New co-operative models such as LMPBN are emerging, where authors come together and write books in an (in this case fantasy) series which enables them to provide the fans with a book a week, thus satisfying the thirst prolific readers have for
the same kind of books.
Find some that review
the same kind of books you like and check back often.
Whether they were the «Big 6» or smaller, self owned «independent» companies, they generally published only work that was pretty much cookie - cutter - change the name of the author and the cover and send out
the same kind of books over and over.
It is not necessary for them to agree with the reviewer's opinion, if it is clear they and the reviewer do not like
the same kind of books.
I made LoriCulwell.com, got on MySpace, and basically spent three or four hours a day connecting with people who liked
the same kinds of books I had written.
Others, who are really prolific and determined and energetic, will go the indie author route and keep writing
the same kind of book and building their fan base and also be successful.
I loved that you could join or create groups to connect with other readers who liked
the same kinds of books, find new books through friend suggestions, review books, and so on.
Not exact matches
This time around that
kind of massive stimulus may help to fill order
books, but it would also surely start a bonfire under inflation at the
same time.
Too many progressive Christian
books I see, even if I find them agreeable, are imo just too shallow and narrow, as if trying to appeal to the
same kind of shallow interests groups as those
of of the mass pop Christian evangelical culture.
As I drove home, I remembered a
book I had recently read called
Same Kind of Different As Me.
Either way, his character just oozes the
same kind of fallacies that we humans do, perhaps the exact
same ones the authors
of his holy
book personally held.
The
same kind of difficulty is raised by Sydney Shoemaker towards the end
of his
book Self - Knowledge and Self - Identity (New York: Cornell University Press, 1963).
You can find wisdom in her worlds, but to consider her some
kind of leader or her
books to be manuals for morality and success is to be the
same sheep she accused the followers
of Christianity and Communism to be.
But «public relations» becomes absurd when we apply the
same kind of advertising and promotional techniques alike to the American economic system, to business in general, to labor, to a political party or candidate, to the policies
of a government, to a public utility, to a
book, to a church.
««The» anti-Semite, he seems to imply all through the
book, is always the
same kind of a person, recognizable at a glance, and, so to speak, in action the whole time.
It does not mean that one lives every day simply as if it were one's last — a
kind of crazy living «for the moment» rather than living «in the moment,» to use a distinction made by the dying poet Ted Rosenthal in his
book and movie bearing the
same title, How Could I Not Be Among You?
Over and over I go back once more to the
same memories, none available in this way to any other stream
of experiences; always, if I want to, I can recall that I had such and such a mother and father, brothers and sister, went to such and such schools, read certain
books, etc., etc., through countless items
of the
kind.
At the
same time, the Frankfurt
book fair continued to be a popular meeting place for publishers and
book agents
of all
kinds, Catholic and Protestant alike, a notable case
of capitalism trumping theology.
The most outstanding
book of this
kind was a work
of Martin Bucer, entitled Pastorale, i.e., On the true Care
of Souls and the right Pastoral Ministry and how the
same is to be established and performed in the Church
of Christ.
Based on The New York Times best - selling
book, and recipient
of the Dove Foundation seal of approval for ages 12 +, SAME KIND OF DIFFERENT AS ME follows successful art dealer Ron Hall (Greg Kinnear) and his wife Debbie (Renée Zellweger), who seemingly have the perfect lif
of the Dove Foundation seal
of approval for ages 12 +, SAME KIND OF DIFFERENT AS ME follows successful art dealer Ron Hall (Greg Kinnear) and his wife Debbie (Renée Zellweger), who seemingly have the perfect lif
of approval for ages 12 +,
SAME KIND OF DIFFERENT AS ME follows successful art dealer Ron Hall (Greg Kinnear) and his wife Debbie (Renée Zellweger), who seemingly have the perfect lif
OF DIFFERENT AS ME follows successful art dealer Ron Hall (Greg Kinnear) and his wife Debbie (Renée Zellweger), who seemingly have the perfect life.
However, establishing some
kind of a sleep schedule with regular, consistent habits, such as reading the
same book and napping at the
same time, will help your baby sleep better.
But at the
same time, what I say at the end
of the
book is the programs I talk about are really small and represent just a small minority
of the
kinds of experiences kids — and especially low - income kids — are having in American schools today.
Austin and I created this coffee table
book for the sole purpose
of educating the world about the true image
of dads as parents, which embodies the
same kind of unconditional love, compassion and dedication that exists in moms as parents.
But, admits Jill, it's not so easy to put the
same kind of «fun» spin on the stack
of mind - numbing calculus and chemistry
books hefty enough to take down a Yellowstone grizzly.
With our daughter, we did a
kind of Baby Led Weaning, before we knew such a thing existed, and we were planning on doing the
same for our upcoming little one, so I was exited to read the
book and maybe find out things I didn't know yet.
More birth stories
of the
same kind have been reported in his following four
books.
You can see the
same kind of thing in the reading
of the play Antigone in my forthcoming
book.
