Sentences with phrase «seen great books»

As I look around the book publishing world, I don't see great book launches going on, though people are trying.
Have you seen a great book announcement press release online?
Always a pleasure to see a great book for the Kindle Daily Deal.
But I've also got some illustrations from Patrick McDonnell's The Monsters» Monster (have you SEEN this great book yet?)

Not exact matches

I related to the book in ways that I was not expecting and it did what only truly great books do — it made me think about things that I wouldn't have otherwise, and it made me see the world from a slightly different perspective.
If you see books on the subject, that's a great sign.
More than a century later, Selby's grandson published the never - before - seen photos in a book: «When San Francisco Burned: A Photographic Memoir of the Great San Francisco Earthquake and Fire of 1906.»
If it's tempting to see Silver as some sort of statistical clairvoyant, his new book, The Signal and the Noise, goes to great lengths to discourage that kind of thinking.
Last year, not a great one for most European economies, saw hotel bookings in the region rise 46 %.
I also just signed up for Social Security, so I am glad to see that apparently I made the right choice, according to Marc Lichtenfeld in his great new book, «You Don't Have to Drive an Uber in Retirement: How to Maintain Your Lifestyle without Getting a Job or Cutting Corners.»
It would be great to see the author maintain an up to date set of data (or at least checked links) on his website for the book and guarantee to do this for as long as the book is on sale at least.
The book is concise and clear, yet goes into a great deal of detail on aspects of link building I haven't seen covered anywhere before.
The questions might be easier to answer had not Amis also framed the book as a kind of challenge to his old friend Christopher Hitchens, whom he sees as exemplary of a class of intellectuals who forever pointed us to the horrors of the Nazis while demurely turning aside from the still greater horrors of Stalinism.
This way, when coworkers come by, they will see these books and magazines on your desk and will know you are a great fisherman.
Although I struggle with some of the exclusionary language of the book (no greater calling than being a mother, etc.) this book helped me to see the big picture of why and how I parent my tinies.
See Professor JD Crossan's book, In Search of Paul, p. 401 for a good review of the history of his ma - rtyrdom i.e. Paul (as was Peter) was rounded up along with many Christians in Ne - ro's purge of the c - ult using the great fire of Rome as the pretext for the exec - utions.
Christ, mystically understood, is the great fish (the Greek word for fish is πà # À ™, an acronym which translates as Jesus Son of God, Saviour); and we, like him, are fish in the water of baptism as we accompany our master (see Augustine's The City of God, Book XVIII, Chapter 23).
In his book Small Faith — Great God, N. T. Wright wrote «The world has yet to see what God will do through a worldwide church whose members love one another.»
And I saw the dead, great and small, standing before the throne, and books were opened.
I see a decline in English culture in this mid-century book compared to the great Darwinian phenomenon in the previous century.
But a friend of mine at work gave me a book today called The Great Derangement, and although I'm already reading several books (see my reading list to the right), I decided -LSB-...]
As we make our way through the Book of Hebrews with its glittering and sometimes confusing images of sacrifices and great high priests and its extended metaphor of Jesus as that priest who makes all other priests unnecessary, the following verses come to us with a remarkable clarity and freshness: «Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who promised is faithful; and let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near.»
If religion is a factor in your voting decision, you need to study the Book of Mormon, Doctrine and Covenants and Pearl of Great Price to see the difference in Mormon beliefs and mainstream Christian beliefs.
There is much in this book to help us learn and see aspects of the two great faiths and their modern encounter.
Although the book doesn't mention it, there is an even deeper affirmation in Hinduism, where the one great, unchanging Reality, Brahman, is seen as or expressed as Sat - cit - ananda.
However all this may be, even if we were obliged to qualify the belief that in the opening oracles of the Book of Amos we actually see Israel's monotheism taking its nascent form right under our eyes, yet at least the passage reveals the sort of thinking that certainly at some time led to Israel's great discovery.
Ralph's book (see below) is really great.
I had a fascinating conversation with Max Stackhouse of Andover - Newton Seminary who felt that one of our greatest needs in the subject area of this book was for an examination of the history of preaching on certain texts as the «Rich Young Ruler» to see how sermons related to different contexts.
I am a great admirer of James White for the work he did on the King James only controversy which I first saw on the Johnny Ankerberg show and then I purchased his book on the subject.
I had great problems with that idea from Girard's earlier books, and I am glad to see that he has backtracked.
Saw this in my church last year when «a great prophet of God» came - a text book case of this blind idiocy in fact.
Maybe I shouldn't be surprised that the man who wrote the world's best - selling book on purpose is already seeing a greater design being fashioned from the rubble of tragedy.
These and other instances of the oppression of animals have been documented in great detail in numerous books and treatises, especially in the last decade (see Singer, 1985).
