Books are the gifts that keep on giving. When you gift a book, you're not just offering a tangible object, you're sharing a piece of your heart, your values, or your own journey. This season, give the gift of words that will stay with them forever.
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Help beyond the price tag. Your words have power, and your knowledge shouldn't be gated behind a fee. Consider how your book can offer help to those who may never have the chance to meet you. Make your book a resource that keeps on giving, regardless of someone's ability to pay.
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Help beyond the price tag. Your words have power, and your knowledge shouldn't be gated behind a fee. Consider how your book can offer help to those who may never have the chance to meet you. Make your book a resource that keeps on giving, regardless of someone's ability to pay.
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Try asking this instead of "How was your day?" For more, check out the book: Stop Asking "How Was Your Day?" 444 Better Questions to Help You Connect with Your Child https://amzn.to/47ESSQy
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The Borrowed Book Imagine you lend someone your favorite book. It’s not just any book—it’s the one with underlined passages, little notes in the margins, and the faint scent of memories that rise with each page. Months pass, and they return it, but it’s different: The cover is torn. Pages are dog-eared. Your handwritten notes are smeared. How they handle this moment reveals more about them than they realize: Do they acknowledge the damage and offer to replace it or apologize? Do they shrug it off, dismissing it as “just a book”? Or do they avoid returning it entirely, hoping you’ll forget? The borrowed book is a metaphor for shared trust, effort, and care. It’s not about the book’s monetary value, but the emotional investment behind it. This is what I’ve learned: Some people treat what’s yours like it’s theirs—they’ll cherish it, honor it, and return it even better than they received it. Some take it for granted, assuming it’s replaceable—be mindful of what you entrust to them. And then there are those who would never borrow it without intention—they respect boundaries, even when given permission. The borrowed book is everywhere—your time, your kindness, your ideas. Pay attention. How someone treats what’s yours reflects how much they value you. And just like that favorite book, you get to decide who you’ll lend your trust to next. #simpletruth #positivevibesonly
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BOOK REVIEW Now that my book YOUR OUTDOOR ROOM has launched, I didn't want you to just take my word for it so here is a book review. Click on the link above the image. https://lnkd.in/eVRFXKUk
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Try asking this instead of "How was your day?" For more, check out the book: Stop Asking "How Was Your Day?" 444 Better Questions to Help You Connect with Your Child https://amzn.to/47ESSQy
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Eventually, you will reach the end of your book. Many exercises encourage people to imagine their final page. These so-called deathbed contemplations are a way to think about how you want your life to be. It helps you live in a way you would be proud of. How do you want to be remembered? For more content like this: https://lnkd.in/gfdugpj7 #life #narratives
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What's your new novel worth in real dollars? Have you ever stopped to think - How much money did I put into my new fiction or non-fiction book? Whether you hired services or not, there's a real cost to your book. Your time is worth money. Your expertise is worth money. Your skills are worth money. In this video, you'll learn how to put a dollar amount on your new book. Now, this isn't to help you price your book. Instead, it's to help you figure out how many books you need to sell to break even. #booksales #bookmarketing https://lnkd.in/gUJBjvSw
What's Your Book Worth in Real Dollars?
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Has anyone read “I Had Appendicitis and Cured It Myself?” Like me, you might feel a mix of irritation and amusement at the many LinkedIn posts where people claim to have made $5 million in three weeks—often by doing something as trivial as recording themselves reading emails, then turning this footage into a productivity coaching empire. However, it seems that those peddling such dubious success stories are drawing from a long-standing tradition, as an article in The Economist illustrates. The first-ever self-help book, “Self-Help” by Samuel Smiles, published in 1859, similarly advocated the idea that sheer willpower leads to success. Despite poor writing and heavy criticism, it outsold works by contemporaries such as Darwin and Mill. Much like today’s LinkedIn "gurus," Smiles promoted the belief that personal determination is the key to achieving success. The article cites many examples of self-help books across the ages, but “I Had Appendicitis and Cured It Myself” was my favourite. Whether you find these claims helpful or “incredibly dodgy,” self-help literature endures. In 2023, Nielsen BookData reported that 3% of all books sold in Britain fell into this category. It seems, then, that self-help continues to reflect our enduring human concerns, regardless of its actual effectiveness.
For as long as there have been selves, they have needed help—and books have offered it. Whether or not all self-help claims are true, these books do reveal what people are worried about https://econ.st/3BdtPsd Photo: Alamy
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