Books were here way before movies, and ladies have been enthralled with certain Romeos for years. |
|
The overall picture of the economy in this report differs little from that of prior Beige Books or other major data releases. |
|
Books are indiscriminately piled on the sidewalk for people to browse through. |
|
Over the years I have read with avidity various intellectual disputes in The New York Review of Books and other literary journals. |
|
Books are priceless treasures that will never become old or obsolete, no matter the advances in technology. |
|
Books from the war period and local history publications will be available. |
|
The first time I saw Bill Bailey was when he co-starred with Dylan Moran as his mad bearded neighbour, Manny, on Channel 4's sitcom Black Books. |
|
Then we walked uptown to the EV, and then had some cannoli and coffee, followed by a trip to St. Mark's Books. |
|
Books on Italian Renaissance prints do not come along very often, and when they do, as likely as not they are catalogues. |
|
Books 1-3 contain linear or quadratic indeterminate equations, many of them simultaneous. |
|
We drove through windblown sheets of rain last night to get to the city for my reading at Books Inc. on Chestnut Street. |
|
Books of all kinds, from colouring books to books on science and business, attract a large number of people. |
|
Photo Memories Accent Books feature accessories and embellishments for scrapbook pages and customized greeting cards. |
|
Books are a source of information that is considered by some to be an outdated way to communicate with the masses. |
|
Books old and new, bargain books, children's books and a large representation of antiquarian books will be for sale. |
|
Books reflect the mental atmosphere in which they were born, and on that account cannot expect to live forever. |
|
Books on mysticism and the supernatural abound, in a way that would have been unthinkable even a few years ago. |
|
Books are open on every surface, and there are many pages of notebooks strewn around. |
|
Books were distributed in communities and neighbourhoods, and to family members and friends. |
|
Books were published in parts, as periodicals, with the added attraction of illustrations, for later binding. |
|
|
Future Tense Books is a wonderful publishing house in Portland, Oregon, helmed by the unstoppable one-man publishing crew of Kevin Sampsell. |
|
From 1983 the business was carried on by a limited company called Mushroom Books Ltd. |
|
Books about outlaws were blamed because they put ideas into his head about an exciting life of crime. |
|
Books assigned in school were the most contemptible of all, since those dunces, our teachers, had heard of them. |
|
Books were also very costly and were mostly written in Latin, an unfamiliar language to the common people. |
|
The hardcover edition from Atria Books is scheduled for fall 2003, and the mass market paperback release is scheduled for 2004 from Pocket Books. |
|
Books were sitting on bookshelves along the back wall, opposite them were inactive Apple computers sitting on old school desks. |
|
India was at last ready for a swadeshi equivalent to the New York or London Review of Books. |
|
I could never keep straight the prophetic meanings found in the Books of Daniel and Revelation. |
|
This article is excerpted from Green Architecture by James Wines, with permission of the publisher, Taschen Books. |
|
Books and articles are now commissions and performances, and an increased emphasis is placed upon awards, recognitions and honours. |
|
The New Books Service is your source for the latest information on current and forthcoming Canadian books. |
|
Books of educative and literary value are kept in libraries for prisoners having an academic bent of mind. |
|
Mark Gillingham heads the technology unit at the Great Books Foundation in Chicago. |
|
By contrast, which is sometimes overlooked, in the arithmetical Books 7-9 multiplication of integers themselves occurs as usual. |
|
Some of us were so disappointed we decided to carry on meeting off-piste, at Riverside Books, if they'll have us. |
|
They have brought in Puffin Books for children and are republishing all of Ian Fleming's original James Bond titles. |
|
Or you could catch the January sale at Esslemont And Macintosh and browse through the second-hand selection at Bon Accord Books on The Spital. |
|
The survey, by Penguin Books, found that more than half the men polled believed that flattering a woman would be enough to impress her. |
|
Books can be exchanged along the way, knickers washed, sarongs or sarapes bought in place of sheets, towels, skirts, shawls. |
|
|
Books about genes seem to have joined the ranks of cookbooks and doctor books in that there appears to be an insatiable market for them. |
|
Books must deal with the local sheriff, an eager mortician, and a nosey reporter who all want a piece of the dying legend. |
|
Books in digital format, also known as e-books, can be read on devices lacking the power and screen space to afford a regular Web browser. |
|