He wrote a fascinating book that those of you who are wondering about that might enjoy called The Great Divorce in which people are given kind of one last opportunity to experience heaven and experience the kingdom and see if they want it.
how does fair, unbiased CNN, AKA ACNN (Anderson Cooper News Network) pick and choose stories as noteworthy... a comment is made by a very elderly priest, probably not quoted properly, and is «front page news» on CNN's website... this same man (priest) has written many great books, done a lot of great charity work in the poorer parts of New York and nothing is ever posted on the website... but something is said incorrectly and its published... is this fair, is it right, is it unbiased or is the motivation to make an entire Church lokk bad and let the anti-Catholic screwballs have their heyday in hateful posts... I didn't see this wonderful netwrok post anything about the disgusting, bigoted and hateful attacks, written by the liberal left wing media elites, like Maureen Dowd, against Rep. Paul Ryan and his Catholic faith... it's all acceptable to you liberal HYPOCRITES!
Nevertheless, recent developments in the scientific culture, especially as we see them reported in books like James Gleick's Chaos: Making a New Science, suggest that Snow's greatest mistake was his failure to take into account the extent to which the literature of science is literature itself, which has all along anticipated much of what science ultimately spells out in its own terms — terms that have often enough seemed invidious to literature.
What makes the Bible such a great book is that it shows the truth about humanity, the evil that sin creates and the truth that the devil is a liar and as Jeremy has stated, has always laid the blame on GOD, but, myself being a fairly new Christian, know that we can not pull certain verses or stories from the Bible to try and understand what GOD is doing, (and I also know that you and your readers know this but I'm saying it anyway) it's history, HIS Story, and when taken as a whole we can see HIS plan laid out, from creation to the cross and then throughout eternity, GOD is good and gracious to ALL!!!! (2 Peter 3:8,9).
it is a shame that many plp think so little of our faith... they do no understand what is like to be a true christian... and no not one of those plp who say im a christian and go to church from sunday to sunday, not one of the fanatics who advocate hate, not a bigot who proclaim god's name without understanding... this life is a journey to find something greater than spiritual awareness... it is a journey to see the world the way god does, it is a journey beyond any book, any view... that is why i belive in my faith... im a christian and i love my god but im not the one who follows faith blindly and question every thing
To see some exceptional in - depth studies of coming persecution, see two unique books by media figure Joe Ortiz entitled «The End Times Passover» and «Why Christians Will Suffer «Great Tribulation»» — both published in the US and UK by AuthorHouse.
I was reading on a plane when the flight attendant said «it's good to see someone reading the greatest book ever written».
In the opening pages Luther set the pace, speaking of the Duke rubbing «his scabby and scurvy head» against the Elector, saying that the Duke «curses, blasphemes, shrieks, struggles, bellows, and spits», and says that such books as the Duke's «make me tingle with pleasure from head to toe when I see that through me, poor wretched man that I am, God the Lord maddens and exasperates the hellish and worldly princes... while I sit under the shade of faith and the Lord's Prayer, laughing at the devils and their crew as they blubber and struggle in their great fury».
I remember seeing an interview with a Baptist fiction writer of great renown - John Grisham, I think - and he was asked something like why there was so little sex in his books.
I remember seeing an interview with a Baptist fiction writer of great renown - John Grisham, I think - and he was asked something like why there was so little socks in his books.
The shortcoming of this brief book, perhaps inherent in the author's polemical task, is that it is negative, and to see how well Kimball conveys his own appreciations of great art a reader must look to his other works (his rich essays on Eakins and Delacroix, for instance, in his collection titled Art's Prospect).
Tradition and aother biblical writings were given great weight as well, and the bible was not something that was seen as literal or without error... God inspired meant God was the muse or concept that moved people to write about their experiences, as well as a history and a bit of a rule book.
Read the book and see how it ends, with God rebuking the surly Jonah and saying, «Should not I pity Nineveh, that great city, in which there are more than a hundred and twenty thousand persons who do not know their right hand from their left, and also much cattle?»
It is great to read through all the comments and see so many I agree 100 % with — longtime reader of your blog but have never commented, happy to see your familiar kitchen counter figure prominently on the covers of your book... all my most popular recipes come from your blog, they're the perfect combo of being easy to make and yet still sophisticated and wonderful.
I CAN NOT wait to see the Great Vegan Bean Book and see what other magic you've concocted with so many lovely legumes!
I'm actually reading a book right now about the art of kaiseki so it was so great to see this post!
He said: «We are now seeing the benefits of our focus on managing volatility in the business, with more favourable contract agreements, a closer pricing alignment between our sales book and the spot market, and targeting sales of products that deliver greater value.»
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