Not exact matches
But while spending
more time with the
written word is pretty much
always a good idea, there is another way to increase how much nourishment your brain gets from
books.
«Making
books is
always a team project,» says Andrew Schloss, who has ghostwritten eight
books and solo
written and co-authored many
more including Salt Block Cooking with Mark Bitterman.
For instance, I'd
always wanted to have a close - knit group of friends,
more creativity in my work, and a lifestyle that would give me the leeway to
write longer articles and
books.
This is what this corporate dictator anti-freedom-of-speech Mayor Michael Bloomberg had to say about those (like the women who were forced out of their job's of his company because they were pregnant) about whom he hire's for his company & I quote: «I just hopefully hire people who are a little
more responsible, that's the first thing I worry about», «I've
always thought that when you work for somebody, you have an obligation to not
write a tell - all
book afterwards and that's true whether you're in an administration or whether you're working for a private company».
But what I started to see was all those
books written about how to be 100 or
more, they're
always written by somebody in their 30s, 40s, or maybe 50s.
He
wrote a fascinating
book about it called The Makers Diet (I know I'm
always recommending articles or
books, but it's so much
more info than I can provide in a blog post!!).
(*» ▽ «*) Something I really enjoy is
write reviews about the
books that I finished of read but like I say on my previous review make a review is
more complicated because I
always constantly working on beauty reviews.
Always Formative Jason Buell is a middle school science teacher from California who
writes about standards - based grading, education conferences, education
books and
more.
I've
always loved science, and I was excited to
write a
book about it, but my background is far
more creative than STEM based.
As an editing and
writing company dedicated to helping authors build their
writing careers, Midnight Publishing is
always on the lookout for indie author - friendly options to sell
more books.
Her earliest
book included poems in which she assumed the personae of goddesses, and she has
always written more energetically feminine and feminist poetry than nearly all of her poetic antecedents — and successors.
But I wanted to
write this article to show that it isn't
always this personal thing against self - publishers, generally it is a matter of volume control and unfortunately there isn't many ways to curb that besides not accepting requests (a blogger might try to set limits to say
books with only a four star or above rating, etc, but often I find many bloggers experience authors and companies ignoring those guidelines so
more drastic measures are taken).
Having
written a good non-fiction
book that focuses on an aspect of city / urban planning (THAT will help you sleep at night) I have
always believed that it would make a great textbook or at least required reading — but for college kids as noted above at over $ 40 for the hardcover it was cost prohibitive, I now have a way to repackage the ebook that is on Amazon (with 65 images) and try to create something
more exciting and interesting.
As
always, there's
more to
writing and publishing success than simply
writing a
book.
I love everything he's
written and
always come away from his
books feeling a little
more aware of myself and the world around me — and wishing everyone else would read his work too so that we could all be smart together.
New Yorker staff writer Lillian Ross (no relation to Harold), who joined the magazine in 1945 and is still, at almost a century old, an occasional contributor, is little
more than a footnote in Cast of Characters, but her own
book, Reporting
Always is a fine collection of some of her best
writing.
Books have always inspired me for many things: to read more books, to live more deeply, to learn, to w
Books have
always inspired me for many things: to read
more books, to live more deeply, to learn, to w
books, to live
more deeply, to learn, to
write.
Besides
writing more books (I am), I'm
always looking for ways to improve so I can reach a larger audience.
Maybe in the indie world that might not
always be the readers in the U.S. market, but we also enable them to sell foreign rights, translation rights, audio rights... We also can free their time so they can sell their own
books and do what's most important and that is
write more books.
The latest Author Earnings report demonstrates the earning potential of the backlist, so
writing more great
books should
always be the focus if longevity in this market is your goal.
I have two novels in print, two
more under contract, and in each case I've gotten good endorsements, but
always from authors who say they don't undertake to consider
writing blurbs for
books until they are under contract.
I
always thought a non-compete clause was
more along the lines of you can't
write another
book and sell it to anyone else.
If you have 4 or
more books it can be difficult to aggressively market all of them at once, but if you can position yourself as someone who
writes great
books of a particular genre, then your readers will be happy to follow your brand and
always purchase your newest
books.
If one thing stands out p, it's what I've
always told my associates: success with your
book takes a lot
more than «
Write it and they will come!»
I was expecting this
book to be a basic rundown of what went down (it was originally slated to just be a
book full of transcripts) but Johnny and Sean
always outdo themselves and instead
wrote a narrative that retold the story in a much
more satisfying way.
But the point is I
always believed I would find a market for my
books and develop a readership, and I did whatever it took to create one — one of the largest things being continually
writing more books and honing my craft, which I still do to this day.
If you had them, you could move on to being smart about selecting
books (in the case of non-fiction, almost
always before they were were completely
written), being skilled at developing them, being capable of packaging them attractively, and being managers of another network — of reviewers and broadcast conversation producers and,
more recently, bloggers and social megaphones — to bring word of them to the public.
It's hard to compare novellas with novels (I've
always found that my
book - length works sell better), but if those had started selling extremely well, I could have
written more of them.
If you've done ALL of that and are still having trouble, it's time to
write a
more satisfying
book in a
more popular genre — sales will
always be directly limited by demand.
It's not uncommon to see an indie authors do well and make tons of money despite having an unprofessional cover or website, and doing half of everything wrong (they're nearly
always writing books in very popular genres and doing things better than their competition... and it's worth pointing out these
books can often make MUCH
more money than professionally published / traditionally published
books, because they have control over their pricing, promotions and advertising.)
While GFP has
always provided top - quality editing and
writing, we now take on
more full production packages, sometimes shepherding a
book through editorial production (copyediting, proofreading, and design), or taking on the entire process, from manuscript through to the printer.
Always makes me happy when I can
write up about
more books heading to print!
More information is
always better in my
book (probably why I can't
write short blog posts — LOL!).
Oh well, I can
always return to
writing books — ok, one
book — that very few lawyers seem to read any
more, and articles that even fewer (at least in this province) seem to have ever read.
Debbie's
writing and advice have appeared in
more than a dozen nationally published «how to»
books; most recently, she was personally acknowledged in nationally syndicated columnist Joyce Lain Kennedy's Cover Letters for Dummies as «a master career management professional [who was]
always ready to help make this
book reach for highest standards».
I
write about this often and in my
books, but sometimes it just feels right to remind myself and my readers again that while we talk about improving our homes a lot here, they key for me isn't in
always buying
more but appreciating what we already have.