In
a recent book I read (Engaging the Powers), the author suggested that such a response is natural in light of the ever - increasing tide of natural catastrophes and human tragedies that are paraded before our eyes on Television and the Newspapers on a daily basis.
All of this was brought again to my attention in
a recent book I read, Down We Go by Kathy Escobar.
A review of my most
recent books read as well as a look at the Whipped Goat Cheese and Honey Spread Appetizer recipe from the Made In America cookbook.
Some 61 % of ereading device owners said they purchased the most
recent book they read, compared with 48 % of all readers.
We also queried book readers in our national survey how they had obtained the most
recent book they read (in any format).
There are three tabs at the top of the page that take you to your most
recent books read, your entire library, or the store where you can purchase more eBooks.
Asked where they got the most
recent book they read, library card holders are just as likely as non-card holders to have purchased the book, but much less likely to have gotten it from a family member or friend and more likely to have obtained it from the library.
Some 61 % of e-reading device owning readers said they had purchased the most
recent book they read, compared with 48 % of all readers.
We asked book readers about the most
recent book they read in any format, print, audio, or e-book: How had they obtained it?
When we asked device owners who read how they had gotten the most
recent book they read in any format, they were much more likely than all readers to say that they had purchased it, and were less likely to say they had borrowed it.
As we noted in Part 2, we asked book readers about the most
recent book they read in any format, print, audio, or e-book: How had they gotten it?
Most
recent book read: Remarks on Color by Thomas Bernhard and Robert Farris Thompson.
This (unfortunate, at least in its effect on diversity) transition, as well as more generally the influence of women on the history of computing and on early connected communities, is discussed in greater details in
another recent book I read: «Broad Band, The Untold Story of the Women Who Made the Internet» by Claire L. Evans.
Not exact matches
Check out his complete guide to better thinking, or
read this fascinating
recent interview on the Huffington Post, which includes the
books that most inspired Boyden and his unique approach to note taking.
Facebook's CEO highlighted 23
books in his recent «A Year of Books» reading list, which featured «Portfolios of the Poor: How the World's Poor Live on $ 2 a Day» by Daryl Collins, Jonathan Morduch, Stuart Rutherford, and Orlanda Rut
books in his
recent «A Year of
Books» reading list, which featured «Portfolios of the Poor: How the World's Poor Live on $ 2 a Day» by Daryl Collins, Jonathan Morduch, Stuart Rutherford, and Orlanda Rut
Books»
reading list, which featured «Portfolios of the Poor: How the World's Poor Live on $ 2 a Day» by Daryl Collins, Jonathan Morduch, Stuart Rutherford, and Orlanda Ruthven.
While you probably already know Simon Sinek's famous «Start With Why» TED Talk, you may not have
read his most
recent book, Leaders Eat Last.
In a handful of fairly
recent examples, I attempted to get the employees of my company to
read a
book together, and we met weekly to discuss what we
read.
The
book — which has received
recent coverage and praise in USA Today, Forbes, The Guardian, US News & World Report, Fox Business News, PBS's Next Avenue, and beyond — is an easy, informative, eye - opening
read.
His most
recent book, Clash of the Cultures, which details how companies went from an investment business to a marketing business, is an excellent
read.
(You can
read a summary of my review of a
recent book on the topic, here: Managing for Stakeholders.)
His most
recent book is A Theology of
Reading: The Hermeneutics of Love (Westview, 2001).
And that is exactly how Slate editor David Plotz cooked up a carefree pot of blasphemies in his
recent book Good Book: The Bizarre, Hilarious, Disturbing, Marvelous, and Inspiring Things I Learned When I Read Every Word of the Bi
book Good
Book: The Bizarre, Hilarious, Disturbing, Marvelous, and Inspiring Things I Learned When I Read Every Word of the Bi
Book: The Bizarre, Hilarious, Disturbing, Marvelous, and Inspiring Things I Learned When I
Read Every Word of the Bible.
Of the range of
recent works available in the area of faith and science, Dr Hodgson was keen to recommend as particularly worth
reading, Mariano Artigas's
book, «The Mind of the Universe: Understanding Science and Religion,» published in 2000 by the Templeton Foundation Press.
I just
read something from Huston Smith's fairly
recent book, The Soul of Christianity.
Jeanne Murray Walker, professor of English at the University of Delaware, offers in her most
recent book of poetry, Coming Into History, some of the finest poems I have
read in
recent years.
I
read the review... which is of Wright's
book «What Saint Paul Really Said» and not his more
recent book, «Justification.»
