Tag: book

  • The Product Book: How to Become a Great Product Manager

    The Product Book: How to Become a Great Product Manager

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    Publisher ‏ : ‎ Product School; 1st edition (1 January 2017)
    Language ‏ : ‎ English
    Paperback ‏ : ‎ 314 pages
    ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0998973815
    ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0998973814
    Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 440 g
    Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 15.24 x 2.01 x 22.86 cm
    Country of Origin ‏ : ‎ USA

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  • Aleksandar Hemon: ‘A book isn’t a car – not everything has to work’

    Aleksandar Hemon: ‘A book isn’t a car – not everything has to work’

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    Aleksandar Hemon, 58, was born in Sarajevo and lives in New Jersey. His diverse output includes The Lazarus Project (2008), a novel drawing on the 1908 shooting of a Jewish migrant by Chicago police; the autobiographical essay collection The Book of My Lives (2013), which discusses the death of Hemon’s second child; and the screenplay for The Matrix Resurrections, co-written with Lana Wachowski and David Mitchell. His new book, The World and All That It Holds, is a century-spanning, cross-continental polyglot gay romance between two conscripts, one Jewish, one Muslim, who fall in love fighting the first world war in central Europe. Hemon spoke from his office at Princeton University, where he has been teaching creative writing since 2018.

    Where did The World and All That It Holds begin?
    I signed a contract for the book in 2010 and cleared my schedule that fall to work on it, and then my daughter got ill and died that year. I’ve since written four other books and many other things while working on it on and off because I have this ability – more like a deformation – to work on about seven things at the same time; I react to stress with hypermania and feel a compulsion to make stuff. I like history books about wars and spies and was reading the memoirs of a British spy, Frederick Bailey, who in 1918 was in Tashkent [in Uzbekistan, then under Russian rule]. The Bolsheviks are looking for him when he runs into a Sarajevan guy from the secret police, who says: “Let’s work together. I want to get out of here too, back to Sarajevo.” This guy devises an exit for them by hiring Bailey to hunt for himself; I liked that! My boys, Pinto and Osman, have a different setup, but that’s what started me thinking.

    Did it feel risky incorporating so many languages into the narration?
    The book is 102,000 words and I venture that under 1,000 of them are foreign words, but already [among early readers] it has started to come up: “There are a lot of foreign words.” I was aware of the risks, yet I wanted an actively multilingual consciousness at the centre of the novel. Pinto’s native languages are Bosnian and Ladino, or Spanjol as it was called in Sarajevo – the Castilian Spanish as spoken by Sephardic Jews after they were expelled [from Spain in 1492]. German features too because Sarajevo was under Austrian occupation and Pinto studied in Vienna. And there’s a residual presence of Turkish because his father was a subject of the Ottoman empire. To me, this is life; not just my life, but that of a lot of people I know.

    How did you settle on the book’s tone, between horror and hope?
    What I was thinking about was: under what condition is our presence in the world not only about suffering? What conditions have to be met for people to be able to love other people? There is a threshold: I don’t think there were many love affairs in Auschwitz. If you’re stuck in one place, all the hope you might have is in that place, so when there’s no hope, there’s no hope. But I write about displacement and migration, and the narrative of moving from “here” to “there” is inherently hopeful; people want to go toward wherever they can make decisions about their life. If you’re in a war and people are trying to kill you, all you can do is stay alive, but over “there”, there could be schools or jobs or just, you know, the possibility of dignity.

    Why did you put a version of yourself into the epilogue, set in 2001?
    My books are not a report. All fiction is “what if?” and I have to put myself in the position of the person who is doing the what-iffing; if I took myself out, it would be a proper historical novel with the implied expertise of a writer speaking from a position of authority.

    Tell us about your work as a screenwriter.
    The sovereignty of being in my head as a novelist is enjoyable but gets burdensome. Lana and David are good friends with brilliant minds different from mine and there’s relief in that: whenever I watch The Matrix Resurrections, at no point do I think: “That’s mine, I did this,” because I never did it alone. So what I get out of screenwriting – apart from the money, which is nice – is doing something with others. The traditional bourgeois concept of literature is that it’s a way to be alone; there’s a Jonathan Franzen book of essays called How to Be Alone. But I don’t want to be alone. I want to be with people.

