Sentences with phrase «what authors like»

Right now, I'm looking for testimonials and some feedback on what authors like you want from a book trailer video and what you're prepared to pay.
The last time I tried to assemble one, I ended up tapping my head gently against my desk, and muttering «But it's not just what authors I like.

Not exact matches

Using the authors» analogy — despite its condescending overtones — of kids and adolescents growing more quickly than adults, if we took away the extra gallons of milk and after - school snacks, if we stopped providing education, if we penalized a kid for an inadvertent mistake, if we took away all the extra tools and resources required to usher kids through childhood, what would that look like?
«We're living in what I like to call the «Thank You Economy,» because only the companies that can figure out how to mind their manners in a very old - fashioned way — and do it authentically — are going to have a prayer of competing,» says social media expert and author of the book The Thank You Economy Gary Vaynerchuk in a recent Entrepreneur.com column.
Time - management expert Laura Vanderkam, author of What The Most Successful People Do Before Breakfast (Portfolio Trade, 2013) says one of the reasons people say they don't like mornings is that they stay up too late.
In his book, Chaos Monkeys (HarperCollins, 2016), author Antonio Garcia Martinez seeks to paint an authentic portrait of what it's like to live inside the Silicon Valley tech bubble.
Media strategist Mack Collier, author of Think Like a Rock Star, says what fans most need to know is what's on the menu and where the food trucks are.
In her TED Talk, Rachel Botsman, author of What's Mine Is Yours: The Rise of Collaborative Consumption, says that «The real magic and secret sauce behind collaborative consumption marketplaces like Airbnb isn't the inventory or the money.
Interestingly, the article's author outlined what a basic - income initiative would look like stateside, using political scientist Charles Murray (of the conservative American Enterprise Institute think tank) as a guide.
«I recommend routinely tracking what the industry analyst firms like Gartner are reporting about your industry, as well as trade associations and advocacy groups,» says Becky Sheetz - Runkle, author of Sun Tzu for Women: The Art of War for Winning in Business.
Virtual Value Steve Wilkinghoff, a chartered accountant and author of Found Money: Simple Strategies for Uncovering the Hidden Profit and Cash Flow in Your Business, offers insight on the value of online services like Keen.com that provide «virtual» experts — and what to watch out for.
In this edited excerpt, the authors offer suggestions for figuring out just what kind of business you'd like to start.
Comedian Aziz Ansari teamed up with sociologist and author Eric Klinenberg to write «Modern Romance,» an in - depth investigation into the reality of what it's like to date and look for love in the digital era.
Milyutin said he would read blogs and books on education — and if he liked what he'd read, he'd get in touch with the author to learn more.
Charles Duhigg, staff writer for The New York Times and author of The Power of Habit, answers questions from readers on Quora on topics ranging from how to develop a blogging habit to what it's like to work as a journalist.
When you have feedback effects like this, you're going to get instability in your model economy, and that's exactly what the authors find — the economy experiences booms and busts in a chaotic, unstable way.
Dan Lyons, an author who was briefly a Valleywag writer, said what Mr. Thiel did «sets a scary precedent,» but «my guess is that most people hate Gawker as much as he does, so he probably ends up looking like a hero among his own crowd.»
Using his publishing background to tap into what readers would like to read — with absolutely no guidance from me — he created several columns that helped to highlight [our] authors and services... I can not recommend Shel Horowitz highly enough and he continues to do work for me to this day.
«TED talks have raised the bar on what it means to deliver an inspiring presentation,» says Carmine Gallo, a communications coach and author of Talk Like TED.
My thoughts on what Jesus looks like were spurred by a fascinating lecture at Baylor by the University of Colorado's Paul Harvey, author with Edward Blum of The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America.
let alone the god they present, one who could have created any kind of world he wanted, like an author who has complete control over what shows up in a fictional work; why would god then giddily create / allow so much pain and evil?
The respected Christian apologist and author, C.S. Lewis 1960 essay «The Worlds Last Night» «Say what you like,» we shall be told, «the apocalyptic beliefs of the first Christians have been proved to be false.
Like a bipolar magnet, the Christian author today feels the pull of both forces: a fervent desire to communicate what gives life meaning counteracted by an artistic inclination toward self - expression, form and structure that any «message» might interrupt.
Privileged authors imply privileged readers, those who are like them with respect to background, experience, and interests, and who as a consequence respond appreciatively to what they have to say.
Jonathan Martin, author of Prototype: What Happens When You Discover You're More Like Jesus Than You Think?
The EV authors were putting on paper what I had been thinking about for at least the previous 10 years, and I wanted to connect with them personally because I was (pretty desperately) looking for a group of Protestant Christians with whom I could seek God, hoping to find anything like what they were advocating and describing near where I live in the Coastal Range of northern California — the pickin's were and are really slim.
