Sentences with phrase «review other books»

I think authors should only review other books if they feel comfortable doing it.
While I'm still passionate about those things, I'd also like to help spread the word and review other books I've been reading and particularly good movies I've seen.
You like to review other books.
How do they review other books in your genre?
You could review other books or movies in your genre, discuss topics that interest your readers, interview other authors or bloggers in that field / genre, or even do things totally unrelated that your target readers might enjoy.
some have gotten back not so nice emails literally saying that authors can't review other books. . .
Authors are welcome if they want to review other books (I have a few authors on board the team already).
Over time, SportsInsights will review other books that are useful to sports investors.
Basically, to have your review stick, you have to have reviewed other books in the past and go through a manual review process.
Reviewing those other books is a great way to, basically, steal traffic away from those other authors.
Has he reviewed other books?
After reviewing other book blogger's review policies and my experience as a book blogger and a lover of books, here are some tips for indie authors to create a positive blogger - writer relationship.
The review / rating you gave the book would not impact your payment or keep you from reviewing other books.
:) Since I hit the publish button on my first book, I got out of the business of reviewing other books.
My publisher sends our ARCs to major reviewers, bloggers, readers who have reviewed other books by his press, and so on.

Not exact matches

New York City - based Zocdoc allows users to find in - network health care providers, book appointments online, and read reviews from other patients.
Reviews of five new business books — two books about why some products fly and others fail; two business novels; and a new edition of a treasured favorite.
There I post links to other people's reviews of ethics - related books.
He is the bestselling author of three other books on loyalty, published by Harvard Business Review Press, including The Loyalty Effect, Loyalty Rules!
Under the Bonus Plan, our compensation committee, in its sole discretion, determines the performance goals applicable to awards, which goals may include, without limitation: attainment of research and development milestones, sales bookings, business divestitures and acquisitions, cash flow, cash position, earnings (which may include any calculation of earnings, including but not limited to earnings before interest and taxes, earnings before taxes, earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization and net earnings), earnings per share, net income, net profit, net sales, operating cash flow, operating expenses, operating income, operating margin, overhead or other expense reduction, product defect measures, product release timelines, productivity, profit, return on assets, return on capital, return on equity, return on investment, return on sales, revenue, revenue growth, sales results, sales growth, stock price, time to market, total stockholder return, working capital, and individual objectives such as MBOs, peer reviews, or other subjective or objective criteria.
Perhaps a book review on Tuesdays, Wordless Wednesday photos, product review on Thursdays, helpful links to other like minded individuals on Follow Fridays.
To prepare for this book, I read and reviewed each of the other family office books currently in print.
First of all, a big thanks to my other cartooning friend, Jon Birch of asbojesus, for awesome review of my cartoon book, nakedpastor101!!
Others reviews conclude that said passage is authentic (e.g. Professor Gerd Ludemann in his book, Jesus After 2000 Years.
It does have great reviews and is selling pretty well (albeit, not as well as my other books), so there has to be some redeeming value to it.
In True and False Reform in the Church (a seminal 1950 work disappointingly never mentioned in any of the books under review), the Catholic theologian Yves Cougar argued that the first condition for genuine church reform was charity — caritas, that selfless, unsentimental love that wills only the good of the other.
See Professor Crossan's reviews of the existence of Jesus in his other books especially, The Historical Jesus and also Excavating Jesus (with Professor Jonathan Reed doing the archeology discussion).
Militias and the Future of the Far Right, by Jeffrey Kaplan Both books reviewed serve to explain the appearance of a great deal of anti-government anger in the militia movement and other right - wing causes.
Barbara Brown Taylor reviews a book on preaching by Robert C. Dykstra: This is a brave book, in which Dykstra does what he counsels others to do.
Henry is torn between the emerging parties, insisting on the one hand that he is closer to Lindsell than to Fuller Seminary (where he once taught) but on the other hand scrambling in a number of interviews, articles and reviews to counteract the book's threat to the evangelical unity to which he has given so much of himself.
This and other questions are pondered by the authors of the books here reviewed.
As Christopher Lasch also points out, new therapies» solutions are tautological, self - defeating to the extent that they advise people «not to make too large an investment in love and friendship, to avoid excessive independence on others, and to live for the moment — the very conditions that created the crisis of personal relations in the first place» (New York Review of Books [September 30, 1976]-RRB-.
And in a review in Eternity magazine he criticized the book for its «spirit of suspicion and hostility» while finding it «intellectually superficial» — even though he would still find himself to the right of Jewett and others at Fuller.
If / when an author in the group becomes published, he / she promises to help other members in the group also get published, and in return, they promise to write about and review the author's book so they can sell more copies.
In the months ahead, at least two other books on the Pope will likely be making their appearance, at which time we hope to run a review article that will also deal with the Szulc book in greater detail.
Book Review: Apologia: Contextualization, Globalization and Mission in Theological Education by Max L. Stackhouse and others (Eerdmans, 237 pp., $ 14.95 paperback).
It is not an easy book to read, and if it had been read and reviewed only in the academic journals, like others of Altizer's books, issues of academic freedom would not have arisen.
As our review of Alister McGrath's latest book in this issue implies, he, along with many other contemporary science and religion writers, fails to make this discernment and thus, whilst making numerous helpful points, despairs of inferring properties of God from looking at nature.
Edgar S. Brightman, who had himself been working for many years on the development of a nontraditional view of God, rejected Hartshorne's panentheism but praised other aspects of his view of God.35 Reinhold Niebuhr wrote a brief but very sympathetic review, 36 and John Bennett claimed that Hartshorne's was perhaps the best hypothesis about God available to contemporary theology.37 D. C. Macintosh found the book «exceptionally penetrating, stimulating, and instructive,» but by accusing Hartshorne of being too rationalistic he touched on what has been one of the major differences between Hartshorne and most other Whiteheadian theologians.38
It is now a commonplace that he probably wrote more on the ontological argument than any other philosopher — a book, a substantial part of two others, and about twenty articles, replies, reviews, and forewords.
The author reviews two books on the subject discussing the cultural patterns and problems of first and second generation Koreans, how they are different from other ethnic groups and the problems of assimilation into American culture.
Others may feel like the schoolgirl who was assigned to write a review of a book on penguins, and did it in one sentence: «This book tells me more about penguins than I really wanted to know.»
Robert L. Kehoe III's work has appeared in The Point Magazine, LA Review of Books, and Boston Review of Books, among others.
Arthur Schlesinger Jr.'s widely noticed essay in the New York Times Book Review last summer, «The Opening of the American Mind,» illustrates among other things the truth of the old adage, les extremes touchent.
See also Professor Crossan's reviews of the existence of Jesus in his other books especially, The Historical Jesus and also Excavating Jesus (with Professor Jonathan Reed doing the archeology discussion).
Understandably startled by this about - face on the part of his former teacher, Boff sent a copy of the review and the book to Ratzinger — his other former teacher — asking for advice.
«Blogging About Cabbages and Kings,» the blog's header reads; in the last year the DHM has taken on, among other things, the Texas FLDS debacle and the Consumer Product Safety Information Act, as well as posting frugal recipes and gift ideas, book reviews, and hymns every Sunday.
* Note: Though I was provided with a complimentary copy of God and the Gay Christian from the publisher, I was not compensated to review or discuss the book (or any others) on the blog.
You can read the other review, learn more about the book, and even read a free sample of the book by visiting it's product page on Amazon.
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