likely to be an increase in the rate of which people buy books [over all]... I hear this from people every day, that they're actually recapturing minutes of the day for reading.
Over the course of two years I read 197 books on different topics ranging from business to physics, from nonfiction to fiction and made every second of my days productive.
Accomplished entrepreneurs and business leaders are giving the same advice over and over: Read more books than average and you'll be more successful than average.
Here's an experience I've had over time that I'm guessing you can relate to: many of the books I've read that have taught me the most or had the greatest impact on me do not appear on the recommended lists of business luminaries, famous authors, or Hollywood stars.
This book is a fabulous read to understand that exceptional talent is a function of hard work over time.
I've read over 550 personal development books and knew I was a natural adviser to the people in my life - especially when it came to connecting to your purpose, becoming more confident, negotiating, and networking.
Peter Thiel may be embroiled in controversy over his support for Donald Trump at the moment, but according to Ng his book Zero to One is well worth a read if you're aiming to start new and innovative ventures.
For a full list of books Gates recommends, perhaps for your bedtime reading list, head over to his blog's Books books Gates recommends, perhaps for your bedtime reading list, head over to his blog's Books Books page.
A great read I enjoyed over the summer break was Gerry McGovern's new book The Caring Economy... Business Principles for the New Digital Age.
A study from Pew Research Center found that millennials are reading more books than people over 30.
I promise you if you spend a couple hours one day reading posts on this site, or if you want to support financial education and read my Best of Financial Samurai book, you will get super motivated to build your wealth and actually gain more wealth over time.
Over the past years while launching and scaling my apparel business I have read countless books and taken a number of courses and Kelsey's approach is on it's own level.»
Egencia's gross bookings for the first quarter rose 15 percent year over year to $ 2.08 billion, parent... KEEP READING
Read the intro to my new book, The Reconnection Agenda: Reuniting Growth and Prosperity, over at the WaPo PostEverything.
I read over 100 personal finance and investing books in the course of the following 24 months, educating myself financially and learning a lot about investing, from stocks to real estate.
I've read over 150 books, courses and tapes and have a library of such information.
Over last 8 or 9 years I have read a fair few books on this topic, but none as good as The Storyteller's Secret by Carmine Gallo.
Over the years I've read a lot of investment books, and the name Benoit Mandelbrot comes up from time to time.
As the year comes to a close we look at the business books that you need to read over the Christmas break... Rearead over the Christmas break... ReadRead...
Over a decade ago, I made the decision to become a full - time real estate investor by reading the book Rich Dad, Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki.
According to Huffington Post, over 95 % of leisure travelers read at least seven reviews before booking their holidays.
Over the weekend I was reading David Einhorn's book Fooling Some of the People All of the Time.
The ideas are «real world,» and over other business related books I have read, this one made it not only seem possible, but much easier.
I haven't kept exact count, of course, but over the past quarter - century I have surely read (or tried to read) a couple thousand books on investing.
No God wrote any bible as the bible is simply a book of compiled stories written by people and the bible was actually written 300 years after the birth of Jesus (if he was) and the reality is most American ministers, priest, etc could have never read the first bible since it was written in Greek and changed over, and over, and over again.
I won't be reading a book by 2 guys whom ``... he -LCB- God -RCB- gave them over to a depraved mind» (Rom.
As a kid I used to read «choose your own adventure» books over and over, looking for the right path to the «real» ending.
So, what happens as people read these stories over and over, the conversation simply never comes up... and if someone challenges their faith... and they go to the Bible to look for answers, they are simply never going to find a trace of what I'm trying to say here in the sacred books.
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....
maybe you should stop reading the same book over and over and start to get a real education.
One of my favourite reads over the summer was Andrew and Rachel Wilson's new book The Life You Never Expected (IVP).
When I read the book again several years later, I puzzled over my previous reading.
As part of my work over the last four years, I've spent a significant amount of time reading books in the Christian «marriage advice» genre: Real Marriage, His Needs, Her Needs, Love & Respect.
As someone who has done so many times over during my almost 40 years as a Christians, I can assure you it's NOT a comfortable Book; only someone who HAS N'T read it would come away with that conclusion!!
Then I read Donald MIller's book «Blue Like Jazz» and it flipped my trajectionary around from trying to know and debate a perfect arguement and win people over through theological submission, to wow, God not only Loves me, but He likes me?
Reading aloud to the children has been like gathering kindling daily — lighting children to read books on their own, flaming their interest in books they might have otherwise passed over.
It would be pleasant to think that the new approach on boys» books - reflecting a genuine panic over the fact that boys lag behind girls in reading, and have been doing so at an increasing rate for these three decades - shows a fresh determination to base future educational policies on truth.
A reader has a special relationship with a living writer whose books he or she has been reading as they appeared over the years.
Thank you for reading, for commenting, for our funny and deep and weird conversations on Twitter and Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram, for your emails and letters, for your support and critiques, for showing up to the events in churches and community centres where I stumbled over my words and hugged you a bit too tightly and likely cried, for buying my little yellow book, for your prayers for me and my family, for staying with me, really, for all of it.
What began as a simple act has turned into a full - blown revolution, as tens of thousands of families all over the world now tune in to Sarah's weekly Read - Aloud Revival podcast, a show dedicated to helping parents make meaningful and lasting connections with their kids through books.
They found that even though, «Four in 10 [Americans] say it's a book worth reading over and over,» only 11 percent had even read the whole thing once.
Marly Youmans's new novel, Maze of Blood, has an epigraph from Jorge Luis Borges (who wasn't writing for Marly or for me, but whose books I have read and reread over the years).
If you've read any of my books or posts over the years, these folks are familiar to you, I know.
Reading Christian books has not been one of my strong points (hang over from too much study), but in the case of the Atonement of God I couldn't put it down.
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