Kirjojen hintavertailu. Mukana 11 342 296 kirjaa ja 12 kauppaa.

Kirjahaku

Etsi kirjoja tekijän nimen, kirjan nimen tai ISBN:n perusteella.

1000 tulosta hakusanalla James H. Morey

Book and Verse

Book and Verse

James H. Morey

University of Illinois Press
2000
sidottu
Exploding the myth that the Bible was largely unknown to medieval lay folk, Book and Verse presents the first comprehensive catalog of Middle English biblical literature: a body of work that, because of its accessibility and familiarity, was the primary biblical resource of the English Middle Ages. The medieval Bible, much like the Bible today, consists in practical terms not of a set of texts within a canon but of those stories which, because of a combination of liturgical significance and picturesque qualities, form a provisional "Bible" in the popular imagination. As James Morey explains in his introduction, although the Latin Bible was not accessible to the average English-speaker, paraphrases- systematic appropriation and refashioning of biblical texts-served as a medium through which the Bible was promulgated in the vernacular. This explains why biblical allusions, models, and large-scale appropriations of biblical narrative pervade nearly every medieval genre. Book and Verse is an indispensable guide to the variety and extent of biblical literature in England, exclusive of drama and the Wycliffite Bible that appeared between the twelfth and the fifteenth centuries. Entries provide detailed information on how much of what parts of the Bible appear in Middle English and where this biblical material can be found. Comprehensive indexing by name, keyword, and biblical verse allows a researcher to find, for example, all the occurrences of the Flood Story or of the encounter between Elijah and the Widow of Sarephta. An invaluable resource, Book and Verse provides the first easy access to the "popular Bible" assembled before and after John Wyclif's translation of the Vulgate into English.
Let's Talk about Money Before You Tie the Knot

Let's Talk about Money Before You Tie the Knot

James H Wilson

Resource Publications (CA)
2008
sidottu
This book reviews the financial past, present, and future of couples contemplating marriage, with questions and text posed to highlight critical points. The work required in this financial counseling course for couples is purposely kept to a minimum to ensure that the task will be finished. Forms that accompany the questions enable each member of a couple to complete an individual workbook. A facilitator's guide is also provided. While the simplicity of this book recommends it, the wealth of good financial information and guidance in Let's Talk About Money Before You Tie the Knot provides a solid financial foundation on which to build a marriage. James H. Wilson, CPA/PFS, is currently the director of personal finance planning at Blackburn, Childers & Steagall PLC in Johnson City, Tennessee. He holds a BBA. in accounting from the University of Miami, has an MBA. in management from Florida Atlantic University, and has earned the PFS (Personal Financial Specialist) designation awarded by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). He is a member of the Tennessee Society of Certified Public Accountants and the AICPA.
A More Excellent Way

A More Excellent Way

James H. Mitchell

Xulon Press
2010
nidottu
A More Excellent Way Synopsis The life changing revelation and the impetus for the book A More Excellent Way came from reading Ecclesiastes 4:4 "I saw that the basic motivation for all success is envy and jealousy."-TLB The book will illuminate the forgotten importance of excellence and reveal God's clarion call to pursue it with relentless passion Men, women, boys, and girls all over the world are in a race for success and the accoutrements it affords those who achieve it. Many compete in this continuous quest on a very deliberate conscious level and some are in it every day unaware they are in a constant competition with their neighbors. A More Excellent Way will guide you to a more excellent way of living life; and cause you to take a peculiar look at the race for success, not from any of today's popular teachings on success, but rather from an old way - "A More Excellent Way " It's pages will sever as a compass for you, helping you navigate through life's failures - and more importantly it will lead you to "the abundant life" the word of God speaks about
Don't Be Stupid about Money: DontBeStupid.club Answers to Budgeting, Debt, and Other Personal Finance Questions
Money can make you happy. Or not. It all depends on you. Most money decisions are bad. They're made without critical thinking. Stupid is normal these days when it comes to money. People just keep paying without thinking until the stress wears them out. Wouldn't it be better to Think For Yourself? Stop doing what everyone else does and start making better money decisions. Your money can make you happy if you know how to use it. This is not the same advice you get everywhere else. This is for when you realize all that commonly repeated BS is not what's best for you. It's your money. You don't have to do what everyone else does. Why not Think For Yourself and choose your own course? This book will give you a real world understanding of money. Some people call it "street smart". Whatever you call it, you will make better decisions because reality makes a better foundation. For example; When did qualifying for a mortgage become the guide for buying a house? That's just stupid... read our book and you'll understand the reality. How about budgeting? Expense tracking sounds smart and the apps are easy to write, so you get plenty of advice to do it. But wouldn't you rather budget simply and effectively? That's how you make your life better instead of wasting time. And investing? You don't really think anyone playing at home beats Wall Street, do you? Wall Street is more profitable than ever, for themselves and not for you. If you're playing their game then you are just paying their salaries. Think for Yourself and invest where you get the best real returns. Our books use critical thinking to make life better. And when you think critically about money, you get different answers from the rest of the herd. We Simplify and we keep it fun. Money is just another tool we use to live. Once you understand it, money is just another hammer in the toolbox. Why not spend a couple of hours with us and be wealthier for the rest of your life? You already know that's a good investment. Read now and be smarter with your money forever. HGJ
James H. Carson's California, 1847-1853

