Not exact matches
I think you will
find that your
book is full of useless
crap and rules you would never follow.
She would fill her bed with
crap (
books, pillows, anything she could
find to fill half of it) in a desperate attempt to feel less alone at night.
I
found out a few weeks ago I am expecting twins (I'll be 10 weeks tomorrow), and I simply can not tell which
books about multiple pregnancies are
crap and which are science - based, straightforward, and helpful by browsing Amazon reviews.
Is it this author for publishing
crap, or is it parents who really think they'll
find everything they need in a single
book without looking elsewhere for a second opinion?
When I finished these last two feeling like
crap and both significantly slower than 4:30, I knew I had to
find a change and that's was just about when I was finishing Chris McDougal's
book, Natural Born Heroes.
I do love to see everything as positive as I can and always, always
find beauty and happiness in the smallest things but today... I just feel like
crap, so I'll just hang on with my crappy day, be lazy, maybe read some
book, hopefully get over this damn flu and cold and feel much better tomorrow and more positive.
The battery on your traditional
book will not
crap out just as the hero is dangling off the cliff and you have to send it off somewhere for repair or buy a new battery online before you
find out what happens.
Do they think I'm made of money that I can buy ten
books of
crap just to
find one worth reading?
I also don't like judging based on intention, as in, it's fine for «good authors» with «real
books» to do things, but not
find for «hacks» who are publishing «
crap».
I can't phone up a venue to say I'd like to do a
book promotion for my own
book because I feel like they will think I'm a wannabe, unable to
find a publisher because I'm
crap.
I have
found that both publishers and independent production assistants (
book designers, graphic artists, editors, etc.) can produce
crap to great work.
Perhaps my reading experience is atypical, but I
find only about 0.3 % of self - published
books are worthy of reading --- the remaining 99.7 % has been utter
crap.
I don't imagine anyone here will be interested in any of the promoted
books, which look like the kind of middlebrow
crap you
find on the shelves at Tesco, all romance novels and misery memoirs, but it looks like Amazon are getting more and more serious about cutting publishers out of the equation altogether.
But it's true that to many people self - publishing means bad quality
books with no editing published by one of the vanity presses and the main concern is that this
crap is flooding the world and readers can't
find quality in the mass of rubbish.
-LSB-...] ``... to many people self - publishing means bad quality
books with no editing published by one of the vanity presses and the main concern is that this
crap is flooding the world and readers can't
find quality in the mass of rubbish.