Sentences with phrase «meeting their readers face»

It would be nice to get to meet my readers face to face.
Plus, it allows me to meet my readers face to face.
Many enjoy meeting their readers face - to - face, discussing their book, and maybe even signing a copy, allowing readers to have a one - of - a-kind treasure.
A book signing is a great way to meet readers face - to - face, and to help them see you as a real person with a personality — not just a name on a book spine.

Not exact matches

The Bible, however, still presents some problems to the modern reader as he faces the actual text, and so this book tries to meet those problems for the person — alone or in a group — who is willing to sit before the material and allow it to speak to him.
With first - hand research and content developed based on in - depth reader relationships, Foodservice Equipment & Supplies delivers digital, print, custom and face - to - face information that meets the needs of its audience — the $ 8.3 billion equipment and supplies marketplace.
Hey kids, this weekend's Roots Camp was a terrific experience — not only did I get to meet Ha - Hoa Dang and several other regular readers face to face, but I was lucky enough to sit in on a bunch of really fascinating discussions.
But then at some point I have to face the music: I have to do a book launch, have a book signing, meet my readers, introduce myself to bookstore managers, give radio interviews, appear on stage and give talks like the one I did to these students.
The post-up-her-ass reader might be frustrated with her current dating situation, but is conflicted about interracial dating because she's so deeply entrenched in what it MEANS to BE a black woman, with it's crippling demands of her allegiance that every move she makes to cross the color line is met with her tripping and falling on her face because she insists in getting in her own way.
In this volume, Kozol reconnects with some of the children his readers first met in Rachel and Her Children (1988), Amazing Grace (1996), Savage Inequalities (1991) and Shame of the Nation (2006) and his other works documenting the social and educational conditions facing urban children.
Posted by A.C. Crispin for Writer BewareI thought Writer Beware's readers might be interested in hearing about the only time I've ever had a face to face meeting with a known writing scammer.
Readers meet Paul Cravath, a young lawyer who has been hired by Westinghouse to face Edison (who makes an especially intriguing and rather terrifying villain).
«Let's face it — Indies are under scrutiny by readers and have higher standards to meet.
As an author there is nothing like meeting face - to - face with new and current readers and hearing their excitement over your book.
I'd really enjoy reviving the «Meet the Neighbors» tradition of Dot Earth readers showing their faces as a way to keep discourse humane and civil.
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