In the big houses — at least in the old days — the imprint would get
name authors in your genre to «blurb» your book, but usually the author didn't have anything to do with it.
Find the biggest
name authors in the genre and check out their Amazon author profiles.
Big
name authors in the trad pub world have lots of incentives to stay (they get lots of marketing $ and support).
Let's take a look at how he's made himself interesting and discoverable, just like all those big -
name authors in the market.
We've got some big -
name authors in it and some newer authors in it.
Some of the big
named authors in attendance included Margaret Atwood, Dan Brown and Nicholas Sparks.
Not exact matches
In one, scholars were asked to read and rate research papers; unbeknown to them, the
names had been changed to change the gender of the
authors, and the scholars rated the papers «written» by men as better than the ones that appeared to be
authored by women.
Also driving the trend is a collective cultural disgust with «obscene comp programs — the Monopoly money, the pay schemes that screw the little investor» — that have been proffered
in recent years, says Charles A. (Chuck) Coonradt,
author of The Game of Work and CEO of a consulting company by the same
name in Park City, Utah.
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.
And they use the
author's
name as a verb that can refer either to purging or meticulous folding: «Waiting for kettle to boil... So I Kondoed my recipe books,» Elaine Colliar, a family - finance columnist for Scotland's Sunday Mail, proclaimed
in a recent Facebook post,» reported the WSJ recently.
Brené Brown,
author of Daring Greatly, recommended writing the
names of people whose opinions matter to you on a small note card and keeping it
in your wallet.
Brands: Many big
names in media have suffered «sudden deaths,» as the
authors put it.
Fellow OPEN Forum
author John Jantsch is
in there, to
name just another reason why you should get on that.
«Trump tried to get as much newspaper coverage as possible [early
in his career], always pushing his Trump [brand] and the adjective «billionaire» attached to his
name or «successful real estate developer» and «rich,»» says Gwenda Blair,
author of «The Trumps: Three Generations of Builders and a President.»
He called one of the report's
authors, Maggie Haberman (whose
name he initially misspelled), a «third - rate reporter,» and said the sources
in the story were «non-existent» and a «drunk / drugged up loser» who hates Cohen.
-- Take the books you're reading and drop their
names or
author names in http://www.ubersuggest.org — look for subtopics around the books or
authors that people are looking for and look for content gaps there.
The city of Boerne was
named in honor of Ludwig Börne, a Jewish - German
author, though he never actually visited the city.
Finds matches
in Author List, Article Title, and Journal
Name.
But if I use the right schema around my
name in the article's HTML, I can indicate to Google that I'm the
author of the article, not just another term
in a sea of indistinguishable words.
In the article, the MSM propagandist states such things as: 2017 has seen, according to his one time Goldman Sachs source, a «dramatic crash in [physical gold coin] demand,» that interest in gold coins is linked to «political conservatism, or anarcho - libertarianism» and «end of the world right wing sentiments,» that gold has been implicated in a «conspiracy to commit money laundering,» that gold is «financed by people in the narcotics trade,» that it comes from «illegal mines and drug dealers in Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador,» that «the federal authorities assume the NTR Metals [case] represented only a fraction of illegally sourced and financed gold,» that therefore the US attorney is broadly investigating the gold industry, that gold is «produced by exploited workers,» that «crude [gold] extraction techniques create serious and lasting environmental damage,» that gold plays an important part in «tax evasion,» that it is related to American gun sales, which the author abhors; that «drug dealers [use] gold imports as a way of laundering their proceeds,» and that «they came to realize that illegal gold [is] an intrinsically better business» than drug dealing; to name but a few of the aspersions cast against gold in the short articl
In the article, the MSM propagandist states such things as: 2017 has seen, according to his one time Goldman Sachs source, a «dramatic crash
in [physical gold coin] demand,» that interest in gold coins is linked to «political conservatism, or anarcho - libertarianism» and «end of the world right wing sentiments,» that gold has been implicated in a «conspiracy to commit money laundering,» that gold is «financed by people in the narcotics trade,» that it comes from «illegal mines and drug dealers in Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador,» that «the federal authorities assume the NTR Metals [case] represented only a fraction of illegally sourced and financed gold,» that therefore the US attorney is broadly investigating the gold industry, that gold is «produced by exploited workers,» that «crude [gold] extraction techniques create serious and lasting environmental damage,» that gold plays an important part in «tax evasion,» that it is related to American gun sales, which the author abhors; that «drug dealers [use] gold imports as a way of laundering their proceeds,» and that «they came to realize that illegal gold [is] an intrinsically better business» than drug dealing; to name but a few of the aspersions cast against gold in the short articl