    You’re a Liverpool fan. How come?
    There was not much football here when I ended up in the United States in the early 90s [during the Bosnian war]. All kinds of nostalgia kicked in for things I couldn’t do any more. Football was one, and Liverpool had been crucial in how I got to love it; they reigned in Europe when we were kids playing in parking lots in the 70s, imagining that we might be Kevin Keegan. When I did an interview for my first book, the photographer took my picture in a Steve McManaman shirt. Someone working for the Liverpool matchday magazine contacted me afterwards and I wrote a couple of columns for it and went to Anfield for the first time. Once I went to Anfield, we were married for life; what Jerusalem is for religious people, Anfield is to me. As for the team now, it’s a crisis but it’ll be OK. I’ve gone through the Roy Hodgson phase, so this is nothing.

    Which writers inspired you growing up?
    In elementary school I got into the surrealist Yugoslav poet Vasko Popa. I didn’t understand him but he had this sheer force of language… Perhaps that is why I am comfortable with complexity. I don’t have to understand everything in a book. It’s not like a car – not everything has to work. If you are constantly puzzled by the world then you read books that puzzle you. I still don’t understand everything in Kafka. His transformation of experience never exactly matches our own experience but at the same time seems to be pointing at some essential quality of it; that’s the shit I like.

    The World and All That It Holds is published by Picador (£18.99) on 2 February. To support the Guardian and Observer order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • ‘Joe Biden has been constantly underestimated’: Chris Whipple on his White House book

    ‘Joe Biden has been constantly underestimated’: Chris Whipple on his White House book

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    There are those who believe that at 80, Joe Biden is too old to serve a second term as president. Yet few clamour for him to hand over to the person who would normally be the heir apparent.

    Two years in, Kamala Harris, the first woman of colour to be vice-president, has had her ups and downs. Her relationship with Biden appears strong and she has found her voice as a defender of abortion rights. But her office has suffered upheaval and her media appearances have failed to impress.

    Such behind-the-scenes drama is recounted in The Fight of His Life: Inside Joe Biden’s White House, written by the author, journalist and film-maker Chris Whipple and published this week. Whipple gained access to nearly all of Biden’s inner circle and has produced a readable half-time report on his presidency – a somewhat less crowded field than the literary genre that sprang up around Donald Trump.

    “In the beginning, Joe Biden liked having Kamala Harris around,” Whipple writes, noting that Biden wanted the vice-president with him for meetings on almost everything. One source observed a “synergy” between them.

    Harris volunteered to take on the cause of voting rights. But Biden handed her another: tackling the causes of undocumented immigration by negotiating with the governments of Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras.

    “But for Harris,” Whipple writes, “the Northern Triangle would prove to be radioactive.”

    With the distinction between root causes and immediate problems soon lost on the public, Harris got the blame as migrants kept coming.

    One of her senior advisers tells Whipple the media could not handle a vice-president who was not only female but also Black and south Asian, referring to it as “the Unicorn in a glass box” syndrome. But Harris also suffered self-inflicted wounds. Whipple writes that she “seemed awkward and uncertain … she laughed inappropriately and chopped the air with her hands, which made her seem condescending”.

    An interview with NBC during a visit to Guatemala and Mexico was a “disaster”, according to one observer. Reports highlighted turmoil and turnover in Harris’s office, some former staff claiming they saw it all before when she was California attorney general and on her presidential campaign. Her approval rating sank to 28%, lower than Dick Cheney’s during the Iraq war.

    But, Whipple writes, Biden and his team still thought highly of Harris.

    “Ron Klain [chief of staff] was personally fond of her. He met with the vice-president weekly and encouraged her to do more interviews and raise her profile. Harris was reluctant, wary of making mistakes.

    “‘This is like baseball,’ Klain told her. ‘You have to accept the fact that sometimes you will strike out. We all strike out. But you can’t score runs if you’re sitting in the dugout.’ Biden’s chief was channeling manager Tom Hanks in the film A League of Their Own. ‘Look, no one here is going to get mad at you. We want you out there!’”

    Speaking to the Guardian, Whipple, 69, reflects: “It’s a complicated, fascinating relationship between Joe Biden and Kamala Harris.

    “In the early months of the administration they had a real rapport, a real bond. Because of Covid they were thrown together in the White House and spent a lot of time together. He wanted her to be in almost every meeting and valued her input. All of that was and is true.

    “But when she began to draw fire, particularly over her assignment on the Northern Triangle, things became more complicated. It got back to the president that the second gentleman, Doug Emhoff, was complaining around town that her portfolio was too difficult and that in effect it was setting her up for failure. This really annoyed Biden. He felt he hadn’t asked her to do anything he hadn’t done for Barack Obama: he had the Northern Triangle as one of his assignments. She had asked for the voting rights portfolio and he gave it to her. So that caused some friction.”

