Rejoignez-nous pour un voyage dans le monde des livres!
Ajouter ce livre à l'électronique
Grey
Ecrivez un nouveau commentaire Default profile 50px
Grey
Abonnez-vous pour lire le livre complet ou lisez les premières pages gratuitement!
All characters reduced
Why Do People Fail - cover

Why Do People Fail

Md. Shahoriar Shakil

Maison d'édition: BookRix

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Synopsis

From this book, you will understand why people fail and a person becomes established in one day! Who has thousands of failure stories behind him, he is an established man today after passing that critical period. Despair never makes life successful but it only invites people to failure. Failure can only be proven wrong by a person who believes in the statement "I have never lost, won, or learned". So there is nothing to lose. If you learn from there and try again, victory is sure.
Disponible depuis: 20/12/2023.
Longueur d'impression: 12 pages.

D'autres livres qui pourraient vous intéresser

  • Write Your Why (What Will Follow) - cover

    Write Your Why (What Will Follow)

    Julia Whelan

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    An approachable craft talk, written and read by Julia Whelan. Combining her perspectives as a writer, an educator, and a narrator, she breaks down what makes books connect with readers. Using Simon Sinek's seminal TedTalk for the business community, "Knowing Your Why", as a starting point, Julia applies this to the broader craft of storytelling: If you know why you are writing something, your audience will know why they're reading it. So... how does one do that? Originally presented as a keynote speech at Nashville's WriterFest. 
    Voir livre
  • Social Skills Training - Conquer Shyness and Anxiety in Social Situations and Transform Your Life by Improving Your Communication Skills (2022 Guide for Beginning) - cover

    Social Skills Training - Conquer...

    Bruno Carline

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The First Complete In-Depth Book Ever Published On This Subject 
      
    The Most Important Skill We All Require in Today's Society! 
      
    Some individuals simply have a natural rapport with others. They always have the correct words at the right moment. They draw friends to them like moths to a flame. They're always moving forward at work. They are enticing the opposite sex on both sides. 
      
    What is it that they all share in common? 
      
    They are all very good at "Social Skills." 
      
    For the first time, "Social Skills" is the first and only one of its kind, an utterly comprehensive book dedicated to the whole spectrum of social skills... 
      
    From... 
     The Roots of Our Lack of Social SkillsProgress in Social DevelopmentSocial Skills Training for Children and AdolescentsAdult Social Skills TrainingUsing Social Skills in Your Daily LifeHow Social Skills Can Help You at WorkRelationship Management Through Social SkillsScientific Theories in Depth PLUS Practical How-To Applications 
      
    ...And Much More! 
      
    If you're having social problems, aren't where you want to be in life, or don't have the connections and relationships you want... 
      
    "Social Skills" will be essential in obtaining what you want. 
     
    Voir livre
  • Wait Five Minutes - Weatherlore in the Twenty-First Century - cover

    Wait Five Minutes - Weatherlore...

    Shelley Ingram, Willow G. Mullins

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The weather governs our lives. It fills gaps in conversations, determines our dress, and influences our architecture. No matter how much our lives may have moved indoors, no matter how much we may rely on technology, we still monitor the weather. Wait Five Minutes: Weatherlore in the Twenty-First Century draws from folkloric, literary, and scientific theory to offer up new ways of thinking about this most ancient of phenomena. 
     
     
     
    Weatherlore is a concept that describes the folk beliefs and traditions about the weather that are passed down casually among groups of people. From detailing personal experiences at picnics and suburban lawns to critically analyzing storm stories, novels, and flood legends, contributors offer engaging multidisciplinary perspectives on weatherlore. 
     
     
     
    As we move further into the twenty-first century, an increasing awareness of climate change and its impacts on daily life calls for a folkloristic reckoning with the weather and a rising need to examine vernacular understandings of weather and climate. Weatherlore helps us understand and shape global political conversations about climate change and biopolitics at the same time that it influences individual, group, and regional lives and identities. We use weather, and thus its folklore, to make meaning of ourselves, our groups, and, quite literally, our world.
    Voir livre
  • Dialogue with a Somnambulist - Stories Essays & A Portrait Gallery - cover

    Dialogue with a Somnambulist -...