... as you stated in another post «By inspiring the human authors to write what they did, God made it look like He was the one responsible for the actions of Israel, the destruction of the flood, the murder of the firstborn males of Israel, and the slaughter of Canaanite women and children.
The author attempts to explain what the historical Jesus of Nazareth was like.
This is not what the church looks like,» wrote blogger and author Rachel Held Evans, prompting a discussion that came to dominate the event's hashtag.
and the Bhagavad - gita is like a Bible for the Krishna devotees, despite what the author if this article writes.
I re-read a book recently, and the author wrote about how she was supposed to speak at an event, and when she asked which topic they would like to here her expound upon, they said, well, just tell us what is saving your life right now.
articles like this are kind of like a mirror, and when readers don't like what they see of themselves, they project it on the author.
Steve... I think we're floggin» a dead horse here, but for what it's worth, understand that I'm not trying to convince you to think like I do, rather I wd hope that room wd be made for many theological differences.To think discuss and debate theology is well supported by the New Testament and history, and is perfectly within the bounds of what it means to engage our minds with the subject at hand.Theologians and biblical scholars have done this very thing for centuries, revealing a plethora of opinion on the evolving world of biblical studies.Many capable authors have written and debated the common themes as well as the differences between Paul, John, Jesus, the synoptics, etc..
Maybe the Holy Spirit is at work around the world to bring multiple authors and pastors and theologians to similar ideas about similar things all at once, and so when I read something in someone else's book that sounds a lot like something I have written, but they don't give me credit, it is not that they «borrowed» from me, but because both of us were listening to what the Spirit has been whispering to minds all over the world.
Readers are thus made to feel like witnesses to what actually happened, with access to the thoughts and motives both of the characters in the drama and of those who wrote about them, the authors of the sources used to build an uncluttered reality.
- Mary DeMuth, author of Everything: What You Gain and What You Give to Become like Jesus
I re-read a book recently, and the author wrote about how she was supposed to speak at an event, and when she asked which topic they would like to here her expound upon, they said, well, just tell us what...
«Avenging Angels» — Brigham Youngs murderers — they did his bidding like the Mason Family Mountain Meadows Massacre — the massacre of 30 men 40 women and 70 children in Utah by the «Avenging Angels» see «Blood of the Prophets» by Will Bagley (mormon author) Blood Atonement — the practice of the mormons that atones for the death of its members and / or the act of which the mormons retaliate when they do not believe one is following what they think is right — google the 1984 murder the Lafferty brothers commited in Utah of their sister in - law and her 9 month old daughter by slitting their throats.
And what are these dangers the author keeps mentioning but not enumerating and how do they compared to the dangers posed by organized religion and other organized philosophies like fascism and communism, «manifest destiny» and other philosophies that those oh so nobly «organized» people have «blessed» us with over the centuries?
What religiously insecure people like this author cant grasp is that we just don't need a group of collective fools claiming some divine right to humanity.
It's sad when the author of this story makes it sound like she knows what she is talking about and the unknowing person believes that the writer is correct.
When it comes to Scriptures we should seek to understand that what the author meant and not what we like or want to understand.
Like any author worth his salt, the writer in Jeremiah begins by stating the subject of the passage: «This is what the Lord Almighty, the God of Israel, says to all those I carried into exile from Jerusalem to Babylon... «(Jeremiah 29:4).
John Gay in his Beggar's Opera notes that «A covetous fellow, like a jackdaw, steals what he was never made to enjoy, for the sake of hiding it» Ancient Greek authors tell how a jackdaw, being a social creature, may be caught with a dish of oil which it falls into while looking at its own reflection.
However, if you are brand new to the subject of a nonviolent atonement, a book like this might be just what you are looking for to introduce you to the various views and available authors which are out there in this important topic.
In contrast, the ancient Hebrew author seldom finds it necessary to set a scene with details or to describe what a character looks like unless these facts advance the plot.
The contemplations of the author can be a bit rambling at times and sometimes seem to focus on random things like what Mary thought of Joseph's home and workshop, and what the house was like, did the workshop look out onto a busy road, was Joseph well known for his carpentry skills etc..
↑ ↑ Typical of those who like the author of the article, their real and only take on the subject is base, baseless and based on a SU PI NE Ignorance of what the Scriptures say.
Seems to me this author is a true believer When God became a man God learned what it is like to be human?
Buchler, like Plato, does not explain that this is what he is doing or why, because he holds the view that the work speaks for itself; that it is the product, not the author, which determines meaning.
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