Respuesta :
In His Steps is a best-selling religious fiction novel written by Charles Monroe Sheldon. First published in 1896, the book has sold more than 30,000,000 copies, and ranks as one of the best-selling books of all time. The full title of the book is In His Steps: What Would Jesus Do? Though variations of the subtitle "What would Jesus do" have been used by Christians for centuries as a form of imitatio dei, the imitation of God, it gained much greater currency following publication of the book. Chicago Advance, the original publisher, failed to register the copyright in the proper form. Other publishers took advantage of this, publishing the book without paying the author royalties. Thus lower prices and multiple publishers led to larger sales.
hope this helps :)
If
you search Google by typing - How to write a critical review - in the
Search Box, you will find various articles about 'writing reviews'.
Here is a sample I go from just doing that:
NOTE: (On my computer there is a small rectangular search-box at the top right-hand side of the subject-bar and all I do is click in that bx, type in the query I need answered and then click on the magnifier symbol.)
Google Search Example:
A journal article review is a common assignment in college and graduate school. Reviewing journal articles is an important assignment on its own or as part of a much larger research paper. Typically, instructors will give you guidelines on the type of journal articles to review and what to include, but general APA journal article reviews include the pieces discussed below. Articles should be from peer-reviewed or scholarly journals and relate to the field of study that the class discusses.
.Difficulty: Easy
Instructions.Step 1
Search the library's online databases, such as EbscoHost and others, to find scholarly or peer-reviewed articles. You can also look in indexes available at the library.
Step 2
Read the entire article. Many journal articles can be quite complex and use complicated wording and statistics. You may need to read the article a few times before you get a full grasp of it.
Step 3
Write a citation for the journal article at the top of the review. The citation should follow the American Psychological Association's style--consult the APA-style manual or the link under Resources for citation information. You will need the title of the article, the journal where the article is published, the volume and issue number, publication date, author's name and page numbers for the article.
Step 4
Write a summary of the article. This should be one to three paragraphs, depending on the length of the article. Include the purpose for the article, how research was conducted, the results and other pertinent information from the article.
Step 5
Discuss the meaning or implication of the results of the study that the article is about. This should be one to two paragraphs. This is where you offer your opinion on the article. Discuss any flaws with the article, how you think it could have been better and what you think it all means.
Step 6
Write one paragraph discussing how the author could expand on the results, what the information means in the big picture, what future research should focus on or how future research could move the topic forward. Discuss how knowledge in the area could be expanded.
Step 7
Cite any direct quotes or paraphrases from the article. Use the author's name, the year of publication and the page number (for quotes) in the in-text citation. Refer to the link in the Resources section to do this correctly.
.
Here is a sample I go from just doing that:
NOTE: (On my computer there is a small rectangular search-box at the top right-hand side of the subject-bar and all I do is click in that bx, type in the query I need answered and then click on the magnifier symbol.)
Google Search Example:
A journal article review is a common assignment in college and graduate school. Reviewing journal articles is an important assignment on its own or as part of a much larger research paper. Typically, instructors will give you guidelines on the type of journal articles to review and what to include, but general APA journal article reviews include the pieces discussed below. Articles should be from peer-reviewed or scholarly journals and relate to the field of study that the class discusses.
.Difficulty: Easy
Instructions.Step 1
Search the library's online databases, such as EbscoHost and others, to find scholarly or peer-reviewed articles. You can also look in indexes available at the library.
Step 2
Read the entire article. Many journal articles can be quite complex and use complicated wording and statistics. You may need to read the article a few times before you get a full grasp of it.
Step 3
Write a citation for the journal article at the top of the review. The citation should follow the American Psychological Association's style--consult the APA-style manual or the link under Resources for citation information. You will need the title of the article, the journal where the article is published, the volume and issue number, publication date, author's name and page numbers for the article.
Step 4
Write a summary of the article. This should be one to three paragraphs, depending on the length of the article. Include the purpose for the article, how research was conducted, the results and other pertinent information from the article.
Step 5
Discuss the meaning or implication of the results of the study that the article is about. This should be one to two paragraphs. This is where you offer your opinion on the article. Discuss any flaws with the article, how you think it could have been better and what you think it all means.
Step 6
Write one paragraph discussing how the author could expand on the results, what the information means in the big picture, what future research should focus on or how future research could move the topic forward. Discuss how knowledge in the area could be expanded.
Step 7
Cite any direct quotes or paraphrases from the article. Use the author's name, the year of publication and the page number (for quotes) in the in-text citation. Refer to the link in the Resources section to do this correctly.
.