in [physical gold coin] demand,» that interest
in gold coins is linked to «political conservatism, or anarcho - libertarianism» and «end of the world right wing sentiments,» that gold has been implicated in a «conspiracy to commit money laundering,» that gold is «financed by people in the narcotics trade,» that it comes from «illegal mines and drug dealers in Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador,» that «the federal authorities assume the NTR Metals [case] represented only a fraction of illegally sourced and financed gold,» that therefore the US attorney is broadly investigating the gold industry, that gold is «produced by exploited workers,» that «crude [gold] extraction techniques create serious and lasting environmental damage,» that gold plays an important part in «tax evasion,» that it is related to American gun sales, which the author abhors; that «drug dealers [use] gold imports as a way of laundering their proceeds,» and that «they came to realize that illegal gold [is] an intrinsically better business» than drug dealing; to name but a few of the aspersions cast against gold in the short articl
in gold coins is linked to «political conservatism, or anarcho - libertarianism» and «end of the world right wing sentiments,» that gold has been implicated
in a «conspiracy to commit money laundering,» that gold is «financed by people in the narcotics trade,» that it comes from «illegal mines and drug dealers in Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador,» that «the federal authorities assume the NTR Metals [case] represented only a fraction of illegally sourced and financed gold,» that therefore the US attorney is broadly investigating the gold industry, that gold is «produced by exploited workers,» that «crude [gold] extraction techniques create serious and lasting environmental damage,» that gold plays an important part in «tax evasion,» that it is related to American gun sales, which the author abhors; that «drug dealers [use] gold imports as a way of laundering their proceeds,» and that «they came to realize that illegal gold [is] an intrinsically better business» than drug dealing; to name but a few of the aspersions cast against gold in the short articl
in a «conspiracy to commit money laundering,» that gold is «financed by people
in the narcotics trade,» that it comes from «illegal mines and drug dealers in Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador,» that «the federal authorities assume the NTR Metals [case] represented only a fraction of illegally sourced and financed gold,» that therefore the US attorney is broadly investigating the gold industry, that gold is «produced by exploited workers,» that «crude [gold] extraction techniques create serious and lasting environmental damage,» that gold plays an important part in «tax evasion,» that it is related to American gun sales, which the author abhors; that «drug dealers [use] gold imports as a way of laundering their proceeds,» and that «they came to realize that illegal gold [is] an intrinsically better business» than drug dealing; to name but a few of the aspersions cast against gold in the short articl
in the narcotics trade,» that it comes from «illegal mines and drug dealers
in Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador,» that «the federal authorities assume the NTR Metals [case] represented only a fraction of illegally sourced and financed gold,» that therefore the US attorney is broadly investigating the gold industry, that gold is «produced by exploited workers,» that «crude [gold] extraction techniques create serious and lasting environmental damage,» that gold plays an important part in «tax evasion,» that it is related to American gun sales, which the author abhors; that «drug dealers [use] gold imports as a way of laundering their proceeds,» and that «they came to realize that illegal gold [is] an intrinsically better business» than drug dealing; to name but a few of the aspersions cast against gold in the short articl
in Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador,» that «the federal authorities assume the NTR Metals [case] represented only a fraction of illegally sourced and financed gold,» that therefore the US attorney is broadly investigating the gold industry, that gold is «produced by exploited workers,» that «crude [gold] extraction techniques create serious and lasting environmental damage,» that gold plays an important part
in «tax evasion,» that it is related to American gun sales, which the author abhors; that «drug dealers [use] gold imports as a way of laundering their proceeds,» and that «they came to realize that illegal gold [is] an intrinsically better business» than drug dealing; to name but a few of the aspersions cast against gold in the short articl
in «tax evasion,» that it is related to American gun sales, which the
author abhors; that «drug dealers [use] gold imports as a way of laundering their proceeds,» and that «they came to realize that illegal gold [is] an intrinsically better business» than drug dealing; to
name but a few of the aspersions cast against gold
in the short articl
in the short article.
The
author George Clason writes, «
In old Babylon there once lived a certain very rich man
named Arkad.
The Bitcoin
name was tainted
in my mind then, but my good friend Steve Patterson, the
author of What's the Big Deal About Bitcoin?
I was not familiar with Maurece Schiller's
name, but when Tom mentioned that this was the
author that Joel Greenblatt referenced
in his lectures, I was immediately curious.