    Chloe Aridjis

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Renowned internationally for her lyrically unsettling novels, PEN/Faulkner Award winner Chloe Aridjis now presents her first collection of shorter works, with an introduction by Tom McCarthy 
     
     
     
    Chloe Aridjis's stories and essays are known to transport readers into liminal, often dreamlike, realms. In this collection of works, we meet a woman guided only by a plastic bag drifting through the streets of Berlin who discovers a nonsense-named bar that is home to papier-mâché monsters and one glass-encased somnambulist. Floating through space, cosmonauts are confronted not only with wonder and astonishment, but tedium and solitude. And in Mexico City, stray dogs animate public spaces, "infusing them with a noble life force." In her pen portraits, Aridjis turns her eye to expats and outsiders, including artists and writers such as Leonora Carrington, Mavis Gallant, and Beatrice Hastings. 
     
     
     
    Exploring the complexity of exile and urban alienation, Dialogue with a Somnambulist showcases "the rare writer who reinvents herself in each book" (Garth Greenwell) and who is as imaginatively at home in the short form as in her longer fiction.
    Voir livre
  • Can Scientists Succeed Where Politicians Fail? - Johns Hopkins Wavelengths - cover

    Can Scientists Succeed Where...

    Peter Agre, MB BChir Seema Yasmin

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    How can science prevail when policies fall short? 
     
     
     
    Sometimes in secret, sometimes as official ambassadors for their governments, scientists trade their white coats for blazers, stepping out of the lab and directly into sensitive, often life-threatening global crises. Think of the Paris Climate Agreement or the Iran Nuclear Deal, the Manhattan Project, and the Antarctic Treaty of 1959. Scientists have played a pivotal role in many of the greatest episodes in political history. 
     
     
     
    But what prompts their involvement in international affairs, and what are some of the impacts of their efforts? Can Scientists Succeed Where Politicians Fail? recounts Nobel laureate Dr. Peter Agre's career as a physician-scientist who went from studying malaria and other diseases to meeting with Fidel Castro in Cuba, discoursing with North Korean officials, and traveling into the Islamic Republic of Iran. 
     
     
     
    The book explores Agre's story alongside those of volcanologists in North Korea, epidemiologists in Latin America, and other scientists who have and are working alongside politicians, from African tribal chiefs to communist leaders, to tackle natural disasters and infectious threats in new ways.
    Voir livre
  • Ancient Greece’s Most Influential Philosophers - cover

    Ancient Greece’s Most...

    Editors Charles River

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    In virtually all fields of human endeavor, ancient Greece was so much at the forefront of dynamism and innovation that the products of its most brilliant minds remain not only influential but entirely relevant to this day. The great philosophers of Athens, men like Aristotle, Socrates, and Plato, interrogated themselves with startling complexity about the nature of good and evil, questioned the existence of divinity, advocated intelligent design, and went so far as to argue that all life was composed of infinitesimal particles.  
    	Although the school of philosophy started by Socrates and championed by Plato and Aristotle continues to be the most famous, other schools of thought began to branch, including the Epicureans and Cynics. In the 3rd century B.C., Stoicism arose in response to and under the influence of these older schools, combining many of the best theories from each into a more cohesive whole. With a greater flexibility and more practical application to everyday life, Stoicism quickly became a very popular school of thought, a growth made exponential by its introduction to the Romans.  
    Today, very few have heard of him, but he became a major philosophical and religious figure through the publication of his thoughts, travels, and miracles by Philostratus the Elder (c. 170-247 A.D.), written about a century after Apollonius of Tyana’s death. Philostratus the Elder’s works were based on the works of other writers (Maximus of Aegae, Damis, and Moeragenes), and miracles attributed to Apollonius were often compared to those of Jesus, who lived around the same time. Apollonius’s cult was important throughout the whole of the Pagan era and even carried on into the Middle Ages. Why such an important philosopher has been so forgotten by modern historians is in itself an interesting issue, and it is just as crucial to understand what Apollonius preached and the information he provided about his contemporary world. 
    Voir livre