The following is a typical advert from the personals column of the London Review of Books. |
|
Books and articles on the tradition of the English country house are legion. |
|
He'd assembled a Catalogue of Printed Books at Middle Hill, but it seemed a hopeless muddle. |
|
In a recent article in the New York Review of Books, Barenboim attacks the current fashion for identity politics and cultural nationalism. |
|
Books and scrolls are nearby, as are servants attending him with a wine pitcher and bringing a large covered jar. |
|
Now the National Books website receives millions of hits and processes tens of thousands of online transactions and book orders each day. |
|
Books will be fetched by Library staff from the stacks downstairs, where the collection will be housed in suitable conditions of security, temperature and humidity. |
|
Excerpted by arrangement with PublicAffairs, a member of the Perseus Books Group. |
|
Books can function as doorstops, paperweights, hiding places for some valuables, platforms for balancing a teacup on or props for broken chairs or tables. |
|
The enthusiast has financed the latest book himself and, based on the previous projects, expects the 1,500 copies printed by publishers Country Books to sell quickly. |
|
Her first book, about synesthesia, titled Tasting the Universe, will be out in March 2011 from New Page Books. |
|
Books cost money and require the user to read them for the idea to spread. |
|
Used with permission from Jericho Books, a division of Hachette Book Group, inc. |
|
Books went well, as did glass and china ware on the White Elephant stall. |
|
Books take up space, and libraries, being confined by walls, must occasionally weed the shelves of injudicious pamphlets and books unborrowed through the centuries. |
|
Reprinted by arrangement with bantam Books, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc. |
|
Books under copyright will be excerpted at varying lengths, depending on whether Google has agreements with their publishers to carry longer excerpts. |
|
|
The New York Review of Books Classics recently rereleased The Balkan Trilogy and School for Love. |
|
In a piece written for the New York Review of Books, James Fenton pulls Bizot up for a couple of factual mistakes, but these seem to me to be minor details. |
|
Books on General Knowledge vouch to enhance your intelligence quotient. |
|
Books were sold mostly on wire racks in drug stores and supermarkets. |
|
She is also author of I brake for Yard Sales, a New York Times bestseller about interior design from Abrams Books. |
|
Books on self-improvement have been a big draw at book fairs. |
|
After hopscotching from event to event in Nashua I found a T-Mobile hotspot at a Borders Books in town and jotted down the events in the post below. |
|
His work has also appeared at The rumpus, The Millions, and The Washington Independent Review of Books. |
|
Note that in the Forum's Tarantino Books Corner, there is one sticky topic for each of the available Tarantino books, so it is very easy to find information on those books. |
|
Little essays in this direction were already made in Prospero's Books, with its concern for the art of calligraphy, for what it meant and stood for. |
|
What do you look for in a great bookstore, and what is the future of independent bookstores, like your Parnassus Books? |
|
Merge-Matic Books is actually the brainchild of The Washington Post. |
|
Penguin Books began a revolution in publishing with their sixpenny pocket paperbacks, and included in their early lists an edition of Shakespeare. |
|
He majored in Chinese at the University of Michigan and moved to New York in the early 1960s, working for Time-Life Books. |
|
Books are becoming obsolete, because they follow a certain sequence. |
|
Over two albums, the Books have plucked sampled voices from their original context and arranged them inside simple compositions for sliced-and-diced guitar, banjo, and cello. |
|
Books tower over us and are crammed into every gap in the structure. |
|
Today, Google Books and other searchable text databases have been a godsend. |
|
Last year, the St. Louis-based publisher Really Big coloring Books released a Ted Cruz coloring book. |
|
Excerpted by permission of Harper Books, a division of HarperCollins Publishers. |
|
|
Excerpted from Moneyball for Government, published by disruption Books, and reprinted with permission. |
|
For instance, his bilious attack on the New York Review of Books. |
|
Speedboat and Pitch Dark have recently been reissued in handsome editions by the New York Review of Books. |
|
Mantel's lecture, organised by London Review of Books, was titled Undressing Anne Boleyn and was on the topic of royal women. |
|
Books about pseudosciences such as astrology sell millions of copies. |
|
In August 2014, he recorded the first ever unabridged audiobook of William Golding's 1964 novel, The Spire, for Canongate Books. |
|
Books such as The Travels of Marco Polo fuelled rumours of mythical places. |
|
This survey may be made by perusing al Books and taking notice of all Mechanicall Inventions. |
|