    A few months into the presidency, Whipple writes, a close friend asked Biden what he thought of his vice-president. His reply: “A work in progress.” These four words – a less than ringing endorsement – form the title of a chapter in Whipple’s book.

    But in our interview, Whipple adds: “It’s also true that she grew in terms of her national security prowess. That’s why Biden sent her to the Munich Security Conference on the eve of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. She spent a lot of time in the meetings with the president’s daily brief and Biden’s given her some important assignments in that respect.”


    A former producer for CBS’s 60 Minutes, Whipple has written books about White House chiefs of staff and directors of the CIA. Each covered more than 100 years of history, whereas writing The Fight of His Life was, he says, like designing a plane in mid-flight and not knowing where to land it. Why did he do it?

    Chris Whipple.
    Chris Whipple. Photograph: David Hume Kennerly

    “How could I not? When you think about it, Joe Biden and his team came into office confronting a once-in-a-century pandemic, crippled economy, global warming, racial injustice, the aftermath of the attack on the Capitol. How could anybody with a political or storytelling bone in his body not want to tell that story? Especially if you could get access to Biden’s inner circle, which I was fortunate in being able to do.”

    Even so, it wasn’t easy. Whipple describes “one of the most leakproof White Houses in modern history … extremely disciplined and buttoned down”. It could hardly be more different from the everything-everywhere-all-at-once scandals of the Trump administration.

    What the author found was a tale of two presidencies. There was year one, plagued by inflation, supply chain problems, an arguably premature declaration of victory over the coronavirus and setbacks in Congress over Build Back Better and other legislation. Worst of all was the dismal end of America’s longest war as, after 20 years and $2tn, Afghanistan fell to the Taliban.

    “It was clearly a failure to execute the withdrawal in a safe and orderly way and at the end of the day, as I put it, it was a whole-of-government failure,” Whipple says. “Everybody got almost everything wrong, beginning with the intelligence on how long the Afghan government and armed forces would last and ending with the botched execution of the withdrawal, with too few troops on the ground.”

    Whipple is quite possibly the first author to interview Klain; the secretary of state, Antony Blinken; the CIA director, Bill Burns; and the chair of the joint chiefs of staff, Gen Mark Milley, about the Afghanistan debacle.

    “What became clear was that everybody had a different recollection of the intelligence. While this administration often seems to be pretty much on the same page, I found that there was a lot more drama behind the scenes during the Afghan withdrawal and in some of the immediate aftermath,” he says.

    The book also captures tension between Leon Panetta, CIA director and defense secretary under Barack Obama, who was critical of the exit strategy – “You just wonder whether people were telling the president what he wanted to hear” – and Klain, who counters that Panetta favoured the war and oversaw the training of the Afghan military, saying: “If this was Biden’s Bay of Pigs, it was Leon’s army that lost the fight.”

    Whipple comments: “Ron Klain wanted to fire back in this case and it’s remarkable and fascinating to me, given his relationship with Panetta. Obviously his criticism got under Ron Klain’s skin.”


    Biden’s second year was a different story. “Everything changed on 24 February 2022, when Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine. Joe Biden was uniquely qualified to rise to that moment and he did, rallying Nato in defiance of Putin and in defence of Ukraine. Biden had spent his entire career preparing for that moment, with the Senate foreign relations committee and his experience with Putin, and it showed.

    “Then he went on to pass a string of bipartisan legislative bills from the Chips Act to veterans healthcare, culminating in the Inflation Reduction Act, which I don’t think anybody saw coming.

    “One thing is for sure: Joe Biden has been constantly underestimated from day one and, at the two-year mark, he proves that he could deliver a lot more than people thought.”

    Biden looked set to enter his third year with the wind at his back. Democrats exceeded expectations in the midterm elections, inflation is slowing, Biden’s approval rating is on the up and dysfunctional House Republicans struggled to elect a speaker.

    But political life moves pretty fast. Last week the justice department appointed a special counsel to investigate the discovery of classified documents, from Biden’s time as vice-president, at his thinktank in Washington and home in Delaware.

    Whipple told CBS: “They really need to raise their game here, I think, because this really goes to the heart of Joe Biden’s greatest asset, arguably, which is trust.”

    The mistake represents a bump in the road to 2024. Biden’s age could be another. He is older than Ronald Reagan was when he completed his second term and if he serves a full second term he will be 86 at the end. Opinion polls suggest many voters feel he is too old for the job. Biden’s allies disagree.

