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Showing 1 - 25 of 34 matches in All Departments
The Pop-Up Pitch is a radical new approach to help you create the perfect presentation, combining three key elements of persuasive storytelling-simple pictures, clear words, and powerful emotions-that together motivate audiences to pay attention, learn something new, and make effective decisions. The Pop-Up Pitch weaves together the latest insights on visual cognition, behavioral economics, and classic story structures in an easy-to-learn and inspiring storytelling algorithm. In this new era of remote, work and online presenting, it delivers powerful and persuasive outcomes for time-limited professionals dealing with complex ideas, attention-deficit audiences, and the evolving challenges of modern meetings.
Also Available as a Time Warner AudioBook What's the one skill you simply must have to succeed? Verbal Fluency. From Harvard to Stanford and many places in between, the ability to converse with our colleagues, co-workers, and potential clients is identified as the #1 success factor. Whether your goal is a new job, a promotion, confidence in social and business situations, an elected office in a professional association, to expand your business base, or to be chairman of the board, your ability to mix well and converse will determine how well you do. Now expert socializer Susan RoAne, bestselling author of How to Work a Room and The Secrets of Savvy Networking, shows how easy it is to gain the verbal edge. What Do I Say Next? Easy to read, enthusiastic, and peppered with hot tips and practical suggestions from scores of business leaders, What Do I Say Next? is a primer that will turn you into a ConverSensation before you know it! No matter if you're shy or extroverted, outgoing or anywhere in the middle, this book is for you. It's packed with important do's and don'ts, guidelines and insights -- some of which may surprise you! Discover:
What Do I Say Next? can do more than improve your social graces. As you become a more effective communicator and listener, you will have a greater influence on decision-makers, build better business relationships, develop friendships...and get more out of life. "The art of conversation -- which is good for the heart, head, and soul-has been revived by Susan RoAne. She points out why we need to be verbally fluent, how to become so, and she provides the extra nudge of encouragement with humor." "What Do I Say Next? takes you to the next step after you have 'worked the room.' RoAne shows you how to make scintillating and successful conversation in an upbeat, fun, and commonsense style. My entire industry could use this book!" "The consummate guide to conversational success...Susan RoAne is known as The Mingling Maven for good reason...she is one. She gives tips, techniques, and strategies in the practical, upbeat, and humorous style that has made her a bestselling author and in-demand speaker." "Once you read What Do I Say Next? you will always know the right thing to say to engage others...and be engaging." "RoAne's delightful wit makes the lessons easy!"
This collection of essays, written by former pupils, celebrates the career of Jasper Griffin, one of the foremost modern scholars of classical epic. The volume surveys the epic tradition from the eighth century BC to the nineteenth century of our era. Individual chapters focus on: Homer and the oral epic tradition; Homer in his religious context; Herodotus and Homer; Hellenistic epic; Virgil in his literary context; Virgil in his political-cultural context; the Augustan poets and the Aeneid; Statius' Thebaid; Old English and Old Irish epic; Renaissance epic: Tasso and Milton; and the Victorians. The aim of the book is to situate writers of epic in their literary and cultural contexts--an enterprise captured in the term "interaction" in the title. The chapters singly offer insights into some of the foundational poems of the European epic tradition and together take a bold, holistic look at that tradition.
The acclaimed bestseller about visual problem solving-now bigger
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The Eclogues, ten short pastoral poems, were composed between approximately 42 and 39 BC, during the time of the 'Second' Triumvirate of Lepidus, Anthony, and Octavian. In them Virgil subtly blended an idealized Arcadia with contemporary history. To his Greek model - the Idylls of Theocritus - he added a strong element of Italian realism: places and people, real or disguised, and contemporary events are introduced. The Eclogues display all Virgil's art and charm and are among his most delightful achievements. Between approximately 39 and 29 BC, years of civil strife between Antony, and Octavian, Virgil was engaged upon the Georgics. Part agricultural manual, full of observations of animals and nature, they deal with the farmer's life and give it powerful allegorical meaning. These four books contain some of Virgil's finest descriptive writing and are generally held to be his greatest and most entertaining work, and C. Day Lewis's lyrical translations are classics in their own right. ABOUT THE SERIES: For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has made available the widest range of literature from around the globe. Each affordable volume reflects Oxford's commitment to scholarship, providing the most accurate text plus a wealth of other valuable features, including expert introductions by leading authorities, helpful notes to clarify the text, up-to-date bibliographies for further study, and much more.