From 1963, the Westmorland Gazette became his publisher, and its name appears on the first impressions of Books Six and Seven. |
|
Books for children of all ages in the Welsh language published by Gomer range from Smot's board books to teenage fiction. |
|
The Welsh Books Council and the offices of the standard historical dictionary of Welsh, Geiriadur Prifysgol Cymru, are also located in the town. |
|
Botany is handled in Books XII to XVIII, with Theophrastus as one of Pliny's sources. |
|
Books and scripts had to be approved by the Propaganda Ministry prior to publication. |
|
At first the volume attracted little attention, but in December it was included in The Times' list of Books of the Year. |
|
Original literature continues to be promoted by institutions such as the Eisteddfod in Wales and the Welsh Books Council. |
|
Books Four, Five, Six and Seven will follow in 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2019 respectively. |
|
Books are most commonly sold through booksellers and through other retailers. |
|
In 2005, The Wealth of Nations was named among the 100 Best Scottish Books of all time. |
|
Books devoted to the homely beliefs of the peasantry are filled with incidents of pixie manifestations. |
|
Then, in 1965, Ace Books proceeded to publish an edition, unauthorized by Tolkien and without paying royalties to him. |
|
|
By the 1930s, it had fallen into disuse and in 1936 was used by the newly founded Penguin Books company to store books. |
|
Though of their Names in heav'nly Records now be no memorial, blotted out and ras'd. By their Rebellion, from the Books of Life. |
|
From 1963, Westmorland Gazette also became the publisher, and their name appears as such on the first impressions of Books Six and Seven. |
|
Honno has received financial support from the Welsh Books Council and the European Union. |
|
Morpurgo married Clare, eldest daughter of Sir Allen Lane, the founder of Penguin Books. |
|
Authorized editions followed from Ballantine Books and Houghton Mifflin to tremendous commercial success. |
|
Pont Books is an imprint designed to produce English books with a Welsh connection for children. |
|
Books considered subversive might be publicly burned, and Domitian crucified copyists for reproducing works deemed treasonous. |
|
The first Young Bond novel, SilverFin was also adapted and released as a graphic novel on 2 October 2008 by Puffin Books. |
|
His children's stories remain popular, and his Jungle Books have been made into several movies. |
|
The main sources for the history of the common law in the Middle Ages are the plea rolls and the Year Books. |
|
She has kept Tolstoy's essays, which interrupt the narrative in Books III and IV but has undone the Aylmers' Anglicisation of Russian names. |
|
I have discovered some of the most amazing pre-made Books of Shadows through a company called Brahm's Bookworks. |
|
Heymann chose not to return messages left with his publisher, atria Books. |
|
If this is correct, the material in the Books of Aneirin is from three sources. |
|
Poetry Wales became involved with publishing, firstly as Poetry Wales Press, and then, since 1985, as Seren Books. |
|
The story of Taliesin is a later survival, not present in the Red or White Books, and is omitted from many of the more recent translations. |
|
Since the relaunch of the programme in 2005, a new range of novels have been published by BBC Books. |
|
Books about Chaplin continue to be published regularly, and he is a popular subject for media scholars and film archivists. |
|
He treats the themes and critical reception of Goller's The Five Books of Moses, and his biblical' and other plays. |
|
|
The Year Books are the modern English name that is now typically given to the earliest law reports of England. |
|
I want to focus on an aspect highlit by Denis Donoghue when he reviewed it in the London Review of Books. |
|
Raquiya Haji Dualeh Sisters in Affliction-Circumcision and Infibulations of Women in Africa-Zed Books Ltd. |
|
Already, more than 11,000 family members and friends have submitted entries to the more than 1,600 Guest Books Legacy. |
|
Congratulations to Groundwood Books which is celebrating its thirtieth anniversary this fall. |
|
Groundwood Books Publisher Patsy Aldana has been named as a member of the Order of Canada. |
|
Our favorite new San Francisco discovery is Omnivore Books on Food, in what used to be a Noe Valley butcher shop. |
|
A large clay cylinder with a cuneiform inscription of Nebuchadnezzar II will highlight Doyle New York's auction of Rare Books and Autographs. |
|
First Third Books is an independent publisher of quality photo books on alternative music and subcultural life. |
|
In June 2010 the book, entitled The Very Fairy Princess, reached number 1 on the New York Times Best Seller List for Children's Books. |
|
Gonzo Parenting is available locally at Hastings in Wenatchee, Riverwalk Books in Chelan, and Orondo Cider Works in Orondo. |
|
The eight volume series is published by Incorgnito Publishing Press under our Topos Books imprint. |
|