James H. Carson's California, 1847-1853

Doris Shaw Castro

Authorhouse
2006
pokkari
It is said that California has the most complete recorded history of any state in the Union. Contemporaries called James H. (Henry) Carson's "sketches" as the most correct eye-witness reports of early California. The U. S. Congress declared war on Mexico in May 1846, and sent four units to occupy and hold Alta California, with a view to its acquisition. Sgt. Carson's Co. F, 3d Reg., Artillery, the "pioneer company," arrived in California in January 1847, after a five-months' voyage around the Horn; the Panama Canal was not yet built. In 1847 Carson served as commissary sergeant at 10th Military District Headquarters. In this capacity he obtained food supplies from the Califor-nios and shared in their social life, making him an important person at Monterey, capital of Alta California. He was one of the few who did not desert his post when gold was discovered in January 1848. In June-July he accompanied R. B. Mason, Col. 1st Dragoons, and Lt. W. T. Sherman (later Gen. Sherman of Civil War fame) on the first official tour of the Northern Gold Mines. In August 1848, on furlough, he discovered Carson Hill, classic gold mining ground of California. In July 1849 he traveled with Gen. B. Riley, Acting Governor of California and Lt. G. H. Derby on a tour of the Southern Mines. Upon discharge from the Army in November 1849, he elected to remain in California, and became a miner. In May 1850 he served as guide to Lt. Derby, Topographical Engineers, on the first official survey of San Joaquin Valley. It was here he contracted a fatal disease. He wrote his "sketches" during this period of inactivity until his death at Stockton on Dec. 12, 1853, aged thirty-two years. Carson was a keen observer, and wrote about California's mineral and agricultural resources; land titles and public domain; establishing a state capital; the first State Legislature. He "saw the elephant." He learned to laugh at himself, and his writings reflected a broad humor as he wrote about his fellowmen
The Winds of Time by James H. Schmitz, Science Fiction, Adventure
John W. Campbell wrote this for a blurb for this tale when it appeared in Analog: He contracted for a charter trip -- but the man who hired his spacer wasn't quite a man, it turned out -- and he wanted more than service James H. Schmitz was a heck of a writer, and this story -- "The Winds of Time" -- is fascinating stuff. Star ships, aliens from the future, time travel, romance, cannibalism, pet humans, and mute-but-brilliant aliens. . . . and, of course, it's got a hero who solves every problem by being smarter and trickier and better-prepared than we'd ever imagine being. But what would you expect? This story first appeared in John W. Campbell's Analog. Analog heroes did it with their brains. Us? We have to work.
The Ethics Of Cooperation: (James H. Tufts Classics Collection)

The Ethics Of Cooperation: (James H. Tufts Classics Collection)

James H. Tufts

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2015
nidottu
ACCORDING to Plato's famous myth, two gifts of the gods equipped man for living: the one, arts and inventions to supply him with the means of livelihood; the other, reverence and justice to be the ordering principles of societies and the bonds of friendship and conciliation. Agencies for mastery over nature and agencies for co peration among men remain the two great sources of human power. But after two thousand years, it is possible to note an interesting fact as to their relative order of development in civilization. Nearly all the great skills and inventions that had been acquired up to the eighteenth century were brought into man's service at a very early date. The use of fire, the arts of weaver, potter, and metal worker, of sailor, hunter, fisher, and sower, early fed man and clothed him. These were carried to higher perfection by Egyptian and Greek, by Tyrian and Florentine, but it would be difficult to point to any great new unlocking of material resources until the days of the chemist and electrician. Domestic animals and crude water mills were for centuries in man's service, and until steam was harnessed, no additions were made of new powers.