    Joe Biden speaks at the National Action Network’s MLK Jr Day breakfast, in Washington this week.
    Joe Biden speaks at the National Action Network’s MLK Jr Day breakfast, in Washington this week. Photograph: Michael Brochstein/Sopa Images/Rex/Shutterstock

    Whipple says: “His inner circle is bullish about Biden’s mental acuity and his ability to govern. I never heard any of them express any concern and maybe you would expect that from the inner circle. Many of them will tell you that he has extraordinary endurance, energy.

    “Bruce Reed [a longtime adviser] told me about flying back on a red-eye from Europe after four summits in a row when everybody had to drag themselves out of the plane and was desperately trying to sleep and the boss came in and told stories for six hours straight all the way back to DC.”

    During conversations and interviews for the book, did Whipple get the impression Biden will seek re-election?

    “He’s almost undoubtedly running. Andy Card [chief of staff under George W Bush] said something to me once that rang true: ‘If anybody tells you they’re leaving the White House voluntarily, they’re probably lying to you.’

    “Who was the last president to walk away from the office voluntarily? LBJ [Lyndon Baines Johnson]. It rarely happens. I don’t think Joe Biden is an exception. He spent his whole career … thinking about running or running for president and he’s got unfinished business. Having the possibility of Donald Trump as the Republican nominee probably makes it more urgent for him. He thinks he can beat him again.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Amazon Brand – Solimo Sketching Book, 100 Sheets, A4 Size

    Amazon Brand – Solimo Sketching Book, 100 Sheets, A4 Size

    51 ZpJflqFS2194GwadGJS51bL4yqocES51KtH0ArQuS210AH1nKC4S31GwZofMh3S
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    The Amazon Brand- Solimo Sketching Book contains 100 sheets of A4 size protected with a 370 GSM thick outer cover for long-lasting use. The sheets are 120 GSM thick and do not tear or leave any marks even when drawn on with sharp pencils.
    Sheet size: A4, 29.70 x 21 cm ( 11.70 x 8.27 in)
    Spiral, metal wire-binded book for easily turning pages
    Attractively designed, 370 GSM thick outer cover for extra protection
    120 GSM thick sheet ensures tear-free drawing even with sharp pencils
    Suitable for dry and mild-wet mediums like graphite pencil, charcoal and colour crayons; not ideal for oil and acrylic colours
    Ideal for pursuing sketching hobbies and professional pursuits
    Package content: 1 Amazon Brand – Solimo Sketching Book, 100 Sheets, A4 Size

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    #Amazon #Brand #Solimo #Sketching #Book #Sheets #Size

  • Amazon Brand – Solimo Sketching Book, 100 Sheets, A4 Size

    Amazon Brand – Solimo Sketching Book, 100 Sheets, A4 Size

    21Y8hMQaPYS51SH9pE1ErS51 5KNgoVVS21Uyqm1gteS31d7DZAIXmS
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    [ad_1]
    The Amazon Brand- Solimo Sketching Book contains 100 sheets of A4 size protected with a 370 GSM thick outer cover for long-lasting use. The sheets are 120 GSM thick and do not tear or leave any marks even when drawn on with sharp pencils.
    Sheet size: A4, 29.70 x 21 cm ( 11.70 x 8.27 in)
    Spiral, metal wire-binded book for easily turning pages
    Attractively designed, 370 GSM thick outer cover for extra protection
    120 GSM thick sheet ensures tear-free drawing even with sharp pencils
    Suitable for dry and mild-wet mediums like graphite pencil, charcoal and colour crayons; not ideal for oil and acrylic colours
    Ideal for pursuing sketching hobbies and professional pursuits
    Package content: 1 Amazon Brand – Solimo Sketching Book, 100 Sheets, A4 Size

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    #Amazon #Brand #Solimo #Sketching #Book #Sheets #Size

  • Amazon Brand – Solimo Sketching Book, 100 Sheets, A4 Size

    Amazon Brand – Solimo Sketching Book, 100 Sheets, A4 Size

    51qWLglDgaS21rMhLnT0sS510WIgInQpS519KcQX1W2S21h qOf4z1S31Z8Hoz+B7S
    Price: [price_with_discount]
    (as of [price_update_date] – Details)

    ISRHEWs
    [ad_1]
    The Amazon Brand- Solimo Sketching Book contains 100 sheets of A4 size protected with a 370 GSM thick outer cover for long-lasting use. The sheets are 120 GSM thick and do not tear or leave any marks even when drawn on with sharp pencils.
    Sheet size: A4, 29.70 x 21 cm ( 11.70 x 8.27 in)
    Spiral, metal wire-binded book for easily turning pages
    Attractively designed, 370 GSM thick outer cover for extra protection
    120 GSM thick sheet ensures tear-free drawing even with sharp pencils
    Suitable for dry and mild-wet mediums like graphite pencil, charcoal and colour crayons; not ideal for oil and acrylic colours
    Ideal for pursuing sketching hobbies and professional pursuits
    Package content: 1 Amazon Brand – Solimo Sketching Book, 100 Sheets, A4 Size

