Sentences with phrase «from readers if»

But I'm happy to share what knowledge I have and would love to hear from readers if they have an answer to any question that stymies me!»
Bestselling series have longer books; authors face reluctance from readers if series books are under 50k words
I also take emails from readers if they are trying to re-create a look or find a celebrity item.»
For instance, the illustrator, research assistant, author and editor of a book might each be able to gain a small payment from each reader if everything that went into the book contained «a unique code assigned to that creator,» Lovy explains.
I know I would've appreciated it from a reader if I strutted like that and my job should consist of quality workmanship (just in case you thought it... I understand these posts may not have been for work, but I imagine after 25 years of journalism habits rub off in all aspects of a person's life... that is, moreso should they take pride in their work).

Not exact matches

An ISIS e-book published in the early days of the Islamic State encouraged readers to check out anti-Israel protests with non-Muslims calling for «the fall of Zionism,» if not to draw recruits from this demographic then relying on their rhetoric to hammer away at the «financial elite.»
Cory Haik, who recently joined Mic as chief strategy officer after working in a similar capacity at the Washington Post, says a big part of what she and Mic's director of growth and editorial products, Marcus Moretti, are working on is an attempt to marry traditional measurements of reader activity with newer ways of determining if readers are getting long - term value from what the site is providing.
Authors who post their ideas and sample pages to Inkshares» community of 100,000 readers, for instance, will be published if their ideas get 750 preorders from readers.
If it works as planned, it could shore up the paper's print subscriber base and offer a small new revenue stream from digital - only readers.
You might not think you're that interesting, but the funny thing about networks is that even if you are boring (surely, you mustn't be, given that you're a Fortune reader), hackers may still aim to A) profit from your misfortune, and B) use you as stepping stone to get at someone else.
misleads the reader (apples are only bad for you if you eat too many every day)... Our system identifies posts that are clickbait and which web domains and Pages these posts come from.
Every industry has authority bloggers, and if you can find the ones that are popular in your niche, you have a number of opportunities to connect with your target buyers — from submitting guest posts for publication, running display ads, to responding to reader questions in the comments.
«All your clear and pleasing sentences will fall apart if you don't keep remembering that writing is linear and sequential, that logic is the glue that holds it together, that tension must be maintained from one sentence to the next and from one paragraph to the next and from one section to the next, and that narrative — good old - fashioned storytelling — is what should pull your readers along without their noticing the tug.»
If the closure of the popular Google Reader service has taught us anything, it's that no program is safe from the search giant's chopping block.
Top tip: If your blog is aimed around professional readers and business people you might have more potential traffic from LinkedIn and Google +.
Way, way too many business blogs seem terrified that they might actually strike up a conversation and never say anything that incites a reaction from readers — and if somebody does comment, there's nobody around to keep the conversation going.
And even if the indicator was valid (counterfactually), the article asks readers to accept as given that earnings are properly reported here, that they will grow by nearly 50 % over the coming year, and that investors are willing to key the long - term return they require from stocks to the yield on 10 - year bonds, which has been abnormally depressed in a flight to safety.
If you have the capability, I would simply suggest reviewing your analytics data for referral information and just keep tabs that way (a previous post on Evaluating Link Results has a great comment from one of the readers regarding this — check out his idea for certain).
And as a few of your readers pointed out, odds are there will still be something left from my investable assets as well, as they would only be exhausted, under the 3 % rule, if my future is as bad as the worst 50 - year period in history.
So how should you start out if you're starting from zero, as one reader is asking?
Guest blogging need to pitch the people that what all the benefits readers get from our guest post and if you've unique compelling content that provide real value will often go viral instead focus it for link building.
You need to convert that blog traffic into leads, and if you've written some amazing content, your readers will probably want to learn more from you.
But from a true Christian perspective — if that's what you choose to believe in — or not — she's misleading the readers.
I wonder if I am the only reader to find Williamson's stance as offensive as Ms. Nouvelle's: here's an employee from the oh - so - liberal world of public radio who fled to the security of provincial life and, through a rather sophistical analysis, passes off as common decency, common bigotry.
If you're part of the TLS group, you'd have already heard about it, but I very recently joined a group of tarot card readers whose own religious beliefs range from secular to progressive Christian.
My point was merely to show that both a God of Love or a God of Wrath can be perceived from the text, and ultimately it is up to the reader to decide if the perception of what they know the world to be like and what they assume God — if He is real — to be like.
