In this guest post, Grant explains what drew her to the alluring mythology of dragons and
talks about her next book in the series, Soul Scorched, out June 30.
I called up my agent to
talk about my next book last week.
The purpose of this internet meme is to
talk about your next book.
Not exact matches
In this
next installment of AskJZ, Zimmerman
talks about his
book, Leading Fearlessly: Transform Your Life and Find Success (Greenleaf Book Group Press, 20
book, Leading Fearlessly: Transform Your Life and Find Success (Greenleaf
Book Group Press, 20
Book Group Press, 2015).
The same dualism — the need for safety and excitement — in the bedroom that she
talks about in her
book and in her TED
talk has relevance for entrepreneurs looking to launch the
next big company, the
next great idea, the
next billion - dollar startup.
The Millionaire
Next Door is great for all those people who have just come into the game of personal financing, because this
book talks about the fundamentals of personal finance with simple, consistent instructions.
So since it's a hot topic, and I've been getting a bunch of tweets
about it, I figured I'd just link to some old posts and share some of my favorite
book recommendations before we find time to
talk about it sometime
next week:
I'll probably try to do a «What I'm Into» post in the
next bit of time to share some thoughts on
books — you know how I love to
talk about books.
There have been times when I've wondered if all the hours I'm pouring into this
next book, a
book about the Bible, will be relevant when all anyone's
talking about these days is politics, but then I remember that this is the creative ground I've been called to cultivate, so I will trust my Maker with the yield.
We'll also be
talking a lot more
about CHURCH — which is consistently the most popular topic on the blog and possibly the topic of my
next book.
It was especially encouraging to
talk about the sacraments (the topic of my
next book) with groups that express those sacraments in different ways.
I am planning on finally
talking about the
book itself — what it's
about, why I wrote it, all of that fun stuff — in the
next week or two here so make sure you sign up for my e-newsletter to get the scoop first.
Our bedtime routine now (at 3.5 years) is: 7 pm - final play in the playroom with a five minute timer on my phone 7:05 - bathroom and pjs 7:10 - read a
book and
talk about our day a bit, answer questions or concerns
about the
next day 7:20 — Facetime with both sets of grandparents 7:28 — final kisses, turning on the closet light and sound machine, tucking in her and her doll
We met to
talk about Bruno's
book, «Keep Swinging: A Memoir of Politics and Justice,» which will be published
next month by Post Hill Press.
Science News
talked with Jones
about the
book, which she hopes will be a wake - up call, encouraging people to be ready for when, not if, the
next disaster strikes.
Next week I'm going to
talk with the venerable Paul Ehrlich
about his new
book «'' The Annihilation of Nature — Human Extinction of Birds and Mammals».
Whether it's sex, reading a
book next to your partner, or taking half an hour to lie in bed and
talk about your day together, give it a shot.
Anyway, I was reading the times this morning and came across this GREAT article that
talks about a new
book coming out
next year.
She'll be
talking about her
book next Tuesday live on «Good Morning, America.»
This isn't to say the
book is worth much of a shit, but to say that it at least has the courage to
talk about a rape and a murder where the film only has the mustard to romanticize loss and suggest that 1973 was so long ago the freak
next door didn't raise any flags.
Paul joins us today at the Ed
Next Book Club to talk about his book, the impact he hopes it will have on the education reform debate, and what it means for the broader war on pove
Book Club to
talk about his
book, the impact he hopes it will have on the education reform debate, and what it means for the broader war on pove
book, the impact he hopes it will have on the education reform debate, and what it means for the broader war on poverty.
For the
next 10 minutes, the team
talks about options for this teacher, such as finding a pair of free glasses if the student needs them, downloading
books on tape if she has an iPod, and increasing her listening center time.
In this episode of the Ed
Next Book Club podcast, Mike Petrilli talks with Sam about the book, the two schools, and how this experience has changed his views on community and cho
Book Club podcast, Mike Petrilli
talks with Sam
about the
book, the two schools, and how this experience has changed his views on community and cho
book, the two schools, and how this experience has changed his views on community and choice.
Journalist Paul Tough
talks with Education
Next editor Marty West
about his new
book, Helping Children Succeed.
Mike Petrilli
talks with Hill and Jochim
about this proposal, what it would mean for policy and practice at the federal, state, and local levels, and the prospects for its adoption in this edition of The Education
Next Book Club.