Vanity press publishing is just a fancy
name for self - publishing, and there are thousands of self - publishing companies that offer aspiring
authors the chance to see their work
in print... for a fee.
Ben Carlson of A Wealth of Common Sense blog (and
author of a great book by the same
name), had a recent post Playing the Probabilities outlining that time has been an investor's best friend (for those investors that have had
in some cases quite a bit of time), pointing to the following table.
This ensures the
author's
name shows up
in search engine results with the post.
in this particular instance — the dorothy business as it relates to this blog — are direct references to Acharya S, whose real
name is Dorothy M. Murdock — an
author of some arguably controversial books that appear to have caused some butthurt among a few mentally unstable folks.
His father was the famed children's
author A.A. Milne, who
named the lead human character
in his Winnie the Pooh books after his son.
When I was born
in 1960, two Gospel
authors (John and Mark) cracked the top 10 for boys, and Mary was the most popular
name for newborn girls.
Quotations from these four books will be indicated by the
author's
name and the page reference
in parenthesis.
An
author can't just say that «
in Jesus's day, one of the ways people got around actually saying the
name of God was to substitute the word «heaven»» without telling me how he knows that to be true!
In this chapter the
author names two quite different models of excellent schooling.
They may or may not receive the glory that belongs to God alone by not doing these things openly
in the
name of Jesus who is the
author of the good works He ordained that we should walk
in.
2)
name usage statistics do not guarantee the miraculous — but they certainly place an
author in that immediate context (or at the very least, with direct access to someone who was from that immediate context), which is a MAJOR contingency that has been much debated
in the question of authorship... which IS the topic you raised.
The unknown
authors of the Gospels are kind of the message «From:»
name where it's difficult to tell where it came from because it was «spoofed» (appearing to originate from one sender, but
in reality comes from someone else).
But it fulfills marvelously the
author's purpose as he states it at the original ending
in John 20:31, «These are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that believing you may have life
in his
name.»
In the oldest versions of Genesis that we have, the author of the first creation story used the word «Elohim» as the name for the Jewish God and in the second version the author used the name «Yahweh»
In the oldest versions of Genesis that we have, the
author of the first creation story used the word «Elohim» as the
name for the Jewish God and
in the second version the author used the name «Yahweh»
in the second version the
author used the
name «Yahweh».
You are perhaps familiar with the fact that the
author JUST went over passing judgement
in God's
name?
In the current state of debate about these matters, I perhaps ought to expect myself to feel «excluded» as a man from reading Jane Austen's Emma until all female references to the protagonist are edited out, the title changed to M., and the
author's
name reduced to the discreet neutrality of J. Austen.
So devoted were the American founders to this understanding of religious liberty that, as Thomas Jefferson wrote
in his Autobiography (1821), the
authors of the Virginia Bill for Establishing Religious Freedom refrained from mentioning the exact
name of the «holy
author of our religion.»
Some church fathers
in 150 — 200 AD decided
authors names needed to be added to the gospels
in order to give them credibility.
Unfortunately, the
authors in this collection almost always turn to «Father, Son, and Spirit» as the only faithful way to
name the divine; they do not suggest alternatives that they would accept, even as a complement to traditional
naming.
Thus one could ask the
authors exactly how often and at what points the Trinity must be called «Father, Son, and Holy Spirit» without compromising the faith; one could also ask feminists how often and
in what contexts one could invoke that
naming without supporting male dominance.
To refer to all the Syrian and Christian Arab
authors who speak of India
in connection with Thomas would therefore be equivalent to referring to all who have made mention of the
name of St. Thomas.
Second, for someone who is so uptight as this
author about knowing religions and even writing a book about it, the mere fact that not ONCE
in this article did you use the official and correct
name of the church of Jesus Christ of latter day saints (aka Mormon)
in my mind completely discredits your temper tantrum.
But the
author is extremely likable, she has done many good deeds
in the
name of the Lord, and frankly, the women
in the group are now invested.
The fourteenth - century Dominican Inquisitor, Bernard Gui,
author of Practica Inquisitionis is famously portrayed
in the film version of The
Name of Rose as a bloodthirsty fanatic.
The biggest
names in women's ministry — from Hatmaker to
authors like Shauna Niequist — remain intimately involved
in their own local churches, and most have Bible college or seminary degrees.
Its purpose is stated succinctly by its
author, «these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that believing you may have life
in his
name» (20:31).
The
author intentionally or unintentionally creates a fundamental misrepresentation of reality by first leading people to conflate the numerical popularity of the
name in relation to other
names with the overall popularity of the
name in relation to all babies born.