Plant the gospel seed within your child and watch it grow.
This beautifully illustrated children's book, written by youth minister, Mark Restaino, features a gardener, his fruit tree, a plot against them, and their blooming forgiveness to tell a symbolic gospel story.
Bible verses, displayed in the corner of each image, walk the reader through the story as well as the gospel message.
We pray that this book bears fruit in your family and hope that you will partner with us by investing in a copy today and sharing with your church community.
This book from Stephen Walther has got everything right, especially for beginners. I wish I had seen this book a little earlier. The first part on Creating Web Forms is written very well. It neither scares the beginner nor does it bore him. Most book authors don't realize that beginners are only looking for a simple book through which they can gain confidence. The language in this book is simple and whereever the author uses...
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I did a lot of research before picking up this .NET book. I must say it has exceeded my expectations by a long shot! It's simply fantastic! I just started ASP.NET programming, and it really helps that there are step-by-step instructions on how to do all the procedures. The author makes no assumptions as to readers' proficiency in using VS.NET. Also it's great that examples are all given in both C# and VB.NET.Get this book...
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Why can't all computer books be written like this one? It's so cleanly written that you'll probably be able to follow it without any problems at all. You'll find no "Dummies"-style attempts at humor here, or other digressions taking up space. He tells you exactly what you want to know, provides a simple example you can play along with, then moves on to the logical next step. This book does make for some pretty dry reading...
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Most of the books on .Net development stay away from Visual Studio.Net as if it were the plague, a creation of an "evil empire", or because of some variation on the "real programmers use Notepad" idea. Developers of that mentality please don't read this book because I want you to stay in that non-competitive hole you have dug for yourself. I have been working with ASP.Net and Visual Studio.Net since beta 1 and quickly realized...
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This is a great book. It is quick and to the point. The examples are focused and short, describing a toolset you can use to build pages. However, it assumes you understand VB.NET and data websites. Certain steps you are asked to code are not particualary well documented, so it is not for beginners.It assumes you will be using Visual Studio.NET to build your site. I am new to Visual Studio and this book makes the power of that...
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