Sentences with phrase «article about authors»

I wrote this article about authors behaving badly to help you avoid becoming one.
Vanity Fair published a very interesting article about the authors experience with dating sugars on SeekingArrangement.com, click here to read.
He was referencing an article about an author's favorite writing hideaway.
Build grammar skills using this activity and answer key for an article about the author of the Nancy Drew novels.
-LSB-...] online articles about author brand and can recommend these by Rachel Thompson, Theresa Meyers, and Kimberley Grabas.
The City Book Review website articles focus on resources for authors, while the other brands focus on articles about author appearances, stories from writer to writer, or cooking (focusing on a cookbook).
The list of possible goals for a reader's experience (education, enlightenment, entertainment, etc.) reminded me of a New Yorker article about author Jennifer Weiner.
A recent issue of Poets & Writer magazine had an article about an author who spent $ 10,000 to self publish her own book, and coordinated with many people over the Internet to come out with blogs and reviews of her book on the release date.
Yesterday I read this article about an author named Amanda Hocking, who has no publisher but sells 100,000 copies of her book a month on the Kindle for between 99cents and three dollars.
And the new editor has hinted at more articles about authors.
I recently read the stream of comments on an article about the author's journey to, and ultimate achievement of, early retirement in his 30's.
Read «In the Flesh», an article about an author's meeting with Carol Rama, published in Frieze Magazine 2004.
Read (External) «In the Flesh», an article about an author's meeting with Carol Rama, published in Frieze Magazine 2004.

Not exact matches

Many of the author's articles about China have been copied word - for - word into Chinese by digital outlets on the mainland.
This gap between the immense curiosity about leadership and the few hard and fast rules about how to do it well has spawned an entire industry dedicated to pedaling dubious leadership «truths,» Stanford business school professor and author Jeffrey Pfeffer warns in a recent McKinsey Quarterly article.
The Harvard grad and author of Delivering Happiness: A Path to Profits, Passion, and Purpose (Business Plus, 2013) tweets uplifting quotes, links to emails he has sent to Zappos employees and links to articles about how to make the office a more fun, collaborative place to work.
It was there that author F. Scott Fitzgerald spent some time with his friend Rumsey, learning about «the lifestyle of the moneyed aristocracy of Old Westport, Long Island, and their involvement in the movement of eugenics,» according to a 2015 article in the F. Scott Fitzgerald Review.
'' [They] come into the world as their parents» sole princess or prince,» wrote Jeffrey Kluger, author of the book «The Sibling Effect: What the Bonds Among Brothers and Sisters Reveal About Us» in an article for «Time.»
In a LinkedIn article about the best advice she ever received, motivational speaker, author, and CNBC host Suze Orman wrote that success has often made her a target of nasty criticism «entirely disconnected from facts.»
Look for opportunities to author articles about your industry.
For example, if you know someone who loves to read, send an article or book review about his or her favorite author.
Vladimir Popov, a crypto and blockchain enthusiast, author of analytical articles and a book about ICOs.
Also, here's a good article about Bitwise — and the author (Laura Shin) is my favorite «mainstream financial media» writer in the cryptocurrency space.
While this strategy works just fine for large publishers that already have established brands and get thousands of shares on any new article they publish (such as Mashable or TechCrunch), a more pragmatic approach is needed for just about every other business.It's true that getting quality inbound links starts with great content on your client's website, but the missing link is getting journalists, contributors, authors, and editors at quality publications to become aware of that content so that they can link to it when writing relevant stories / articles.
It seems that the author of this article has never been to Hajj and has very poor knowledge about what Hajj is about.
The author above at least made an attempt at doing so about the myths in this article.
Reading articles like this is so painful because it is so obvious the author knows nothing about any of the religions he's writing on.
The thing that interests me about this article as that the author is expecting someone to fix the church for Millenials so they will return.
Wow, if anything this article highlights the authors lack of knowledge about religion in general.
What is funny about this article is that the author has clearly not read the entire trilogy.
I find it strange and a bit sad that the posts in response to an article that is decrying the negative images many have of atheist are of the same sort of mean spirited close - minded stereotypical behavior that gives many those negative images the author was upset about.
Second, for someone who is so uptight as this author about knowing religions and even writing a book about it, the mere fact that not ONCE in this article did you use the official and correct name of the church of Jesus Christ of latter day saints (aka Mormon) in my mind completely discredits your temper tantrum.
The author of this article should be ashamed of herself for not even understanding what the bible is all about.
@Chad «true (it is possible to believe in a deity, but not wish to be affiliated with a particular insti tution), but that is not what the author is talking about in this article.
I like how this entire article is about «speaking Christian» and the author fails to reference one single scripture in the bible.
(The preceding remarks by Dr. Silkworth can be found in the series of articles sent to the present author via email titled «William Duncan Silkworth, M.D., Some Writings by & about «The Little Doctor Who Loved Drunks»» from Mary H. on April 11, 2002.
I understood what the original article was about and understood what the author was trying to convey.
So instead of commenting about the article, you decide to comment on the author.
To be fair to both sides, I think the author should be posting an article about Mitt Romney's religion, which is not Christianity, but is in fact a cult.
(Please see the comment by the author of this article about religious illiteracy.)
I guess this article is about what the author believes about the budget commission and the subsequent political reactions... ok.
I challenge the author of this article to write a similar thing about the prophet mohammed and for CNN to display it with his photo.
The author of the original article makes some good argument about translations and interpretations from Greek to English.
Now if the true issue is so clearly defined in the article — THE ISSUE OF WHAT THE LOST MUST BELIEVE TO BE SAVED — and I believe it is, and like I said, I can scan my own copy of the article with with notes and numbering in my own handwriting — and if your position on this issue is so Biblically solid, then why do you not deal with the real issue at hand, rather than raising all these sorts of protests and all this fuss about the author that can be directly quashed by quotes from the articles?
The article has been well written by the author and yes Sharia law is a sacred part of our text, If you want to know read the Const.itution and learn about this yourself.
The author of this article makes a bad assumption about christians.
In a recent article in the New York Times, author Nadine Gordimer expresses views about the disease that South Africa is eager to promote and that have wide acceptance in America.
This article hs done what the author wanted it to do... got people talking about the issue... I was raised in a Christian home..
Physician and author Dr. Joseph Mercola also warned about the potential dangers of crystalline fructose in a HuffPost article.
Loved this article from the author about how the novel relates to the world today, and this bit: «One of my rules was that I would not put any events into the book that had not already happened in what James Joyce called the «nightmare» of history, nor any technology not already available.
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