Sentences with phrase «whose latest book»

To determine what kind of movements are vital for interviews, we spoke to body language expert Dr. Lillian Glass, who writes about these kinds of tips in her book The Body Language Advantage, Patti Wood, a body language expert and author of SNAP — Making the Most of First Impressions, Body Language and Charisma, and Tonya Reiman, a body language expert whose latest book was 2012's The Body Language of Dating.
In spite of troubling predictions about Earth's climate, many young people are addressing the problems in positive ways, according to Lynne Cherry, acclaimed author of 30 - plus environmental books for children, whose latest book explores the science of global warming at an eighth - grade reading level.
Here's the reaction to this «feather music» from Rothenberg, whose latest book, «Survival of the Beautiful: Art, Science, and Evolution» (to be published next month), explores instances of what might be called aesthetic evolution:
Marc Maron, whose latest book is Attempting Normal, is also the author of The Jerusalem Syndrome: My Life As a Reluctant Messiah.
This week, Salon 94 announced its representation of the New York - based artist whose latest book, «Today I Shall Judge Nothing That Occurs: Selections from the Ektachrome Archive,» was just published by Aperture.
«We started out the study at Johns Hopkins looking at the effects of loneliness on heart patients, trying to determine what governs their length of survival,» says Lynch, whose latest book is The Cry Unheard: New Insights into the Medical Consequences of Loneliness.
Sean M. Douglas is an author, businessman and teacher whose latest book From Storm Clouds Come Angels has been praised as a work of true and genuine insight.
«I started out as an engineer, and I thought that what was really important was that something worked,» says longtime interface guru Don Norman of the Nielsen Norman Group, whose latest book, Emotional Design, describes his conversion to aesthetics.
It is, says sociologist Nick Wolfinger, whose latest book, Soul Mates: Religion, Sex, Love and Marriage Among African Americans and Latinos, was just published.
There is a more theological way to put this» a way suggested by the work of the French literary critic turned American theologian, René Girard, whose latest book, I See Satan Fall Like Lightning, is as clear and systematic a primer to his thought as he has yet produced.
It features Ryan Holliday, whose latest book provides a behind the scenes look at the story of how Peter Thiel secretly funded Hulk Hogan's lawsuit against Gawker Media.
Michael Hyatt is a bestselling author whose latest book «Your Best Year Ever: A 5 Step Plan for Achieving Your Most Important Goals» uses the latest research to help us take control of our time and our dreams to build the lives we want.
A healthy culture and respectful treatment may keep your workforce satisfied, says Heath, whose latest book The Power of Moments: Why Certain Experiences Have Extraordinary Impact, was released in October.
Jeff Shore, of Shore Consulting, is a sought - after sales expert, speaker, author and consultant whose latest book, Be Bold and Win the Sale: Get Out of Your Comfort Zone and Boost Your Performance, was published by McGraw - Hill Professional in January 2014.
Harvey Mackay is a business and sales expert, whose latest book is The Mackay MBA of Selling in the Real World.