As I
read Hartshorne, he maintains that «God is not spatially localized» (Schilpp, 545) and the meaning of this phrase is that God is everywhere — «God is not spatially separated from things» he has written (Schilpp, 545), and in a
recent book he claims that deity, the universally immanent, is everywhere.5 Given this assumption Hartshorne is then able to say that since God, being everywhere, includes the regional standpoint of every temporal actual entity, he must intuit all occasions wherever they are as they occur» (Schilpp, 545).
Some of the best
books I have ever
read are on the subject of grace, and a
recent book by Andy Stanley is no exception.
The clearest and best example of
reading Revelation as it was
read in the first century, as God's assurance to the suffering Christian community, is Allan Boesak's
recent book Comfort and Protest.
Adela Yarbro Collins summarizes the results of more
recent study of apocalyptic writings in general and of Revelation in particular in»
Reading the
Book of Revelation in the Twentieth Century,» Interpretation 40 (1986): 229 - 242.
In conclusion, I am grateful to Professor D. D. Williams of Union Theological Seminary, New York City, and Professor D. W. Sherburne of Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, for
reading the typescript and making many valuable suggestions; and above all to Professor Charles Hartshorne, who has not
read the typescript but who, during a
recent short visit to England, discussed with me many of the ideas which are found in this
book.
Instead, too many atheists simply regurgitate the «official» atheist position (ironic, given that this is what they accuse believers of doing vis - a-vis the Bible...), not only without having
read the
book recently enough to cite it accurately, but also not taking into account the most
recent arguments supporting or undermining — not only by believers, but by atheist scientists as well.
To learn my more
recent views,
read some of my newer posts on the church, or my
books on church.
If the average American can
read the first chapter of Mr. Stern's more
recent book and not be red with anger, then I am at a loss as to what would stir indignation.
The
recent publication of Elisabeth Kübler - Ross's second
book on death and dying provides an opportunity to examine the views of the American scholar most widely
read and quoted on that subject.
Keillor is a powerful reciter of varied kinds of poetry, as we discovered when we heard him give a
reading in Chicago as part of a
recent book tour.
It is, we
read, a «marvelous
book,» not least because it avoids the pitfalls of «postmodernist deflations» and «feminist revisionisms» and «Marxist deployments» that have so damaged the humanities in
recent times.
If I were choosing
recent books in this area which most deserve to be
read outside the country, I would start with Oliver O'Donovan's political theology in The Desire of the Nations; John Milbank's critique of the social sciences in Theology and Social Theory; Timothy Gorringe's provocative political
reading of Karl Barth in Karl Barth: Against Hegemony; Peter Sedgwick's The Market Economy and Christian Ethics; Michael Banner's Christian Ethics and Contemporary Moral Problems; Duncan Forrester's Christian Justice and Public Policy; and Timothy Jenkins's Religion in Everyday Life: An Ethnographic Approach, which argues with a dense interweaving of theory and empirical study for a social anthropological approach to English religion which has learned much from theology.
«Not many will
read Whitehead's
recent book in this generation; not many will
read it in any generation» (JR 10:137).
If you want a better
book read Tim Keller's
recent book on marriage.
I just reread all of the Harry Potter
books -LRB-... all in one week...); late night
reading is at least partially to blame for my
recent lack of sleep.
The
books I listed are very much reflective of my
recent reading material.
Go
read a few
books, and perhaps a few decent articles (like the most
recent one on Wenger at Arsenal Blog), and then come back here, and perhaps we can have a different discussion.
Ibe will be cup - tied for Sunday's FA Cup game against Aston Villa, although Rodgers will be hoping that Sterling can shake off the
recent allegations and turn in a decisive performance that could
book the Reds an FA Cup final against either Arsenal or
Reading.
This is one of her earlier
books and I'm interested to
read it after enjoying her more
recent publications.
You are responsible, in fact, for a
recent addition to my shoe collection and the
book I'm
reading!
There's been a
recent spate of new
books about the feeding of children that are so good I actually feel a little sad when I
read them: I feel certain they would have saved me from many a feeding pitfall if they'd only been around when my kids were... [Continue
reading]
There's been a
recent spate of new
books about the feeding of children that are so good I actually feel a little sad when I
read them: I feel certain they would have saved me from many a feeding pitfall if they'd only been around when my kids were little.
You can
read my
recent review of her
book HERE.
Unlike some of the more
recent books I've been reviewing, however, it is a more challenging
read.