Sentences with phrase «authors with readers»

We have always placed a high value on the role that libraries can play in connecting our authors with our readers.
To an extent it has to do with increasing receptiveness to indie publishing in general, and the fact that social media has connected authors with readers more than ever before.
Despite the «high value [Penguin places] on the role that libraries can play in connecting our authors with our readers» as Penguin stated in a response to Library Journal, apparently this policy change came out of nowhere.
Author blogs and chat sessions such as #LitChat connect authors with readers.
Interview (14:07)-- Richard Nash is putting his visionary ideas about how to link authors with readers to work in creating his startup independent publishing business, Cursor.
We're a diverse group, and we've come together to help connect authors with readers (and vice versa).
Every publisher (traditional, hybrid, or indie) has the same challenge: to connect authors with their readers.
Founded by authors and aspiring authors to solve the core discovery challenges new authors face, Scribl connects authors with readers in more ways than anyone else.
It also allows more room for legacy publishers to maximize resources and to build more direct relationships through their authors with readers — the current gatekeepers of the publishing industry's digital future.
It also allows more room for legacy publishers to maximize resources and to build more direct relationships through their authors with readers — the current gatekeepers -LSB-...]
My work at Kate Tilton's Author Services, LLC allows me to connect authors with readers and help authors reach their goals.
He now continues to develop and explore new and exciting ways to connect authors with readers in the rapidly evolving digital book marketplace.
In 2013 we started focusing more on books promotion and marketing because market changes led to a great opportunity for anyone willing to focus on connecting authors with readers efficiently and smoothly
I love RT; I appreciate Kathryn's support of the military; but also recognize that there is room in Romanceland for other venues to connect authors with readers.
Indeed, our current size (8 Million Readers) has enabled us to do all these things better than we used to Books Butterfly is about connecting authors with readers.
Readers expect a high degree of engagement with authors so it is relatively easy for any author with readers to build their own platform rather than somebody else's.