Books by Transformative Press focus on spiritual growth and personal responsibility. |
|
Books were also spirited home in food cans and Tampax boxes. |
|
The Internet has been an integral part of Marabella Books from its inception and ebooks, for short subjects, are in the near future. |
|
Books deemed unacceptable to the regime were removed from school libraries. |
|
Books of hours, in both manuscript and printed versions, provide valuable clues to the beliefs and devotional habits of medieval people. |
|
The Arcana collection offers the best examples of their type, ranging from Books Of Hours to works of literature and on the natural world. |
|
In the history of medieval prayer, Books of Hours were among the most widely used Latin devotional texts. |
|
Now the owner of Birchbark Books, an independent bookstore in Minneapolis, Erdrich continues to add layers upon layers to her fiction. |
|
|
Morton Prize from Sarabande Books, and a book of flash fiction, Alabama Steve. |
|
How One Company's Extraordinary Workforce Changed the Way We Look at Disability Today, which was recently re-released by BenBella Books. |
|
Reprinted courtesy of da capo Press, a member of the Perseus Books Group. |
|
There's also a red Routemaster bus, an anglepoise lamp, a polypropylene chair and the famous Penguin Books jacket. |
|
I buy most of my books in a shop called Books in Basel in Basel Street. |
|
Simon's first books Zoom and Xanadu were published by Northumberland-based Bloodaxe Books. |
|
Pitch Items, Lookbacks, Cigarette Vanishers, Magic Books, Trick Cards, Hot Flashy Photos. |
|
Some of Ransome's early works were The Nature Books for Children, a series of children's books commissioned by publisher Anthony Treherne. |
|
In 1962 many of her books were among the first to be published by Armada Books in paperback, making them more affordable to children. |
|
Books were acquired by collectors including Sir William Cecil, William, Lord Paget, John Dee and Archbishop Matthew Parker. |
|
Ghana has the largest bookshop in Africa, EPP Books Services located at the University of Ghana. |
|
A major section of the Natural History, Books XX to XXIX, discusses matters related to medicine, especially plants that yield useful drugs. |
|
Former editor Cary Archard also founded Poetry Wales Press, which now trades under the name Seren Books. |
|
Along with two other literary magazines in Wales, New Welsh Review and Planet, Poetry Wales receives funding from the Welsh Books Council. |
|
Published by Arrow Books, Fairweather Eden was designed for a popular audience. |
|
Digital scans of the Blue Books are available at the National Library of Wales. |
|
Leaping backwards 400 years, staff have also been engaged in the digitisation of two of the Library's medieval Books of Hours. |
|
These words are found in all medieval Books of Hours, the devotional books made for the laity. |
|
Books and studies for teachers and students in primary and secondary schools usually use this scheme. |
|
The first written record of the pony was in 1603 in the Court Books of Shetland and, for its size, it is the strongest of all the horse breeds. |
|
|
In the first millennium, these were most likely to be Gospel Books, such as the Lindisfarne Gospels and the Book of Kells. |
|
Stuart Paterson wrote a stage adaptation in 2004, first produced by the Birmingham Old Rep in 2004 and published in 2007 by Nick Hern Books. |
|
He maintains his journalism with regular contributions to newspapers and journals such as The Guardian and The London Review of Books. |
|
Seven Stories, the National Centre for Children's Books in Newcastle upon Tyne, holds the largest public collection of Blyton's papers and typescripts. |
|
Also important in the movement was Peter Kravitz, editor of Polygon Books. |
|
Bookchests will be ready for distribution on the 4th Saturday of September and January. Books sent to the respective Circles are charged to the officers. |
|
For older children, the staff have come up with a book club, Cooking The Books, where members create some tasty treats to munch on while listening to stories. |
|
Online book news company book2book announced on Tuesday that publishers Orchard Books will publish The Dark, a new book by author Lemony Snicket and artist Jon Klassen. |
|
The monasteries allowed the scriptorium to develop and the wonderful hand-painted Books of Hours, prayer books for the wealthy few, are still world treasures. |
|
Poems for the Millennium was a slap in the face of the official verse mediocracy of the New Yorker, New York Review of Books, and major US prize awarders. |
|
Six Pretty Good Books explores the social sciences through books by prominent authors including Steven Pinker, Nicholas Christakis, Robert Frank, Duncan Watts, and Dan Aridly. |
|
The author began the rewriting of his works last year and his first finished rewritten book, a new version of 'The Books and The Sword', went on sale earlier this month. |
|
A number of abridgements of the Year Books were compiled and circulated by various editors, who sought to excerpt leading cases and categorise them by subject. |
|
