Following guidelines provided by design experts at Reader's Digest and tailored to
your desired reading audience, the interior pages of your book will include custom chapter titles, headings, page numbers and other elements to make your book easier for readers to enjoy.
Following guidelines provided by design experts at Simon & Schuster and tailored to
your desired reading audience, the interior pages of your book will include custom chapter titles, headings, page numbers and other elements to make your book easier for readers to enjoy.
Not exact matches
This
desire to be
read by the
audience harkens back to the dialogical nature of the smart cycle, which Perkins has shown is always part of a larger conversation between the filmmaker and social culture.
To put it another way, while I'm more than sympathetic to Jonathan's
desire to
read Karen Ordahl Kupperman's book about early America before weighing in on The New World (I speak as one who
read four different books about feudal Japan before writing my review of The Last Samurai a few years back), I think it's also essential to keep in mind the fact that most
audiences who see the film will come to it with very little, if any, historical background, and that to a certain extent the film even asks to be
read ahistorically.
How to you insulate / protect yourself from the
desire to post personal and even political posts on Facebook but at the same time avoid alienating your
reading audience who might take exception to those posts / opinions?
Any author, who has taken the time to write and publish a book,
desires to see it
read by their intended
audience.
The need /
desire for a trailer also definitely depends on your
reading audience.
I Know Something About Love
reads as a gushing four - verse love poem to love itself — an extended visual sonnet that unfolds in time and space, instilling optimism, hope and
desire in the love - stricken
audience that ventures to dive on in.
I remember
reading in Bette Davis's biography (she's one of my favorite actors), that when she was once asked about the great secrets of her success she said, «to suppress the
desire to be loved by the
audience,» and «brown mascara.»
To ensure that your resume gets
read by your
desired audience (meaning that picky scanning system!)