This Book Needs No Title


Book Description

From Simon & Schuster, This Book Needs No Title is Raymond Smullyan's budget of living paradoxes—the author of What is the Name of This Book? Including eighty paradoxes, logical labyrinths, and intriguing enigmas progress from light fables and fancies to challenging Zen exercises and a novella and probe the timeless questions of philosophy and life.




The Leader Who Had No Title


Book Description

From the author of "The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari" comes an inspiring parableabout the skills needed to excel in career and life.




The Book with No Title


Book Description

It's said that men don't like to ask for directions. In volume two of this series, Ruben and Jason candidly reveal why. With a fatherless generation plaguing our society, they confront men across the world by challenging them to stop dying for their families and start living for them.This volume provides men a rawness that is rare in today's men group meetings, but Ruben and Jason believe that without this type of transparency, true manhood will never flourish.




The Book with No Title


Book Description

The book James Seward wrote for his five children, available to those who want to order it for themselves.




This Book Has No Title


Book Description

In This Book Has No Title: The Black Book, Collins I. Aki presents a collection of verses and comments on color, race, and future. Collaborating with the artwork of Harouna Ouédraogo, Aki makes a case for the idiom of black genius as the idiom of future par excellence. Through verses and comments on time, history, thought, love, past works of poetry, reading, myth, and other experiences in a movement of word and line that Aki credits to the experimental idiom of the jazz mystic, Sun Ra, the Black Book offers a metaphor of the future that has always been among us as the "now/here/always/after" that 'we' are. The Black Book is more of a cypher than a journey, going from poetry to prose to "politics," Aki charges the reader to embrace black genius in all of its motion and emotion of world.




The Public and Play Without a Title


Book Description

Federico Garcia Lorca called The Public "the best thing I've written for the theater." Yet, he acknowledged, "this is for the theater years from now." Now, half a century later, The Public and another of Lorca's most daring works, Play without a Title, are available in English translation for the first time. Surrealism, folk theater, poetry, vivid costumes, black humor--in the The Public, dramatic traditions are ransacked to develop themes as timely in the 1980s as they were taboo when Lorca was writing: if Romeo were a man of thirty and Juliet a boy of fifteen, would their passion be any less authentic? No, says a young observer of the play within the play, "I who climb the mountain twice each day and, when I finish studying, tend an enormous herd of bulls that I've got to struggle with and overpower at every instant, I don't have time to think about whether Juliet's a man or a woman or a child, but only to observe that I like her with such a joyous desire." In both The Public and Play without a Title, the player himself is of as much consequence as the role he plays. The fierce, stark Play without a Title, with its cast of Author, Prompter, Stagehand in the wings, and hecklers in the gallery, clearly heralds developments in today's avant-garde theater. It also reflects the violence of the times in which it was written. As Carlos Bauer notes in his introduction, neither of the plays in this volume was complete in 1936, when Lorca was assassinated by Franco's forces. Still, both have here the unity and grace of finished tours de force.




No Title Just Facts


Book Description

This book is timely in that it identifies the failure and complicity of our elected officials that sell their votes and abdicate their oath to defend the US Constitution. from foreign and domestic enemies such as the September 11, 2001 aerial attack on the United States and the January 6, 2021 Insurrection against the US Government.




No Title Here


Book Description

Inspired by his bizarre encounters with the odd and the unusual in Asbury Park, New Jersey, made famous by Bruce Springsteen, Mermelstein vigorously prowled the streets of New York City in the mid-1980s, snapping up scenes of vivid colour, glitz, artifice and unrelenting ugliness. Attracted to the surreal and outlandish, including everything from dog shows to grand openings of malls, Mermelstein took his project across the decades and across the country, resulting in this bizarre catalogue of the wacky, quirky, oddly lyrical sights of America. 75 full-colour photos.




Leaders Without Titles


Book Description

What does it mean to lead? Are there natural born leaders? Can leadership be taught? Throw out everything you thought you knew. Leaders Without Titles challenges the way we determine who our leaders should be and uncovers the factors that really influence the ability to lead.




Indies Unlimited: Authors' Snarkopaedia


Book Description

In Volume One of the Authors' Snarkopaedia, sentences have been painstakingly crafted together using nouns, verbs and other words, bringing you paragraphs of text. These paragraphs flow into pages of expert tips, advice and insight for authors at all levels of the publication food chain. Any book can claim to offer this type of information, but they can't give you what sets the Indies Unlimited Authors' Snarkopaedia above the rest: the "je ne sais squat" of the high decorated staff of the Snarkology Department at the Indies Unlimited Online Academy. Their groundbreaking and empirical research over the years sheds new and snarkified light on subjects ranging from book publishing and marketing to the nuts and bolts of writing and technology. If you like information to grab you by the throat and smack you in the face, the Indies Unlimited Authors' Snarkopaedia is the reference book for you.