Robert Nadeau and Menas Kafatos's
book, The Non-Local Universe, skillfully lures you to confront the
same kind of madness, if you don't instead pitch it into the nearest body
of deep water.
And I had a patient just maybe a month or two ago came in with severe RA, had multiple surgeries on her spine and hands because
of the actual disfigurement and she had been on gluten - free diets, but then we
kind of upped it one notch with a true gluten - free diet or an autoimmune diet following a lot
of the
same tenets in your
book and her pain, 30 - year pain, literally vanished in little less than a month.
I am a good woman with a good and a
kind heart, God fearing, humbled and shy, disciplined, loyal, honest, loving, caring, understanding, i like reading - any interesting
books, seriously faithful and looking to meet a man with the
same kind of heart so we can live our life's happily together with eac...
Loveflutter shows you matches who like the
same kinds of music,
books, movies, TV shows, and sports.
Christian Carter teamed up with Eben Pagan, the man behind David DeAngelo's famous Double Your Dating
book for men, to bring women the
same kind of relatable, effective dating advice that men have been getting for years.
i'm
kind of a shy and quiet person but at the
same time i'm friendly, easy going and have a sense
of humor.i'm 38, single, no kids, 5» 4, blonde hair, blue eyes, a beard and some what on the chubby side.i don't smoke or drink, drug and disease free and no tattoos or piercings.i like to read
books, play...
Films that might have fit this putative strand included the charming but overlong Timeless Stories, co-written and directed by Vasilis Raisis (and winner
of the Michael Cacoyannis Award for Best Greek Film), a story that follows a couple (played by different actors at different stages
of the characters» lives) across the temporal loop
of their will - they, won't - they relationship from childhood to middle age and back again — essentially Julio Medem - lite, or Looper rewritten by Richard Curtis; Michalis Giagkounidis's 4 Days, where the young antiheroine watches reruns
of Friends, works in an underpatronized café, freaks out her hairy stalker by coming on to him, takes photographs and molests invalids as a means
of staving off millennial ennui, and causes ripples in the temporal fold, but the film is as dead as she is, so you hardly notice; Bob Byington's Infinity Baby, which may be a «science - fiction comedy» about a company providing foster parents with infants who never grow up, but is essentially the
same kind of lame, unambitious, conformist indie comedy that has characterized U.S. independent cinema for way too long — static, meticulously framed shots in pretentious black and white, amoral yet supposedly lovable characters played deadpan by the usual suspects (Kieran Culkin, Nick Offerman, Megan Mullally, Kevin Corrigan), reciting apparently nihilistic but essentially soft - center dialogue, jangly indie music at the end, and a pretty good, if belated, Dick Cheney joke; and Petter Lennstrand's loveably lo - fi Up in the Sky, shown in the Youth Screen section, about a young girl abandoned by overworked parents at a sinister recycling plant, who is reluctantly adopted by a reconstituted family
of misfits and marginalized (mostly puppets) who are secretly building a rocket — it's for anyone who has ever loved the Tintin moon adventures,
books with resourceful heroines, narratives with oddball gangs, and the legendary episode
of Angel where David Boreanaz turned into a Muppet.
It's
kind of the
same situation we had with Manhunter and The Silence
of the Lambs: they're both adaptations
of connected
books, yet the two movies have really nothing to do with each other.
While The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty feel like chapters
of the
same book, Detroit is a very different
kind of socio - political drama and I'm incredibly eager to see what her and Boal have put together this time around.
Paramount Pictures announced on Tuesday, October 28, 2014 that Academy Award ® - nominees Greg Kinnear and Djimon Hounsou and Academy Award ® - winners Renee Zellweger and Jon Voight will star in
Same Kind of Different As Me, based on the best - selling nonfiction
book by Ron Hall and Denver Moore with Lynn Vincent, author
of the bestselling
book Heaven Is for Real.
Though the late - 19th century setting
of Jules Verne's Around the World in 80 Days is an important character (and perhaps the most important one), the
book has a
kind of timeless, universal appeal that made a film version in the»50s relevant and entertaining and could make a new adaptation feel the
same.
