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As a self-publisher you need to acquire an ISBN for your book. You may also choose to register your copyright. This article will explain how to acquire an ISBN for your book and how much it will cost, as well as how to register the copyright
By Chris M. Carmichael | Published 4/30/2007
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Have you ever found yourself visiting half.com, textbooks.com, etc., for a required textbook only to find that the ISBN does not exist? You may need a custom textbook. Get to know some of the advantages and disadvantages.
By Jimmy Walker | Published 10/24/2007
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If your book is contains an ISBN#, is being sold and/or distributed, available for public consumption, and someone is making money off of it (preferably you), then yes, you are really published!
By Pamela S Thibodeaux | Published 10/1/2007
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Chapter titles and excerpts from the book titled "Torture and the law of proof Europe and England in the Ancien regime" by John H Langbein 1977 ISBN: 0226468062 : 9780226468068 | OCLC: 2695110
By ptosis | Published 6/26/2007
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A brief article concerning five different dirty joke books. Includes publisher and ISBN numbers
By Zelda Mayfield | Published 4/17/2006
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A brief article listing some choices for family-friendly joke books. Includes publisher and ISBN info.
By Zelda Mayfield | Published 4/13/2006
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Much has been written about the conflict of World War II, which many see as a battle against good versus evil. Most of it has been written about the soldiers who fought and died, but there were other brave individuals whose stories need to be told.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/28/2005
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Phil Mickelson's book is subtitled But Winning Isn't Everything. It isn't, of course. It's only what you win that matters. Mickelson played on the PGA tour for ten years. But he never rated a biography. After winning his first major, he got two.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/28/2005
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Two thousand products later, Parker Brothers is one of the best known and most beloved of all game publishers. And somewhere in the process, its games have gone from simply reflecting the values of the country to helping shape them.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/28/2005
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Global warming is a hot topic these days. To understand what global warming is, and whether or not we need to be afraid, one must start by learning about the ice ages, and Frozen Earth is an excellent introduction to the topic.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/28/2005
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America is the fattest nation on earth. We are a nation of fat people! I have nothing against fat people; I am fat. However if we are the fattest nation on earth then we are also an unhealthy nation. We owe it to ourselves to eat healthier as best we can.
By Alan Cohen | Published 6/25/2005
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What do secret agents and restaurant critics have in common? Well, with the notable exceptions of James Bond, and John Steed and Emma Peel (the Avengers), they don't want to be recognized.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/23/2005
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This Adaptations is an anthology of short stories that were the basis for 35 movies. Why do filmmakers adapt from literature, anyway? Editor Stephanie Harrison quotes film theorist George Bluestone: "Film feeds off literature like sharks off a marlin."
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/23/2005
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There are a few diseases that destroy the body but leave the mind intact - Lou Gehrig's disease, and MS. These diseases put their victim in one particular kind of hell. And then there's Alzheimer's disease, which destroys the mind as well.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/22/2005
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Book Review: 'Distilling Knowledge: Alchemy, Chemistry and the Scientific Revolution' by Bruce Moran
Alchemists have a bad rap today, but what they were really doing for hundreds of years was seeking after knowledge...they wanted to understand their world...and make money while doing so, of course. When did alchemy turn into chemistry, and how?
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/22/2005
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"...in more than thirty-five animated features Disney has released...there is scarcely a mention of God as conceived in the Christian and Jewish faiths shared by most people of the Western world and many beyond.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/22/2005
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Lou Gehrig retired midway through the 1939 season when his disease, ALS, became too much even for the Iron Horse. He died two years later, on June 2, 1941. He was 38 years old.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/21/2005
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There's an old saying, meant to be humorous: "Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not out to get you." Identify theft is the fastest growing crime in the United States, and ruins thousands of lives each year.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/21/2005
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"Great... inventors start out to solve a practical problem, then their solution soars off into uncharted skies whose scope they could not have imagined when they embarked on their work."
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/20/2005
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Jane Austen, born in 1775, died in 1817 at the age of 41. Although she lived in a time when women were not given formal education, she was extremely intelligent and well read, and wrote from childhood onward.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/16/2005
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On May 26, 2005, it was reported that a flower, the Mount Diablo buckwheat, thought extinct for sixty years, was found in a remote part of California.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/13/2005
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Girls today have more opportunities to reach for the heights than ever before - not only to make a career in sports such as tennis, basketball, and car racing, but also as scientists, inventors, politicians, explorers, and soldiers.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/13/2005
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If you want to get the dirt on George Steinbrunner, this is the book to read. Don Zimmer, bench coach for the Yankees, left after the 2003 season on less than amicable terms with its owner, and in this book he reveals the reasons why.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/12/2005
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This is a book review of Philip Roth's 2004 novel, The Plot Against America, an alternate history in which Charles Lindbergh becomes president and starts a wave of anti-Semitic prejudice in the U.S.