Books range from the academic to the popular, from devotional literature and works on spirituality to books addressing contemporary issues in the Church and society. |
|
It was also shortlisted for the Giller Prize, the Commonwealth Writers' Prize, and the Books in Canada First Novel Award, as well as being longlisted for the IMPAC Award. |
|
It is possible that Saxo then enlarged it with Books 15 and 16, telling the story of King Valdemar I's last years and King Canute VI's first years. |
|
Plagiarie had not its nativity with Printing, but began in times when thefts were difficult, and the paucity of Books scarce wanted that Invention. |
|
Books were so in demand during Charlemagne's time that these libraries lent out some books, but only if that borrower offered valuable collateral in return. |
|
Books focusing on this railway would inevitably include a promotion for the Talyllyn Railway, either in the stories themselves, in a footnote or in the foreword. |
|
In July 2011, Egmont Books UK released another Railway Series book, no. |
|
|
In an episode of the Channel 4 television series Black Books, the character Fran Katzenjammer listens to the shipping forecast because a friend from her college is reading it. |
|
When Google Books started, the British Library signed an agreement with Microsoft to digitise a number of books from the British Library for its Live Search Books project. |
|
Once approved by the Lord Lyon, after recommendation by the Advisory Committee on Tartan, the clan tartan is then recorded in the Lyon Court Books. |
|
Study of the classics continued in the form of the Great Books program. |
|
His autobiography Changeling was published in May 2007 by Virgin Books. |
|
That same year he made his last film appearance in a leading role, playing Prospero in Prospero's Books, Peter Greenaway's adaptation of The Tempest. |
|
Emin and Childish were a couple until 1987, during which time she was the administrator for his small press, Hangman Books, which published Childish's confessional poetry. |
|
Instead of publishing with an academic press, he signed a contract with Bantam Books, a mass market publisher, and received a large advance for his book. |
|
The church printed Bibles and Prayer Books in Gaelic, and some churches, and some Protestant clergymen like William King of Dublin, held services in the language. |
|
I wanted to do well for guys like Geoff Kloske and Matt Boyd and everyone at Riverhead Books who believed in me and convinced Penguin to write a check. |
|
Some Books of Shadows are passed from one Wiccan to another, usually upon initiation, but the vast majority of Books of Shadows today are composed by each individual Wiccan. |
|
Much of the time, when no customers came, he spent reading the yellow-jacketed trash that the library contained. Books of that type you could read at the rate of one an hour. |
|
In 2015 a manuscript for an unpublished book was discovered by Jo Hanks, a publisher at Penguin Random House Children's Books, in the Victoria and Albert Museum archive. |
|
I grant that he's a talented writer, but I just don't find his books very interesting. |
|
It's been a year since I moved here and I still haven't unpacked all of my books. |
|
A Parsi lawyer was examining a witness and asking him question regarding credit and debit entries in account books. It was all Greek to me. |
|
I amused myself by thinking that in his choice of books he showed pleasantly the irreconcilable sides of his fantastic nature. |
|
Whilst working at the Institute, Childe continued writing and publishing books dealing with archaeology and prehistory. |
|
Because of the international position of the Netherlands, many books have been written on the subject. |
|
The Liechtenstein State Library is the library that has legal deposit for all books published in the country. |
|
|
Throughout, he continued to publish prolifically, producing excavation reports, journal articles, and books. |
|
Illustrated books, including erotica, were popular, but are poorly represented by extant fragments. |
|
In this respect, the only books which approach to its excellence are Gulliver's Travels and Robinson Crusoe. |
|
The book library is one of the UK's largest archives of art history books, periodicals and exhibition catalogues. |
|
He also had occasional spells of imaginary illness, and he is reported to have had books and papers placed in tall stacks in his study. |
|
Two Bird swishes and a Johnny Davis three-point air ball later, the victory was in the books. |
|
The Theosophical Society popularized the ancient wisdom of the sacred books of India and China in the early years of the century. |
|
General art books dated 2105 will be as brutal about editing the late 20th century as they are about almost all other centuries. |
|
His books defended democratic liberalism as a social and political philosophy. |
|
He was a renowned man of letters, having written several hymns and being credited with having transcribed 300 books personally. |
|
Winehouse's parents have each written memoirs about their daughter and donated the proceeds from both books to the Amy Winehouse Foundation. |
