Sentences with phrase «readers out of this reality»

Not exact matches

Carley's book offers readers an abundance of clever trading strategy and risk management techniques in that easy - to - read format, but she doesn't leave out the harsh realities and heartbreak many overzealous speculators face.
3Eslick points out that at the crucial passage in Process and Reality in which Whitehead says Descartes» concept of substance is a true derivative from Aristotle's, Whitehead refers the reader not to Aristotle's Categories but to W. D. Ross's book about Aristotle (SCCW 504).
As readers of this blog know, late last spring I spoke at a cool conference in England called How the Light Gets In, where I hung out with all kinds of professional reality - ponderers.
Both of those sound great, but in reality they end up being little more than window dressing, and in most cases you'll find out that you wasted your money on a promotion that returned little in the way of finding new readers.
Bolles and Christen hold readers» interest with quick tip and reality check boxes, profiles of successful 20 - somethings, and websites to seek out further information.
Today more readers than ever before need something that will take them out of reality and sweep them away on an emotional joy ride.
However, as Florrie Binford Kichler President of the IBPA, points out, «The reality is that Amazon has levelled the playing field for smaller publishers, enabling them to reach readers online in huge numbers, and publish their content quickly, easily and efficiently.»
The reality is these same publishers are missing out on opportunities to expose more of their content to readers who already bought from them.
I think it's also important to point out that in many of these conversations (not that it will necessarily happen in this one), people will often assume that no one reads books anymore, but in reality, that vast majority of American adults read at least one book a year -LSB-(75 % according to a Pew Study)-RSB-(http://www.pewresearch.org/2013/06/25/library-readers-book-type/) and the median number of books read was 5 in 2013, so I don't think we can say that school is turning kids off reading, because most of them grow up to be adult readers.
We are, however, giving Fidose of Reality readers the opportunity to win a basket of goodies for taking the time to check this tale out:
1995 Cotter, Holland, Beneath the Barrage, The Modern's Little Show, The New York Times, April 7, p. C27 Hainley, Bruce Next to Nothing: The Art of Tom Friedman, Artforum, November, pp. 4 - 5, pp. 73 - 77 Kastner, Jeffrey, lo - fo, Frieze, September / October, pp. 72 - 73 Kim Levin, Choices, The Village Voice, May 2, p. 11 Mitchell, Charles Dee, «Critical Mass»: More Than Meets the Eye, Dallas Morning News, February 3 Narbutas, Siaurys, Modernus Menas Padeda Atlaidziau Zvelgti I Pasauli, Lietuvos Rytui, August Rich, Charles, At MoMA: A «Mad» Muse, The Hartford Courant, April 1 Schjeldahl, Peter, Struggle and Flight, The Village Voice, April 18, p. 79 1994 Connors, Thomas, Evanston Art Center, New Art Examiner, May Green, David, Doors of Perception, Burelle's, May, p. 18, p. 23 Mollica, Franco, Tema Celeste, Autumn, p. 64 Perretta, Gabriele, Flash Art (Italian edition), Summer Romano, Gianni, Tom Friedman, Zoom, no. 12 Romano, Gianni, In and Out Liquid Architectures (Through a Few Objects, Temporale, no. 31, pp. 34 - 37 Romano, Gianni, Interactive Child, Arquebuse, May, pp. 24 - 25 Tager, Alisa, Emerging Master of Metamorphosis, The Los Angeles Times, May 3, p. F1, p. F8 Trione, Vincenzo, De Soto, Ulisside del Bello, Il Mattino, May 27 1993 Artner, Alan, Sharp Conceptual Show Dares to be Different, The Chicago Tribune, January 22, section 7, p. 56 Auer, James, There's No More Than a Hairbreath Between Art, Reality in This Exhibit, Milwaukee Journal, January 17 Blair, Dike, review, Flash Art, November / December, pp. 112 - 114 Flynn, Patrick J.B. review, Hair, Artpaper, February Heartney, Eleanor, New York, Dans les Galeries, Art Press, October, pp. 24 - 28 Humphrey, David, New York Fax, Art issues, May / June, pp. 32 - 33 Levin, Kim, Choices, The Village Voice, February 23, p. 65 Lillington, David, Times, Time Out, June 16 Lillington, David, Times, Metropolis M, Winter, pp. 47 - 49 Nesbitt, Lois, Artforum, Summer, pp. 111 - 112 Paine, Janice T. Hair Pieces: Exhibition Worth Combing, Mikwaukee Sentinel, January 8, p. 8D Shepley, Carol Ferring, Tom Friedman Shapes Art Out of Everyday Things, St. Louis Post - Dispatch, January 14, p. 3E Southworth, Linda, An Extraordinary Exhibition at Arts and Letters, The Washington Heights Citizen & The Inwood News, February 28, pp. 10 - 11 1992 Bernardi, David, News Reviews, Flash Art, May / June, p. 149 Cameron, Dan, In Praise of Smallness, Art & Auction, April, pp. 74 - 76 Faust, Gretchen, New York in Review, Arts, March, p. 79 Kahn, Wolf, Connecting Incongruities, Art in America, November, pp. 116 - 121 Marrs, Jennifer, Simple Style With a Complex Meaning, Courier, October 2, p. 15, p. 18 Smith, Roberta, Casual Ceremony, The New York Times, January 3, section C 1991 Artner, Alan, Friedman Debuts with Winning Simplicity, The Chicago Tribune, February 22, section 7, p. 56 Barckert, Lynda, The Work of Art, The Reader, March 1 Brunetti, John, New City, March 14, p. 14 Heartney, Eleanor, Art in America, December, p. 118 Hixson, Kathryn, Chicago in Review, Arts, May, p. 108 Levin, Kim, Choices, The Village Voice, September 17, p. 104 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, February 8, section 7, p. 68 McCracken, David, Gallery Scene, The Chicago Tribune, August 30, section 7, p. 54 Goings On About Town, The New Yorker, September 23, p. 12 Palmer, Laurie, Artforum, May, p. 151 Patterson, Tom, Trio of Solos: Thoughts on Three Current Shows at SECCA, Winston - Salem Journal, September 1, p. C6 Smith, Roberta, Art in Review, The New York Times, September 13, p. C5 1990 Harris, Patty, Four Summer Art Shows, Downtown, August 29, pp. 12A - 13A Levin, Kim, Choices The Village Voice, August 7, p. 102
We imagine that readers of this blog probably are well - aware of the details behind this reality, as we have laid them out on many occasions, so we won't go into them again here.
Unless Goddard, or intrepid DeSmog readers, have the time to go out and urge bloggers to correct this latest misinformation, it will be popping up as yet another false piece of information on the true state of our planet and the realities of global warming for some time to come.
Errol Morris ran a study on The New York Times website, ostensibly to determine whether readers were optimists or pessimists, but in reality to find out if typeface affected readers» acceptance of a statement.
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