By Chris Barsanti | Published 6/5/2005
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Every time a "Jesus film" has been made, from the silent films which deliberately omitted the trial of Jesus before the Sanhedrin, to the more recent films that have not, it has always produced controversy and concern.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/5/2005
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In 1920, the Boston Red Sox sold Babe Ruth to the New York Yankees, and the "Curse of the Bambino" was begun. The Red Sox had won the World Series for the fourth time in 1918...
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/5/2005
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This book is, in reality, a course in how to subtly put down your friends and complete strangers, and get exactly what you want out of life at the expense of others. It's the type of book that Marie of Everybody Loves Raymond fame would love.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/3/2005
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There are fourteen mountains in the world which have peaks over 8,000 meters (26,000 feet) high. These peaks are in what's called the Death Zone - "an altitude above which life begins to die."
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/3/2005
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Marjane Satrapi, illustrator, writer and capturer of childhood's truths, displays her talent in her comic-book style novels, Persepolis and Persepolis 2. The autobiographical story begins in 1980 Iran, the beginning of the Muslim Revolution.
By Roxy Miller | Published 6/3/2005
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The Incredibles, released in 2004, is the sixth computer animated movie by Pixar, after: Toy Story (1995), A Bug's Life (1998), Toy Story 2 (1999), Monsters, Inc. (2001), and Finding Nemo (2003).
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/3/2005
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"There was something about describing the wind that sparked expressive language...and I think the answer is that the wind is invisible. You can't describe it because you can't see it. You can only describe what it does to things you can see..
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/3/2005
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Bob Cousy was the man who kept professional basketball alive in its formative years. When he began his career as a Boston Celtic in 1950, the college game was king.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/3/2005
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Seventy five years ago, in 1930, American golfer Bobby Jones achieved �the grand slam' - winning all four major tournaments of his era (the Open and Amateur championships of the United States and Great Britain).
By Barbara Peterson | Published 6/2/2005
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John Lydon, former Sex Pistol and punk pioneer, shares his past, present and future in the wonderfully page-turning ROTTEN. The book is a look into the life of a semi-reclusive punk turned Real Estate mogul.
By J. Wallace | Published 5/30/2005
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Hardly a month goes in which a newspaper somewhere in the United States does not report of a company closing, life-long employees suddenly without jobs that are being given to Mexico, to China, or similar countries.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 5/27/2005
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It's a stereotype - grounded in truth - that women are always "chattering" away and that men never listen to what they have to say. But anyone who wants to get inside the head of singer/songwriter Tori Amos has to, in effect, listen to her.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 5/26/2005
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What's a rogue economist? Someone who says of himself, "I'm not good at math, I don't know a lot of econometrics, and I also don't know how how to do theory." But he can look at the way the world works with the tools of an economist and illuminate it.
By Barbara Peterson | Published 5/17/2005
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David Bach gives you a painless way to save for your later years, and it does it in the simple terms that everyone can understand.
By Tina Samuels | Published 5/15/2005
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Favorite Poems by Emily Dickinson is a collection of poetry centering around love, life, nature, and time and eternity. A recommended read for seasoned writers and poet enthusiasts alike.
By Aaron Coffey | Published 5/15/2005
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We must all face the unexepected. No one can control everything in life. Our reaction to the unexpected creates an opportunity for either positive or negative change in our personal and professional lives. Learn to use your reactions to your advantage.
By Tracie Harris | Published 5/14/2005
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Books have always been a top seller on the Internet. Try your hand at this interesting business, today!
By Merry Strong | Published 5/13/2005
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Sundials have been around for centuries. It was one of the few ways to get a reasonable method for telling time.
By Tina Samuels | Published 5/1/2005
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"Warfare is the greatest affair of state, the basis of life and death, the Tao to survival or extinction. It must be thoroughly pondered and analyzed." - Sun Tzu
By Tina Samuels | Published 4/29/2005
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Life is what you make it. Learn how the perspectives you choose can make or break your chances of success in life. Increase control over your environment by taking responsibility for your life choices.
By Tracie Harris | Published 4/26/2005
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Three wicca book reviews that are highly recommended
By Tina Samuels | Published 4/23/2005
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A reminder that our soldiers coming back from Iraq may experience the Persian Gulf Syndrome with its crippling ailments.
By Tina Janke | Published 4/22/2005
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Garden gnomes are more than just decoration; many believe they are beings in their own secret society.
By Tina Samuels | Published 4/18/2005
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Native flowers are a boon to the gardening enthusiast. Not only are they easier to plant and grow, but they thrive with little or no effort. Plants that have originated in the southern plain are used to the rocky clay that peppers the landscapes.
By Tina Samuels | Published 4/13/2005
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How to decypher common latin plant names.
By Tina Samuels | Published 4/11/2005
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This article is a raodmap to writing and self publishing a book, and discusses tips to help drive profits and avoid costly mistakes.
By Taylor | Published 3/5/2005
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