Nathan Glazer
talks with Education
Next about whether the policy of assigning students to schools to achieve socioeconomic diversity in Raleigh - Wake County has worked, as argued by Gerald Grant's 2009
book, Hope and Despair in the American City: Why There are No Bad Schools in Raleigh.
He joins the Ed
Next book club today to
talk about his
book, Smarter Budgets, Smarter Schools: How to Survive and Thrive in Tight Times — and the reception it's received to date.
In this installment of the Education
Next book club, host Mike Petrilli
talks with Michelle Rhee
about becoming Michelle Rhee, what she's learned over these last tumultuous years, and what she thinks the future holds for education reform in America.
Today Ed
Next's Mike Petrilli
talks with John
about his
book — and what he's learned from the countless hours he's spent as a reporter in America's classrooms.
Checker and Brandon visit the Ed
Next Book Club podcast to talk about the book, what they've learned from countries overseas, and whether there's reason for hope that America might finally get serious about better serving our brightest k
Book Club podcast to
talk about the
book, what they've learned from countries overseas, and whether there's reason for hope that America might finally get serious about better serving our brightest k
book, what they've learned from countries overseas, and whether there's reason for hope that America might finally get serious
about better serving our brightest kids.
In this edition of the Education
Next Book Club podcast, Mike Petrilli talks with Green about her book, what's she's learned about great teaching, and her hope that it can become common practice in Amer
Book Club podcast, Mike Petrilli
talks with Green
about her
book, what's she's learned about great teaching, and her hope that it can become common practice in Amer
book, what's she's learned
about great teaching, and her hope that it can become common practice in America.
In this edition of the Education
Next Book Club podcast, Mike Petrilli talks with Dana Goldstein about her best - selling b
Book Club podcast, Mike Petrilli
talks with Dana Goldstein
about her best - selling
bookbook.
Nathan Glazer
talks with Education
Next about Larry Cuban's new
book, As Good As It Gets: What School Reform Brought to Austin.
AEI scholar (and Ed
Next editor) Frederick M. Hess
talks about his new
book, The Same Thing Over and Over: How School Reformers Get Stuck in Yesterday's Ideas.
In this edition of the Ed
Next book club, Mike Petrilli
talks with Tyre
about parents» concerns, the advice she gives them, and why it matters.
In a new
book, Sent to the Principal: Students
Talk About Making High Schools Better (
Next Generation Press, May 2005), Cushman shares their insights on a range of issues that exert a largely unnoticed effect on how they learn and thrive.
«My
next novel is near completion and already Archway and I are
talking about turning that manuscript into a
book.
The
next time she phoned, she said, «I'm calling to
talk about getting your
book into bookstores.»
After having initial success with his first
book, Michael
talks about his
next project and how that didn't go as planned:
For the
next post in this series, I'll
talk a bit
about various technical differences between devices I'm familiar with, and how difficult it is to get
books onto them.
Legendary fantasy artist Charles Vess
talks to CBR
about The
Book of Ballads: The Original Art Edition, and what's
next for him.
Today we'd like to
talk about marketing your self - published
book; in particular, we'd like to share some ideas
about locations to hold your
next book signing.
In a recent interview with Forbes, the author
talks about the subject for her
next book: gay rights.
In the introduction, Mark
talks about the newly announced
Book2Pod service announced by Jim Kukral on the Sell More
Books Show podcast and shares two of the voices available (Nigel and Jessica) to
talk about one of the things he likes best
about it (freeing authors to be able to work on their
next book).
And I love that, while I rarely
talk about my
books outside of it, I do have this inner circle, a secret society who actually makes in - jokes or asks me what's coming
next.
Laura Hazard Owen sums up the recent BookExpo America with 5 Things the
Book Industry Will Be
Talking About Next Week.
Next Week's Interview Guest — Jeremy Greenfield, editorial director of Digital
Book World,
talking about the Department of Justice's anti-trust lawsuit against Apple and the defendant publishers.
We also
talk a bit
about avoiding marketing FOMO, or the fear of missing out on the
next big thing, you know that thing you read
about on Facebook, that's like a
book selling miracle.
And speaking of celebrity influence,
next week we're going to
talk about an important marketing model to sell your
books online, so stay tuned!
Next time, we're going to
talk about how to get your
books into libraries.