For if it succeeds in its mission, the Museum of the Bible will help reverse the bleaching out from our culture of what is arguably its deepest, noblest, and most important wellspring: the Word of God, molding the lives of the readers of the Book.
A long series like this is probably not the best way to use a blog, since readers come and go, and miss a post or two, and since the argument builds from post-to-post, if someone is just jumping in or misses a few post, they won't understand the flow of thought that brought us here.
If we could even effect in one percent of our readers a change - over from the conception of Space to the conception of Heaven, we should have made a beginning.
From start to finish, the book warns readers that, for example, «congregations can survive, but only if religious leaders roll up their sleeves and pay considerably more attention to young adults» and «unless religious leaders take younger adults more seriously, the future of American religion is in doubt.»
After soliciting questions and concerns from readers, I wrote a post entitled «Confessions of a Sponsorship Skeptic» that you can check out if you have questions yourself, and you can read all my posts from Bolivia here.
The Holy Spirit ministers to our deficiencies in more ways than we even realize, but any attempt to compel use of the KJV only would be wrong if it effectively cut the reader off from the Word.
Nearly all other notices of God's activity are found in the speech of the characters as if to reveal their growing awareness of what the storyteller has told the reader; God is present and active, even when God remains hidden from view.
Readers and viewers value storytelling for its power to let them identify with the common elements of humanity in characters very different from themselves; if they can't identify, they lose interest fast.
If the reader has some role in creating the authorial «intention'then why must one suppose that such an extraction originates fully from the authors / Bible and not from the readers?
And may no noise - making busybody interfere to snatch me out of my carefree content as the author of a little piece, or prevent a kind and benevolent reader from examining it at his leisure, to see if it contains anything that he can use.
I've already heard from several readers who plan to attend the conference.Please contact me if you will be in the Grand Rapids area April 15 - 17, and maybe we can grab coffee or lunch one day.
If Tim was missing from the autograph table or the green room of a network television show, he was likely in a corner praying with someone he'd just met — from a reader to a part - time bookstore stock clerk to a TV network anchorman.»
With cost containment becoming the new buzzword in medicine — particularly given the much - ridiculed but far from unreasonable apprehension that the Affordable Care Act could lead to «death panels» — a reader may worry that Gawande recommends forcing the weakest and most vulnerable out of the lifeboat if they refuse to jump themselves.
If a Catholic literary revival is to occur in the U.S. (or anywhere else), it will come from writers and readers, not the hierarchy.
Peter Kirk recently posted a quote from one of my blog posts (if you do this, let me know so I can come interact with your readers!)
Peter Whittle pointed out in the September Standpoint magazine that «If faced with a group of gang members playing music unbearably loud in the car next to them at traffic lights I personally know of nobody - nobody, from Daily Telegraph reader toGuardian reader - who would risk asking them to turn it down... but it's not just the gang culture.»
This qualifies the first half of that particular section, which calls for singing to come from one of the books of chant: «If there is no singing at the Entrance, the antiphon given in the Missal is recited either by the faithful, or by some of them, or by a reader; otherwise, it is recited by the Priest himself, who may even adapt it as an introductory explanation.»
If we may imagine a group of readers, from many different cultures and with various intellectual presuppositions, coming fresh to the New Testament, we shall expect them to respond to that literature in many different ways and to reach various conclusions as to its meaning and worth; but on one thing I believe it is fair to expect them to agree: «Here,» they would say, «is reflected a new and distinctive communal life.
The dissertation could not have been written without their enormous help — Kline encouraging and suggestive, and Ford (if the reader can imagine that serious countenance in the portrait shaking slowly, negatively, from side to side) resisting every move I made.
Even if one were to say that the biblical authors were exempt from this tendency when they wrote, the readers are not.
If the meaning of the text does not already confront the reader, how shall the act it announces not be reduced to a simple symbol of inner conversion, of the passage from the old man to the new?
(So that when you read a news story, for instance, you might also get a composite assessment value that was assigned directly from other readers without them ever having to express such assessment via speaking, writing, etc. if a group of people are on the scene of some event covered by the news, then obviously there would be great value in knowing some directly transferred assessment values from their brains, rather than what today we get as a summary from a few reporters plus maybe a few witnesses that still have to express what they saw.)
Writer / Readers, If this was 1776, what kind of an answer do you think you would get from our founding fathers?
One of the challenges of this view is that if Mark truly ended his narrative here, he seems to have concluded by deliberately not concluding, by dangling something incomplete and unsatisfying before the reader in the final verse: «So they went out and fled from the tomb, for terror and amazement had seized them; and they said nothing to anyone, for they were afraid.»
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