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How to Read a Person Like a Book [Secure]
eBook by Gerard I. Nierenberg & Henry H. Calero
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eBook Category: Self Improvement
eBook Description: Whether we are conscious of it or not, in any conversation there are actually two languages being spoken. One is the verbal communication we are all familiar with, but the other--and maybe more important, is the more subtle collection of gestures, expressions, and movements that constitute body language. In this illustrated guide, authors Gerard Nierenberg and Henry Calero decode this largely unexplored form of expression--revealing how to look past words to determine what's really being said. This virtual dictionary of gestures explains how determine if a person is lying, expressing affection or flirtation, or on the defensive--allowing the educated observer to gain the upper hand in any social or business interaction.
eBook Publisher: Barnes & Noble Digital, Published: 2001
Fictionwise Release Date: June 2002
Available eBook Formats [Secure - What's this?]: SECURE MOBIPOCKET FORMAT (965 KB]
All formats: Printing DISABLED, Read-aloud DISABLED
MobiPocket Reader ISBN: 1401407110 Microsoft Reader ISBN: 1401401929 Adobe Acrobat Reader ISBN: 1401401902 eReader (recommended) ISBN: 1401401937

FOREWORD This book is a handbook of types of nonverbal communication that will give you insights into the significance of gestures -- factors of ordinary experiences that are all too often only vaguely understood, if not entirely ignored. The material has been arranged so that the parts make up a meaningful whole: the gestures making clusters of gestures that make up attitudes dealing with relationships involved in life situations. We hope we have added an important tool in the continuing search for a way to make man better understood by his fellow men and to promote understanding among all men. The process of communication, which continues to confound us, will be enhanced by the understanding and analysis of gestures. Our function as human beings is to increase our expertise and to become so human that we see ourselves in all other people. Copyright © 1971 by Gerard I. Nierenberg and Henry H. Calero
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