Business | Business
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Feb.25.2008
What really matters, at work and in life? For most of us, the days get so hectic that we sometimes lose sight of the essential things. Dreams, desires, and the little joys in life can be swept away by the pressures of being a manager. To keep from feeling overwhelmed, tens of thousands of business...
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Feb.22.2008
SUMMARY "Computer Ease" is a state of mind - one you can't reach when you're frustrated. It's hard to feel like a success when your mouse won't move, you're stuck on hold with tech support, and you can't format a page margin. There isn't one magical manual for all computer problems...
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Feb.03.2008
If you've ever been tongue-tied - or if you've ever given a tongue-lashing (and regretted it), Tongue Fu! offers constructive alternatives that will turn hostility into harmony and help you avoid a mental breakdown in the face of aggression. With straightforward strategies and proven techniques,...
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Jan.15.2008
The longtime psychotherapist and bestselling author of The 10 Smartest Decisions a Woman Can Make Before 40 now turns her attention to the special challenges and opportunities available to women over forty. In mid-life, many women find themselves in new circumstances. Women with grown children...
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Jan.11.2008
Infoquake, the debut novel by web programmer David Louis Edelman, takes speculative fiction into alien territory: the corporate boardroom of the far future. It’s a stunning trip through the trenches of a technological war fought with product demos, press releases and sales pitches.
Natch is a...
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Jan.10.2008
With a focus on the non-financial aspects of retirement, How to Retire Happy, Wild and Free by Ernie J. Zelinski explores the myriad choices and decisions that retirees are all confronted with in living out their retirement lives. Easy to read and well laid out, the best-selling non-financial...
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Jan.09.2008
This collection of essays from "Forbes ASAP's" annual "Big Issue" has been hailed by both readers and critics alike. Stanley Crouch called the "Big Issue," the "last great bastion of the essay," famed historian Stephen Ambrose said it was his favorite...
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