This volume presents a wide range of pieces from a world-class Latinist which displays both his diverse interests as a scholar and his consistent concern with Augustan texts, their language and literary texture. The range of articles, written over more than three decades and including one previously unpublished piece, covers the same connected territory - largely Virgil, Horace, and elegy. R. O. A. M. Lyne's consistent approach of close reading means that the articles form a coherent whole, while his compelling style as an engaged literary analyst ensures that these are not dry or forbidding pieces.
Also Available as a Time Warner AudioBook What's the one skill you simply must have to succeed? Verbal Fluency. From Harvard to Stanford and many places in between, the ability to converse with our colleagues, co-workers, and potential clients is identified as the #1 success factor. Whether your goal is a new job, a promotion, confidence in social and business situations, an elected office in a professional association, to expand your business base, or to be chairman of the board, your ability to mix well and converse will determine how well you do. Now expert socializer Susan RoAne, bestselling author of How to Work a Room and The Secrets of Savvy Networking, shows how easy it is to gain the verbal edge. What Do I Say Next? Easy to read, enthusiastic, and peppered with hot tips and practical suggestions from scores of business leaders, What Do I Say Next? is a primer that will turn you into a ConverSensation' before you know it! No matter if you're shy or extroverted, outgoing or anywhere in the middle, this book is for you. It's packed with important do's and don'ts, guidelines and insights -- some of which may surprise you! Discover:
What Do I Say Next? can do more than improve your social graces. As you become a more effective communicator and listener, you will have a greater influence on decision-makers, build better business relationships, develop friendships...and get more out of life.
Vergil largely avoided artifices of poetic diction, preferring ordinary language, and using words which conventional poets thought too prosaic or colloquial. This book identifies such diction in Vergil and examines the methods by which he turned this into poetry.
The Aeneid can strike one as a relatively conventional epic, an objective heroic tale of Rome's beginnings. Vergil designed it so that it might read in this way. This is one, epic `voice' that he wished us to hear. But there are `further voices', and these may be disturbing, even shocking, as they add to, comment upon, question and occasionally subvert the implications of the epic voice. This is a detailed examination of Vergil's method of intruding such further voices.
Track list
Illustrated with copious quotations (all translated) this book offers a full account of the great Latin love poets: Catallus, Propertius, Tibullus, Horace, and Ovid. Set in social and historical context, it combines literary history with literary criticism to reveal something of the personality of the poets themselves.
A selection of poems from the creator of TheLionsPoet Publishing, Roam. Includes a variety of topics including love, breakup, emotions, and more.
The band's third full-length album is the most honest, raw, gut-punching collection of songs of the band's career. Since forming in 2012, ROAM has extensively toured the world, headlining in the US, UK, Europe, Asia, Australia, and supporting acts such as New Found Glory, Sum 41.
A selection of poems from TheLionspoet Publishing creator, Roam. Including poems about love, loss and many more.
Strategic Prosperity is a practical guide to thinking creatively, achieving financially, and enjoying the best in life. Strategic Prosperity presents a deliberate process for achieving personal financial independence - how to make a fresh start, how to prosper in any economy, how to attract money and ideas, how to seize opportunities, and how to use the "secret power" of billionaires.
This fascinating study of one of the greatest poets of the Augustan age sheds new light on Horace's works, combining literary analysis with an investigation into the poet's social and political circumstances. Lyne focuses on the poet's relations with his patron Maecenas, with the Emperor Augustus and with other grandees. Describing his background, the book considers how and why Horace came to rely on patronage, and looks at the nature of that patronage. It identifies the point at which Horace adopted the role of political poet and shows how he evolved a public poetry for his particular society. Horace was a master of personal insinuation, as well as a fine maker of public poetry. Lyne reveals him a master, too, in the art of ordering his works, positioning his poems with skill and subtlety. Looking closely at poems from the 'Satires', 'Odes' and 'Epistles', Lyne demonstrates how Horace neatly balanced deference to the great with careful assertion of his own social and political standing. He finds instances where Horace teases his original recipients - and his wider audience. He investigates why the poet set aside his great political lyric in 23 B.C. and resumed it in 17 B.C..Examining Odes in Book 4, Lyne contends that behind the public face, Horace exhibits resentment, recording views that undermine earlier patriotic statements. Horace's political utterances are always interesting, invariably well-composed, often independent. His is the public voice of Augustan society, and his literature reflects the pressures and nuances of that society, as well as revealing an image of the poet himself. R.O.A.M. Lyne was Fellow and Tutor in Classics at Balliol College, Oxford. Among his books are 'Ciris: A Poem Attributed to Vergil' (1978), 'The Latin Love Poets, from Catullus to Horace' (1980), 'Further Voices in Vergil's Aeneid' (1987), 'Words and the Poet: Characteristic Techniques of Style in Vergil's Aeneid' (1989). |
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