Not exact matches
Kopp is the
author of the Washington
Post bestseller, A Chance to Make History: What Works and What Doesn't in Providing an
Excellent Education for All, and of One Day, All Children: The Unlikely Triumph of Teach For America and What I Learned Along the Way.
An
excellent blog
post I found this morning: 7 Ways to step up your indie
author career.
He was smart and funny, and gave some
excellent advice for all the questions
authors asked him (this interchange was eye - opening for me, if you want to hear what he said, stay tuned, I'll write a full
post about it soon.)
Today he
posted and
excellent post and inspired me to watch an hour long presentation video and read more on the interviews he did with other best selling
authors like Seth Godin.
In an
excellent blog
post, bestselling
author and writing teacher David Farland takes on purveyors of plagiarism, fake reviews, purchased reviews, review - swapping schemes, attack reviews, etc..
For more opinions on
author co-ops, check out
author Paty Jagr's
excellent article at Indies Unlimited and Jordan E. Rosenfeld's guest
post at The Book Designer.
Tim Grahl's Book Marketing Checklist Book Marketing Plan, The Definitive Checklist Tim also has an
excellent post on building a
Author Blog How to Build the Ultimate
Author Website
Lots of
excellent book marketing ideas in this blog
post from
Author Media.com, 89 Book Marketing Ideas that will Change Your Life
For more information about the basic components of
author websites, check out Jane Friedman's
excellent post.
We began talking after that, and as a result, she wrote an
excellent guest
post for us here, «10 terrible social media myths
authors should avoid.»
-LSB-...] Editor, Alan Rinzler
posted this
excellent article, «Strategic Tweeting for
Authors» on his blog, The Book -LSB-...]
Guest blogger Chris Syme, a social media specialist and
author, takes on everything from hashtag stuffing to ageism in this
post packed with
excellent tips and advice.
Jane, in your
excellent post regarding how to write a non-memoir nonfiction book proposal, you encourage discussion of an
author's platform in said proposal.
I hosted the other day a guest
post by my
author friend, Charles E. Yallowitz, but today I'm sharing his
excellent series of
posts he has written on fantasy (Medieval) arsenal.
Writing community specialist and University of Cincinnati professor Jane Friedman, who hosts the Ether here at her site,
posted her
excellent warning,
Authors: Don't Pay Money for BEA Book Promotion, just as I'd been reading an arresting series of comments on a blog
post titled Who Controls Your Amazon eBook Price?
Your website is an
excellent place to
post reviews, information about upcoming
author events, and free content for visitors (such as interesting historical facts about the period of your novel or sample chapters of upcoming releases).
Facebook is
excellent for
authors who have less time to
post, or do not want the commitment of
posting multiple times per day.
An
excellent exercise on developing content was engaged, where the outcome would deliver blog
post ideas, articles, product development — all taking the
author business to another level.
Apart from the
excellent points raised by the
author in his
post, you can possibly look for other areas of information e.g. the eBook format, different pricing strategy, book promotion services to include in your data analysis.
Author John Scalzi
posted this most
excellent «Electronic Publishing Bingo» scorecard over on his blog, and, while it's hilarious in its own right, I think it's also worth a bit of closer discussion.
[pullquote] For more information about
author ethics in relation to self publishing, please see this excellent post by WU writer Porter Anderson, where he discusses 8 Issues in Author E
author ethics in relation to self publishing, please see this
excellent post by WU writer Porter Anderson, where he discusses 8 Issues in
Author E
Author Ethics.
Your website is also an
excellent place to
post reviews and information about upcoming
author events.
Even if your books are
excellent, you're going to be crushed by 100 other
authors whose books aren't nearly as good as yours, but they have a website and
post content and get traffic and sell books.»
Blog tours aren't new — this New York Times article from a couple years back explores one
author's blog tour experience — and sites like Blog Book Tours or this
post at The Dabbling Mum contain some
excellent information about what exactly a blog tour is.
Today, we have a guest
post from Dina Silver,
author of One Pink Line which has an
excellent 4.6 star rating (157 reviews).
An
excellent post, with only one flaw that I can see, which is the implication that
authors «live» in a particular class because they DESERVE to be in that class, and that literary / social mobility can be achieved by improving the quality of the writing.
To get an idea of what services for
authors cost, please have a look at this
excellent post from duolit on a full spectrum of services and their costs for the independent writing community.
William Bernstein (the
excellent author of The Intelligent Asset Allocator, The Four Pillars of Investing, etc.) had a good
post on the Permanent Portfolio.
Planet 3.0 has
posted some
excellent material of late, particularly a great Q&A with Nathan Urban, one of the
authors of the new paper assessing the limits to warming from a big rise in carbon dioxide levels.
The
author cites Ted Tjaden's
excellent post here on Slaw from last year, wherein Ted noted the limited overlap in publication of court decisions in both French and English and also referred readers to the unofficial translations of selected decisions made available by SOQUIJ.
For those unfamiliar with LegalZoom (likely only our Canadian readers, shielded from the ubiquitous LegalZoom advertising in the US), Richard Granat has
authored an
excellent series of
posts on his eLawyering Redux blog.
The
author cites Ted Tjaden's
excellent post here on Slaw from last year, wherein Ted noted the limited overlap in... [more]