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    #Amazon #Brand #Solimo #Sketching #Book #Sheets #Size

  • Amazon Brand – Solimo Sketching Book, 100 Sheets, A4 Size

    Amazon Brand – Solimo Sketching Book, 100 Sheets, A4 Size

    51HyqdZofNS21xpd jhZpS516psziC1BS51uydUkcSdS21jd7Ou9tcS411WUBb9+rS
    Price: [price_with_discount]
    (as of [price_update_date] – Details)

    ISRHEWs
    [ad_1]
    The Amazon Brand- Solimo Sketching Book contains 100 sheets of A4 size protected with a 370 GSM thick outer cover for long-lasting use. The sheets are 120 GSM thick and do not tear or leave any marks even when drawn on with sharp pencils.
    Sheet size: A4, 29.70 x 21 cm ( 11.70 x 8.27 in)
    Spiral, metal wire-binded book for easily turning pages
    Attractively designed, 370 GSM thick outer cover for extra protection
    120 GSM thick sheet ensures tear-free drawing even with sharp pencils
    Suitable for dry and mild-wet mediums like graphite pencil, charcoal and colour crayons; not ideal for oil and acrylic colours
    Ideal for pursuing sketching hobbies and professional pursuits
    Package content: 1 Amazon Brand – Solimo Sketching Book, 100 Sheets, A4 Size

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    #Amazon #Brand #Solimo #Sketching #Book #Sheets #Size

  • Amazon Brand – Solimo Sketching Book, 100 Sheets, A4 Size

    Amazon Brand – Solimo Sketching Book, 100 Sheets, A4 Size

    51qPMDXb8YS21YMHhbMJeS51BwSAnF3bS51IhP+KjY3S21S64rWboGS31TLJ51cSFS
    Price: [price_with_discount]
    (as of [price_update_date] – Details)

    ISRHEWs
    [ad_1]
    The Amazon Brand- Solimo Sketching Book contains 100 sheets of A4 size protected with a 370 GSM thick outer cover for long-lasting use. The sheets are 120 GSM thick and do not tear or leave any marks even when drawn on with sharp pencils.
    Sheet size: A4, 29.70 x 21 cm ( 11.70 x 8.27 in)
    Spiral, metal wire-binded book for easily turning pages
    Attractively designed, 370 GSM thick outer cover for extra protection
    120 GSM thick sheet ensures tear-free drawing even with sharp pencils
    Suitable for dry and mild-wet mediums like graphite pencil, charcoal and colour crayons; not ideal for oil and acrylic colours
    Ideal for pursuing sketching hobbies and professional pursuits
    Package content: 1 Amazon Brand – Solimo Sketching Book, 100 Sheets, A4 Size

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    #Amazon #Brand #Solimo #Sketching #Book #Sheets #Size

  • The Power of Your Subconscious Mind

    The Power of Your Subconscious Mind

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    From the Publisher

    The Power of Your Subconscious MindThe Power of Your Subconscious Mind

    The Power of Your Subconscious MindThe Power of Your Subconscious Mind

    The Power of Your Subconscious MindThe Power of Your Subconscious Mind

    Publisher ‏ : ‎ Fingerprint! Publishing; 2017th edition (1 February 2015)
    Language ‏ : ‎ English
    Paperback ‏ : ‎ 256 pages
    ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 8172345666
    ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-8172345662
    Reading age ‏ : ‎ Customer suggested age: 13 years and up
    Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 280 g
    Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 20.3 x 25.4 x 4.7 cm
    Importer ‏ : ‎ 011-23247062

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  • Do It Today: Overcome Procrastination, Improve Productivity

    Do It Today: Overcome Procrastination, Improve Productivity

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    Publisher ‏ : ‎ Penguin (27 October 2020); Penguin Random House India | 7th Floor, Infinity Tower C, DLF CyberCuty, Gurugram, Haryana, 122002
    Language ‏ : ‎ English
    Paperback ‏ : ‎ 256 pages
    ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0143452126
    ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0143452126
    Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 170 g
    Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 20.3 x 25.4 x 4.7 cm
    Country of Origin ‏ : ‎ India
    Importer ‏ : ‎ PRH India
    Packer ‏ : ‎ PRH India
    Generic Name ‏ : ‎ BOOK

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    #Today #Overcome #Procrastination #Improve #Productivity