|
His books often focus on the role of religion in society and conflicts between faiths and between the religious and those of no faith. |
|
Display items, such as books and music, were featured together with captions written by Winehouse's brother. |
|
The bookstore primarily services people looking for out-of-print books. |
|
Vernacular book production saw a growth in the amount of books being copied, both secular and religious. |
|
He also recalled having read books by the American James Fenimore Cooper and the English Captain Frederick Marryat. |
|
The Kelmscott Press would go on to publish 23 of Morris' books, more than those of any other author. |
|
Text books are frequently and deterioratingly changed and the result is that they repel the students. |
|
You have like a dillion books here, probably nobody would have even looked at it. |
|
Sales of both books were poor, resulting in Thomas living on meagre fees from writing and reviewing. |
|
|
In 1788, aged 31, Blake experimented with relief etching, a method he used to produce most of his books, paintings, pamphlets and poems. |
|
The creature in Frankenstein, for example, reads books associated with radical ideals but the education he gains from them is ultimately useless. |
|
Income from audio books helps not inconsiderably to keep authors, and publishers, afloat. |
|
She had a governess, a daily tutor, and read many of her father's children's books on Roman and Greek history in manuscript. |
|
Godwin, which sold children's books as well as stationery, maps, and games. |
|
They may have been some of the new mass books that were being written at this time. |
|
The process is also referred to as illuminated printing, and the finished products as illuminated books or prints. |
|
Blake designed his own mythology, which appears largely in his prophetic books. |
|
Chesterton wrote around 80 books, several hundred poems, some 200 short stories, 4000 essays, and several plays. |
|
Cole wrote at least seven books for the Left Book Club, all of which were published by Victor Gollancz Ltd. |
|
The International Phonetic Alphabet is commonly used in books about Shanghainese because none of the existing romanizations are very popular. |
|
Mill's Principles, first published in 1848, was one of the most widely read of all books on economics in the period. |
|
Russell supported his family during this time by writing popular books explaining matters of physics, ethics, and education to the layman. |
|
His characters were often so memorable that they took on a life of their own outside his books. |
|
There was a heavy table in one corner of the dungeonesque place, on which were a number of books and papers. |
|
Abercrombie suggested their choice of weapon be unsold copies of their own books. |
|
Furthermore, they demonstrate her conviction, a legacy from her father, that books should provide moral education. |
|
At the age of 28 she still acted out scenes from the little books with Anne while travelling on the train to York. |
|
Wilde was not, at first, even allowed paper and pen but Haldane eventually succeeded in allowing access to books and writing materials. |
|
Jawaharlal Nehru, the first Prime Minister of independent India, often described Kipling's novel Kim as one of his favourite books. |
|
|
To pass the time he started reading books from the local library, brought to him by his father. |
|
Wells contemplates the ideas of nature and nurture and questions humanity in books such as The Island of Doctor Moreau. |
|
He was seeing life in the raw, and it was a different life from what he had known within the printed books of his library. |
|
Annotated versions provide insights into many of the ideas and hidden meanings that are prevalent in these books. |
|
For the next year he was occupied writing reviews for plays, films and books for The Listener, Time and Tide and New Adelphi. |
|
Meanwhile, he was still writing reviews of books and plays and at this time met the novelist Anthony Powell. |
|
I hid my books in the long grass near the ashpit at the end of the garden where nobody ever came and hurried along the canal bank. |
|
For some years past I have managed to make the capitalist class pay me several pounds a week for writing books against capitalism. |
|
In addition, most prayer books include a section of prayers and devotions for family use. |
|
In these books, Lawrence explores the possibilities for life within an industrial setting. |
|
Until 1930, Woolf often helped her husband print the Hogarth books as the money for employees was not there. |
|
The books that make up The Chronicles of Narnia have sold the most and have been popularised on stage, TV, radio, and cinema. |
|
Many books have been inspired by Lewis, including A Severe Mercy by his correspondent and friend Sheldon Vanauken. |
|
There have also been several adaptations of her books for stage, screen and television. |
|
It brought the need for books that were aesthetic objects as well as words to the attention of the reading and publishing worlds. |