Not exact matches

Only later did many readers notice that the authors were not in fact the well - known short - selling firms Muddy Waters and Citron Research, but rather two fake accounts using similar names with misspellings: @Mudd1waters and @Citreonresearc.
Professor and author Dr. Barbara Oakley helps readers learn to retrain and reinvent themselves during a time of rapid technological change with her book, Mindshift: Break Through Obstacles to Learning and Discover Your Hidden Potential.
Stieg Larsson's riveting trilogy — «The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo,» «The Girl Who Played with Fire,» and «The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest» — gets the finale readers have been waiting for from author David Lagercrantz.
Here are 10 social media strategies successful authors use to engage with readers — and sell more books:
Thought leadership, like all good editorial, needs to be created with the readers» needs in mind, not the author's.
«Author Julie Morgenstern wrote an entire book on the subject, called Never Check Email in the Morning,» The Huffington Post reminds readers in an article that rounds up several voices all agreeing with Morgenstern and Bradberry.
Using his publishing background to tap into what readers would like to read — with absolutely no guidance from me — he created several columns that helped to highlight [our] authors and services... I can not recommend Shel Horowitz highly enough and he continues to do work for me to this day.
A story with millions of your own adventure in it — looking for readers, writers, ghost writers, authors, editors, reporters, journalists, bloggers, influencers, entrepreneurs, sponsors like you who want to help by giving $ 1 or more and spreading this campaign and the story to the world.
But it seems to me that one of the problems with academic articles is that the reader doesn't get a chance to comment on the article, and the author doesn't get the chance to read readers» comments and respond to them.
Lastly, our good friends at the Incrementum Fund, Ronald Stoeferle and Mark Valek, who our readers know as the authors the annual «In Gold We Trust» report, have released the inaugural issue of their new Crypto Research Report this December in cooperation with Demelza Kelso Hays and several other contributors.
In precise and entertaining chapters — each culminating with very specific «action steps» for readers to follow — author Ken McElroy offers real estate investing stories from the trenches and wisdom.
This event is sponsored by Morningstar, John Wiley and Sons Publishers, The Reader, The University of Nebraska at Omaha College of Business Administration and Omaha Airport Hudson Booksellers and is an excellent opportunity to visit with several Buffett authors, newsletter editors, stock analysts, Berkshire managers and fellow shareholders.
It was Philip Fisher, author of the groundbreaking Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits, who often exhorted his readers to be cautious about trading in the stock of a company they have known for many years and come to understand well for one with which they are not as familiar as it introduces different types of risk.
The content published on this blog is personal opinion of author, reader is responsible for their action with no accountability of author
In Upbuilding Discourses in Various Spirits, the reader is to reflect along with the author on what purity of heart is, how to acquire absolute confidence in Divine providence, and what it means to follow Christ.
In quiet meditation along with the author, the reader is to search his self; in stillness he is to offer himself for judgment to God.
The reviewer can tell the reader that in Three Discourses on Imagined Occasions he is to think along with the author about what it means to seek God, how the «resolution of duty» that ought to be present in marriage transforms romantic love into love that conquers everything, and how the awareness of one's mortality, of the certainty of death, of «death's decision» enhances earnestness in life.
Privileged authors imply privileged readers, those who are like them with respect to background, experience, and interests, and who as a consequence respond appreciatively to what they have to say.
Indeed, it can even be read as a mockery of the whole literary enterprise, pairing dull and uncomprehending readers who ploddingly manage to miss the obvious, with clever authors (both the fictional Vereker and the actual James) who feel compelled to play the trickster, taunting their readers with the hint that there is something — indeed, the whole point of it all — that they don't get.
Usually when theologians say that the Bible is a human book, they mean that the Bible has human authors who use human words to discuss human ideas to human readers with human ways of thinking.
But for now, lest it appear to some readers that we are in dialogue with a phantom scientific ideal rather than with one that is seriously held, let us recall the famous statement of F.H.C. Crick, the celebrated Nobel - prize winning molecular biologist and author of the book, Of Molecules and Men:
Smith reminds readers of the idea of divine accommodation, which suggests that «in the process of divine inspiration, God did not correct every incomplete or mistaken viewpoint of the biblical authors in order to communicate through them with their readers... The point of the inspired scripture was to communicate its central point, not to straighten out every kink and dent in the views of all the people involved in biblical inscripturation and reception along the way.»
In this chapter the author prepares the reader to deal better with the rest of the book by carefully defining the concepts of «pluralism,» «understand,» «action,» and «practice.»
Eliade, who was for many years at the University of Chicago, will be familiar to most readers as the author of the four - volume A History of Religious Ideas and numerous other books dealing with religion and myth in human history.
Many readers who agree that the U.S. was intended to be a republic and not an empire will nonetheless disagree with what can only be described as the author's radical isolationism, including his restated doubts as to whether World War II was ours to fight and his suggestion that Israel is, at least in the long term, a lost cause.
Readers are thus made to feel like witnesses to what actually happened, with access to the thoughts and motives both of the characters in the drama and of those who wrote about them, the authors of the sources used to build an uncluttered reality.
The author becomes another reader with some privileged knowledge of what, she or he once meant, but with no hermeneutical privilege at all in interpreting what the text actually says.
Daniel Fuller believes that in non-revelatory matters, there is «error» in the Biblical text which was included deliberately by the authors in order to communicate effectively with their readers.
The author does assume a prior knowledge of Therese, and some instances of her life are mentioned with little explanation, but this is not off - putting; rather it makes the reader want to learn more.
The richness of the relationship between the two, speech performance and linguistic code, with all the nuances and allusions which the latter provides, those by the design of the author and those by the creative interaction of the reader, can only be realized by an ironic discernment that is critical of Dasein's projection of its preunderstanding.
If the play of interaction has occurred with an «effective historical consciousness» that has realized a «fusion of horizons», that something is a new «subjectivity» (34) that combines the subjectivities of the author and the reader.
Probably not all readers will agree with what the author writes in this chapter, for the whole matter of Christian perfection is very much disputed.
Matthew Lickona is a staff writer for the San Diego Reader, a weekly newspaper, and author of Swimming with Scapulars.
One could argue that such portraits are part and parcel of their hilariously hyperbolic writing style, but such obviously overdrawn characterizations reinforce the reader's feeling that the authors» only definition of a good mother is that of a mordant political activist with their particular brand of feminist conscience,
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