Sentences with phrase «at fiction university»

Congrats on becoming Faculty over at Fiction University.
In person, Janice is just as awesome as her amazing blog, so I'm doubly honored to become one of the faculty at her Fiction University.
My series about Indie Publishing Paths at Fiction University is working to highlight some of those choices and give us a few guidelines for figuring out how to make the best decisions for us.
My series about Indie Publishing Paths at Fiction University has been highlighting some of the choices we have to make and giving us a few guidelines for figuring out how to make the best decisions for us.
In this month's post at Fiction University, I'm covering the basics of those best practices so that we can all start in the right direction.
My series about Indie Publishing Paths at Fiction University has highlighted some of the choices we have to make as self - published authors, including what our newsletter strategy should be.
As I mentioned in my guest post at Fiction University, Marketing Strategy: The Next Book, it's important for authors to move on to the next project.
My series about Indie Publishing Paths at Fiction University has highlighted some of the choices we have to make as self - published authors, and now it's time to pull all that information together and develop our «master plan.»
My series about Indie Publishing Paths at Fiction University has highlighted some of the choices we have to make as self - published authors, and now it's time to summarize everything we've learned in a step - by - step plan.
My series about Indie Publishing Paths at Fiction University has highlighted some of the choices we have to make as self - published authors and also given us a few guidelines.
Introductions for all of Jami's posts as a faculty member at Fiction University, including the complete collection of her Indie Publishing Paths series.
In this month's post at Fiction University, I'm exploring our options and the pros and cons for each strategy.
For more advice and helpful writing tips, visit her at Fiction University, Twitter, and Facebook.
posted at Fiction University, saying, «As indies, one of our major advantages is that we're quick and agile.
If you haven't been following along, my series about Indie Publishing Paths at Fiction University has highlighted some of the choices we have to make as self - published authors and also given us a few guidelines.
In this month's post at Fiction University, I'm sharing some guidelines to help us figure out whether including an excerpt teasing readers with another one of our stories is a good idea — or not.
Agreed, In next month's guest post at Fiction University, I'll be rehashing my «risks of freebies» information from here.
Continued at Fiction University: Where Do I Go From Here?
In this month's post at Fiction University, I'm digging into the pros and cons of those two philosophies:
For a great short piece on what contemporary writers need to know about writing descriptions, see Janice Hardy's post at Fiction University: Three Things to Consider when Writing Descriptions.
Each month, I guest post at Fiction University, a site overflowing with helpful information for writers at all stages.
My guest post at Fiction University shares a big list of ideas for book - specific and non-book extras.
Finding the Right Balance With Your Stage Directions — an older post from Janice Hardy at Fiction University, but useful.
My friend Janice Hardy came up with the perfect solution: joining the Indie Author Series at Fiction University, where I'm writing a series digging into some of our options for indie publishing.

Not exact matches

«The tax numbers in corporate filings are mostly fiction,» Alison Christians, a law professor at McGill University who specializes in tax matters, told us.
According to research conducted at the University of Toronto, study participants who read short - story fiction experienced far less need for «cognitive closure» compared with counterparts who read nonfiction essays.
Those who still cling to pre-scientific religious fictions, ignoring the truths discovered through modern science, should at least take notice when the biology department at the world's most prominent Baptist university, where a statement of faith is a prerequisite for teaching, unequivocally support evolution through the following statement, which you can look up on their web site:
... my memory of his sojourn there [at Tuskeegee University] was kept alive by the sight of his name on checkout slips of so many of the library books of fiction, poetry, history, and literary criticism that had become the main part of my own personal extracurricular reading program.
Julia Yost is a Ph.D candidate in English at Yale University and an MFA candidate in fiction at Washington University in St. Louis.
This adjustment would have made it clearer what Carter — who teaches at the University of Arizona and who has written learnedly on the eras of Grant, Coolidge, and Eisenhower, as well as on such disparate subjects as Antarctica and science fiction — was up to.
Scientific American, the longest continuously published magazine in the U.S., Nature, the world's leading multidisciplinary science journal, and Tor Books, the leading science fiction and fantasy publisher, are media partners for the contest run by the Centre for Quantum Technologies at the National University of Singapore.
«If successful, a global quantum - communication network will no longer be a science fiction,» says Pan Jian - wei, a physicist at the CAS's University of Science and Technology of China in Hefei and the mission's principal investigator.
In a Commentary in the same issue, Michael S. Leapman, MD, of the Department of Urology, Yale University School of Medicine, and Steven A. Kaplan, MD, of the Department of Urology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, offer some perspective on separating fact from fiction about opioid use in urology.
His 183 mD of fame came not from being a biochemistry professor at Boston University, of course, but for becoming a titan of hard science fiction.
«It's almost science fiction to be driving around antimatter in a truck,» says Charles Horowitz, a theoretical nuclear physicist at Indiana University, Bloomington.
«This is science fiction coming to life,» says Daniel Weiss at the University of Vermont College of Medicine in Burlington, who works on lung regeneration.
Andrea Rothman was a postdoctoral fellow and research associate at the Rockefeller University in New York, where she studied the neurobiology of olfaction; she is a fiction writer and an editor for the journal Hunger Mountain, and her first novel, set in a research lab, is under contract with Janklow & Nesbit Literary Agency.
Nine years ago I graduated with an MFA in Fiction from Pacific University, divorced, and transitioned from my role as an at - home mother of two young children to a working single mother and long distance parent.
Of course online daters aren't known for their honesty, either: In a survey of online dating profiles, researchers from Cornell University and the University of Wisconsin - Madison found 80 percent contained at least one fiction.
«You can't pretend it's all fiction,» says Carol Jago, whodirects the California Reading and Literature Project, at the University of California at Los Angeles, and has taught Englishat Santa Monica High School, in Santa Monica, California, forthirty - two years.
She was inspired by her sixth - grade teacher, Mrs. Koeppl, who paved the path for her to study writing and literature at Naropa University and earn a master's in fiction at The New School.
All these figures come from the AAP's Annual StatShot Survey, which is «a yearly statistical survey of publishing's estimated size and scope» and looks at trade (fiction / non - fiction / religious), k - 12 instructional materials, higher education course materials, university presses and professional books.
A graduate of Rutgers University, Díaz is currently the fiction editor at Boston Review, and the Rudge and Nancy Allen Professor of Writing at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
After a one - month break for my health issues and to let Janice run her fantastic, month - long Revision Workshop on her blog, it's time once again for my monthly guest post over at Janice Hardy's Fiction University.
She studied Writing, Literature and Publishing at Emerson College and received her MFA in Fiction at Lesley University.
She teaches Creative Nonfiction at the Hamline Young Writers Workshop, Fiction and Introduction to Literary Publishing at Hamline University.
He has taught fiction at the University of Pennsylvania, Yale, Deep Springs College, and in the MFA program at San Francisco State University.
Just ask Nell Stevens, a 27 - year - old British graduate student working toward her MFA in fiction at Boston University.
A graduate of Stanford University with an MBA from Columbia, Beatriz spent several years in New York and London hiding her early attempts at fiction, first on company laptops as a corporate and communications strategy consultant, and then as an at - home producer of small persons.
Blake taught school and college - level English in Colorado and New York for several years and has taught fiction workshops at institutions including the University of Maryland and George Washington University.
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