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Fast Company Rebecca Greenfield |
5 Secrets To Finding Time For Work, Love, And Play From "Overwhelmed" Author Brigid Schulte The Washington Post reporter and author of Overwhelmed: Work, Love, and Play When No One Has the Time, led a very busy, full, and stressful life. She recounts her formerly hectic daily routine. |
AskMen.com March 23, 2014 James Bassil |
One Of The Most Successful Men In Music Thinks You Should Be Meditating More In the introduction to his new book, Success Through Stillness, Def Jam founder Russell Simmons declares, "Let me say without any reservation that I consider meditation to be the most effective tool you can use to build a similar success in your own life." |
Lucire March 21, 2014 |
The Crimson Garter, Chapter 10 Chapter 10 of The Crimson Garter, by travel editor Stanley Moss, writing pseudo-nymously as Lovejoy, is presented. |
Fast Company Stephanie Vozza |
Is It Time To Dramatically Quit Your Day Job? How do you know if you should quit your day job? It depends on your threshold to pain, says Kevin Johnson, author of The Entrepreneur Mind: 100 Essential Beliefs, Characteristics, and Habits of Elite Entrepreneurs. |
Chemistry World March 18, 2014 Andrew Abbott |
Molten salts chemistry The editors of this book have not just assembled a who's who of molten salt experts, but they have carefully crafted a comprehensive summary, describing a subject that is still very much cutting edge. |
Fast Company April 2014 Robert Safian |
Confessions of a Reformed Micromanager As Pixar president Ed Catmull deftly illuminates in his forthcoming book, Creativity, Inc., it's not just bureaucracy and rules that deaden creative impact. It's also human nature. |
Lucire March 14, 2014 |
The Crimson Garter, Chapter 9 The Marshes, Vittorio Rosetti and Capt Blackpool are in London, and the auction commences in chapter nine of The Crimson Garter, by travel editor Stanley Moss, writing pseudo-nymously as Lovejoy |
Chemistry World March 13, 2014 Felicity Mellor |
Communicating popular science: from deficit to democracy Should science writers play the role of science boosters or science critics? Like other academics working in the field of science communication studies, in her new book, Sarah Perrault believes we need more critics. |
HBS Working Knowledge March 12, 2014 Sean Silverthorne |
Entrepreneurship and Multinationals Drive Globalization Why is the firm overlooked as a contributor when we identify the drivers of globalization? Geoffrey Jones discusses his new book, Entrepreneurship and Multinationals: Global Business and the Making of the Modern World. |
Fast Company Lisa Evans |
Lessons From A Guy Who's Changing The World One Pencil At A Time Adam Braun's book, The Promise of a Pencil: How an Ordinary Person Can Create Extraordinary Change, offers lessons he learned on his journey to becoming a world-renowned social entrepreneur. These lessons apply to nonprofits, but can be enlightening to business leaders as well. |
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