Not exact matches

His latest book, «Unshakeable,» was written with Peter Mallouk, Barron's top - ranked independent advisor for three years and president of Creative Planning, whose board Robbins has joined.
Like biblical Hebrew, Atwood's witty prose is thick with double entendre and allusion, including hidden puns whose meanings dawn on us only later, and outrageous jokes that don't so much dawn as «bomb» (one of the book's metaphors and an effect of Atwood's powerfully laconic style)
Editor's note: CNN Contributor Bob Greene is a best - selling author whose 25 books include «Late Edition: A Love Story»; «Duty: A Father, His Son, and the Man Who Won the War»; and «Once Upon a Town: The Miracle of the North Platte Canteen.»
In Cline's latest book, «The Return of Edgar Caycee,» Cline claims he was channeled by the previously deceased reincarnation guru, whose fan club has rivaled that of God's.
Later when I was in Selly Oaks, I had a conversation with Prof. John Hicks of the University of Birmingham whose approach was that inter-religious relation should have God as the point of entry, as indicated in his book, God and the Universe of Faiths.
At any rate, this celebrated love lyric, whose admission to the Hebrew canon was vigorously withstood and was not finally settled until about 90 A.D., (At the Synod of Jamnia, although even later Rabbi Akibah pronounced condemnation on those who sang snatches from this book in wine houses.)
The worst perpetrator is, of course, Mary Daly, whose significant work in The Church and the Second Sex (1968) and the even more important Beyond God the Father (1973) has degenerated into her latest effort, Gyn / Ecology: The Metaethics of Radical Feminism (1978); about «Spinning and Witches and Great Hags,» it is a book which makes one want either to laugh or cry.
It must be said that it is a book whose rhetoric is flawed, and one finds it more than a little strange that the beautiful precision and economy that generally mark his prose in his work for The New Yorker and in his major books at so many points in his latest work give way to a profusion of jargon and a bloatedness of syntax that disfigure the whole.
Adam Gopnik — like his pieces on France and the French — writing about Houllebecq (whose new novel is out) and Eric Zemmour (a French TV journalist with a book of diatribe against modern France) in the latest New Yorker, brings up Football: «The result of the new free market in football is that French footballers, like Thierry Henry and Arsene Wenger, have become heroes in North and West London».
Her latest book, Teach Your Children Well, also a New York Times bestseller, tackles our current narrow definition of success — how it unnecessarily stresses academically talented kids and marginalizes many more whose talents and interests are less amenable to measurement.
I've walked the fields of mega-tournaments, watched countless instructional DVDs and books, appeared on television to promote new football helmets, and, over the years, have turned down the chance to promote hundreds, if not thousands, of products, many making claims that could not be backed up by peer - reviewed studies, some whose advertisements were later found to be misleading by the Federal Trade Commission.
Late - night comedian Samantha Bee, whose «Full Frontal» show last year created images of Schneiderman as a comic - book superhero taking on Trump, distanced herself from him, demanding on Twitter that he take down a recent tweet of the pictures.
Whatever the reason, NASA's later grants to O'Neill, which continued till around 1980, according to Patrick McCray, a historian whose recent book includes chapters on O'Neill, tended to focus on his work on a mass propulsion system — potentially suitable for getting things up into orbit, but not explicitly space - colony - related.
This is what happened to molecular biologist Robert Sinsheimer, whose autobiographical account, The Strands of Life, is the latest in the Sloan Foundation's Science Book Series.
Josh Tickell, whose new book, Kiss the Ground, explores the potential of regenerative farming practices like these to transform agriculture as we know it, told mbg late last year, «The biggest misconception about U.S. agriculture is that we can somehow make it work without dealing with the soil.»
I now have your Secrets books and DVDs, cookbook and the latest book just published (whose name escapes me at the moment).
Latest News Headlines and free hookup apps Speed dating app, it on Zhana Vrangalova, whose At Euro lesbian bookings.
As an arms dealer whose arm doubles as a Vibranium super-cannon, Klaue makes for a nasty henchman, while Killmonger keeps his cards up his sleeve until relatively late in the film but emerges as the most satisfying comic - book adversary since Heath Ledger's Joker.
McChrystal's story is the inspiration for writer - director David Michôd's new Netflix film, War Machine, based on a book by the late journalist Michael Hastings, whose 2010 Rolling Stone profile, «The Runaway General» got the general fired as commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan.
Almost unheard in the background of 12 Years a Slave was the Christian - driven abolitionist movement that would, within a decade of Northup's book (he disappears from history, perhaps to Canada), plunge the United States into a four - year civil war whose savagery matched 1914 - 18, though no one realised until too late.
Nearly a decade later, an enigmatic detective (Kyle Chandler) searches for the missing author, whose books are connected to a string of mysterious arsons.
Competing alongside them are such notable talents as Spike Lee, whose new comedy, «BlacKkKlansman,» tells the true story of an African - American police officer who infiltrates the KKK; Jean - Luc Godard, here with «The Picture Book»; and Pawel Pawlikowski, whose Oscar - winning «Ida» played at Ebertfest, and whose latest film, «Cold War,» centers on a mismatched romance.
Besides Sarris and by all means Corliss himself, the magazine regularly featured first - rate, challenging, authoritative figures such as Robin Wood (whose book Hitchcock's Films had revolutionized British and American thinking about that director's work), Joseph McBride, Molly Haskell, David Thomson (who came along a bit later, and ruled), Raymond Durgnat, Richard Roud, Brendan Gill, and Paul Schrader (whose 1972 «Notes on Film Noir» remains the definitive introduction to and disquisition on that cinematic darkbloom).
In this Reverse Shot Talkie, director Matías Piñeiro browses the aisles of Greenwich Village bookstore Mercert Street Books with host Eric Hynes to talk about adaptation as an art of taking liberties, the beauty of mess, and his ongoing relationship with William Shakespeare, whose plays have inspired many of his films, including his latest, The Princess of France.
The Art of Technology competition was judged by popular children's illustrator Jonny Lambert, whose books, including his latest, The Little Why, is an Early Years education staple.
The high priest (or, as McLaren puts it, «inaugural protagonist») of critical pedagogy is the late Paulo Freire, whose view of conventional schooling (a teacher instructing students in the canon of established academic curricula) was captured in the title of his seminal 1970 book, The Pedagogy of the Oppressed.
In her 2013 book, Reign of Error, Diane Ravitch — an education historian and former federal education official who originally supported but later became a critic of reforms like No Child Left Behind — cites surprising evidence that a nation's higher position on an international ranking of test scores actually predicted lower per capita GDP decades later, compared with countries whose test scores ranked worse.
SilverWood Books is a partner member, as is Cameron Publicity, whose director Ben Cameron will be speaking later about marketing.
But I'd so much like to catch authors before it's too late to get a book publicist really excited about a project: before a major book publishing house has given up on promoting the book (or lost interest in selling the book) or before an author has committed to working with a print - on - demand company whose imprint would make a book about 95 % more difficult to properly promote than it has to be.
An intimate video biography chronicles the personal life and professional career of late AIDS activist, screenwriter, poet, novelist, and National Book Award recipient Paul Monette, whose distinctive personality is poignantly captured in home videos, news footage, photographs, and heartfelt reflections from actors, authors, family members, and Monette himself.
If you count yourself as a member of this group, here's your chance to break away from the book - club clusters whose participants have their noses buried in the latest novel or memoir — for it's National Poetry Month, a time to celebrate a different genre.Works in progress This year we're lucky enough to have an...
46 members Latest Activity: Apr 29, 2017 Books For Film is an exclusive site dedicated to presenting, to the publishing and film industry dealmakers, serious authors whose books are suitabBooks For Film is an exclusive site dedicated to presenting, to the publishing and film industry dealmakers, serious authors whose books are suitabbooks are suitable...
Who knew an author whose latest novel features severed fingers would enjoy a well - crafted children's book?
Much like J.K. Rowling and George R.R. Martin, best - selling author Haruki Murakami is the type of writer whose fans queue up at bookstores at midnight, clamoring to be the first to get their hands on his latest book.
Their Little Free Libraries non-profit venture was inspired by Andrew Carnegie's support of 2,509 free public libraries in the late 1800s / early 1900s; by Miss Lutie Sterns, a librarian whose «traveling little libraries» delivered books to 1,400 locations around Wisconsin during that same period of time; and the more recent «take a book leave a book» movement in cafes and public spaces.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z