«U.N.I (You And I)» from And the Winner Isn't «Love and Lies» from Band Aid «If I Dare» from Battle
of the Sexes «Evermore» from Beauty and the Beast «How Does a Moment Last Forever» from Beauty and the Beast «Now or Never» from Bloodline: Now or Never «She» from Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story «Your Hand I Will Never Let It Go» from The
Book of Henry «Buddy's Business» from Brawl in Cell Block 99 «The Crown Sleeps» from The Breadwinner «World Gone Mad» from Bright «Mystery
of Love» from Call Me by Your Name «Visions
of Gideon» from Call Me by Your Name «Captain Underpants Theme Song» from Captain Underpants The First Epic Movie «Ride» from Cars 3 «Run That Race» from Cars 3 «Tell Me How Long» from Chasing Coral «Broken Wings» from City
of Ghosts «Remember Me» from Coco «Prayers for This World» from Cries From Syria «There's Something Special» from Despicable Me 3 «It Ain't Fair» from Detroit «A Little Change in the Weather» from Downsizing «Stars in My Eyes (Theme From Drawing Home)» from Drawing Home «All In My Head» from Elizabeth Blue «Dying for Ya» from Elizabeth Blue «Green» from Elizabeth Blue «Can't Hold Out on Love» from Father Figures «Home» from Ferdinand «I Don't Wan na Live Forever» from Fifty Shades Darker «You Shouldn't Look at Me That Way» from Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool «This Is How You Walk On» from Gifted «Summer Storm» from The Glass Castle «The Pure and the Damned» from Good Time «This Is Me» from The Greatest Showman «The Hero» from The Hero «How Shall a Sparrow Fly» from Hostiles «Just Getting Started» from If You're Not in the Obit, Eat Breakfast «Truth to Power» from An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power «Next Stop, The Stars» from Kepler's Dream «The Devil & The Huntsman» from King Arthur: Legend
of the Sword «Have You Ever Wondered» from Lake
of Fire «I'll Be Gone» from Lake
of Fire «We'll Party All Night» from Lake
of Fire «Friends Are Family» from The Lego Batman Movie «Found My Place» from The Lego Ninjago Movie «Stand Up for Something» from Marshall «Rain» from Mary and the Witch's Flower «Myron / Byron» from The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected) «Longing for Summer» from Moomins and the Winter Wonderland «Mighty River» from Mudbound «Never Forget» from Murder on the Orient Express «Hold the Light» from Only the Brave «PBNJ» from Patti Cake $ «Tuff Love (Finale)» from Patti Cake $ «Lost Souls» from The Pirates
of Somalia «How a Heart Unbreaks» from Pitch Perfect 3 «The Promise» from The Promise «Kaadanayum Kaalchilambe» from Pulimurugan «Maanathe Maarikurumbe» from Pulimurugan «Stubborn Angel» from
Same Kind of Different as Me «Dancing Through the Wreckage» from Served Like a Girl «Keep Your Eyes on Me» from The Shack «On the Music Goes» from Slipaway «The Star» from The Star «Jump» from Step «Tickling Giants» from Tickling Giants «Fly Away» from Trafficked «Speak to Me» from Voice From the Stone «Walk on Faith» from Year by the Sea
Not having read Roald Dahl's 1982 children's
book, I can't say how faithful this adaptation is (though colleagues have suggested that darker aspects have been watered down), but it seems to follow the
same basic trajectory: Cute British orphan Sophie (newcomer Ruby Barnhill) gets abducted by the title character (played, or performance - captured, by recent Oscar winner Mark Rylance), who turns out to be the smallest and
kindest inhabitant
of Giant Country; Sophie winds up enlisting the Queen (Penelope Wilton) in an effort to stop the other, meaner giants (led by a performance - captured Jemaine Clement) from eating England's children.
When: October 14th Why: Based on the
book of the
same name by Mark Obmasick, «The Big Year» has the
kind of cast that, up until a few years ago, would have sounded like a comedy dream team.
For another, the
books are moderately popular, but certainly not the
kind of blockbusters as some
of these, so it doesn't have the
same built - in audience.
From a purely narrative standpoint, it has to be admired for its sheer audacity and sense
of assuredness in recreating the
kind of intricate, multi-modal, long - form storytelling that comic
books have been utilizing for decades; a wrong step at any point could have brought the whole thing down, as we witnessed last summer with Universal's «Dark Universe» non-starter The Mummy (2017) and, to a lesser extent, rival DC's fitfully successful, but mostly disappointing attempt to do the
same thing with its stable
of comic
book characters.
Advertised as a quasi-sequel to «Jumanji» (the
books were written by the
same author), «Zathura» is a mediocre family film that's
kind of interesting as the bridge between Favreau's early films («Swingers,» «Elf») and the action stuff he would do later («Iron Man,» «Cowboys vs. Aliens»).
Based on the bestselling
book, which inspired both a sequel and a children's adaptation, «
Same Kind of Different as Me» is the true story
of a wealthy Texas white couple, Ron and Debbie (Greg Kinnear and Renee Zellweger), who befriend a violent homeless man (Djimon Hounsou).
Several sections are frankly dull, while others depend on an attempt to allow Stark the
same kind of character depth and developmental arc that lucky characters in the better comic -
book adaptations have enjoyed.
The
same kind of thing happens in an English class when they create newspapers, or publish
books, and in social studies or history when they role - play the armistice
of World War I, or the debates between Lincoln and Douglass.
(These are just the
kind of folks I'm addressing in my forthcoming
book The
Same Thing Over and Over: How School Reformers Get Stuck in Yesterday's Ideas, which is due out in November).
(The
same kind of successful policy was described by Michael Rutter and his colleagues in their 1979
book, Fifteen Thousand Hours, and by Ron Edmonds and Larry Lezotte in their studies
of effective schools.)
Either one is fine, but I wouldn't mix the two styles in your
book for the
same kind of text.