|
Mary Godwin read these memoirs and her mother's books, and was brought up to cherish her mother's memory. |
|
Keats began to lend Brawne books, such as Dante's Inferno, and they would read together. |
|
Augustine received liturgical books from the pope, but their exact contents are unknown. |
|
When he came into the house, I perceived he had some scraps of paper in his hand, and these he was quietly thrusting behind the books. |
|
Coleridge wrote reviews of Ann Radcliffe's books and The Mad Monk, among others. |
|
|
They brought a pallium for Augustine and a present of sacred vessels, vestments, relics, and books. |
|
Decodable books are sold in packs, with more letter combinations appearing in each successive book. |
|
Typically, Eliot first published his poems individually in periodicals or in small books or pamphlets, and then collected them in books. |
|
She's an acclaimed writer, her books are bestsellers before they are published. |
|
In 1958 they met Leonard Baskin, who would later illustrate many of Hughes's books, including Crow. |
|
Fleming's last two books, The Man with the Golden Gun and Octopussy and The Living Daylights, were published posthumously. |
|
It was almost impossible to locate specific books in the library until we had alphabetized them by the authors' surnames. |
|
The briefing between Bond and M is the first time in the twelve books that Fleming acknowledges the defections. |
|
Scott met the blind poet Thomas Blacklock, who lent him books and introduced him to James Macpherson's Ossian cycle of poems. |
|
But although his law studies would influence his books, he never practised law. |
|
The first version, published in 1667, consisted of ten books with over ten thousand lines of verse. |
|
Bacon's alleged connection to the Rosicrucians and the Freemasons has been widely discussed by authors and scholars in many books. |
|
The New Testament, originally written in Koine Greek, contains 27 books which are agreed upon by all churches. |
|
Lyly's mannered literary style, originating in his first books, is known as euphuism. |
|
In the same year, he made a visit to Oxford University with Giordano Bruno, who subsequently dedicated two books to Sidney. |
|
These books appear in the Septuagint, but are regarded by Protestants to be apocryphal. |
|
He has authored many books in the fields of public bureaucracy, democracy, political development, elections, and cybergovernment. |
|
Spenser originally indicated that he intended the poem to consist of twelve books, so the version of the poem we have today is incomplete. |
|
The theory was criticized by Thorndike in a 1915 letter to Science and several books, a position joined by Muir, Stillman, Steele, and Sarton. |
|
His books were lost first, as their antiquarian subjects became unfashionable. |
|
|
And therefore the bishops, belike, taking his works but for jests and toys, in condemning other books, yet permitted his books to be read. |
|
It's possible we'll eventually have more books than available space for them, but we'll cross that bridge when we come to it. |
|
Her books are based in fact, but she fictionalizes many of the events. |
|
Fleming's books had always sold well, but in 1961 sales increased dramatically. |
|
Alongside Stevenson's portrait are scenes from some of his books and his house in Western Samoa. |
|
Caxton was a technician rather than a writer and he often faced dilemmas concerning language standardisation in the books he printed. |
|
He wrote in an easy, conversational tone about books, food, friends, and current events. |
|
The other, known as The Henge Shop, focuses on selling New Age paraphernalia and books. |
|
The Royal Academy has an important collection of books, archives and works of art accessible for research and display. |
|
He designed a cup engraved with her device of a falcon standing on roses, as well as jewellery and books connected to her. |
|
Overall, this is the first HP game to even get near to living up to the quality of JK Rowling's books and the accompanying films. |
|
The newly credentialled ambassador to the Holy See is already in the PM's good books. |
|
At first he painted murals and religious works and designed for stained glass windows and printed books. |
|
He established a library in the Lyceum which aided in the production of many of his hundreds of books. |
|
Therefore, until the end of the 17th century the majority of books and almost all diplomatic documents were written in Latin. |
|
There were other Gospel books produced in the same time period and geographic area that have similar qualities to the Lindisfarne Gospels. |
|
The execution, though of high quality, is not as refined as in the best later books, nor is the scale of detail as small. |
|
You had better crack the books if you want to have any chance of graduating this year. |
|
He continued to be highly productive, writing plays, short stories, novels, essays and travel books. |
|
The latter chapters of the books describe the various Germanic tribes, their relative locations and some of their characteristics. |
|