I don't
often write reviews for non media products but I was impressed with the quality and got on of those (small business, please review) emails.
Not exact matches
who
writes often for the New York
Review of Books.
But it thrilled me to read smart, relevant, and
often sharp - edged essays and
reviews written by men and women who think faith matters: matters
for our political system, matters
for our culture, matters
for our souls.
In all honesty, this is the complaint
written most
often in my
reviews for all terrain strollers.
«[A company] can pay workers small amounts to
write negative online
reviews for a competing business,
often fabricating stories of bad experiences or service,» Zhao says.
Every week I
write a beauty
review and
often that
review is based on me using the product
for a couple of weeks.
Is it true that critics are paid by the studios to
write rave
reviews to hype up certain movies and / or actors??? I don't know if I'm in the minority here, but I more
often than not always find myself at odds with established critics (and The Academy
for that matter.)
When I
wrote my
review for Dallas Buyers Club, it began with a preamble of sorts concerning my problem with biopics in film, and how
often they have a tendency to disappoint.
For this assignment, I
often have my students
write articles about school events that are happening in November or a
review of a Fall or Thanksgiving themed book.
For some reason people will not
write reviews even though they
often make comments on a FB post or blog that it was a «great story».
When I started on the site, the «
review» space was
for book lovers to
write their thoughts and express themselves, maybe rant or joke,
often post funny (and irrelevant) pictures.
Over the years, I've read many thousands of
reviews posted at BookBrowse, and those that have been
written by students
for school projects run the gamut from positive to negative, but more
often than not they tend towards the vitriolic or just plain bored.
I've
written a Kindle Fire
Review for what it is worth and I do find myself using the Android Kindle Ereader app more
often than I used to.
Despite having lived in New York
for 15 years, Carey once again sets his latest book, at least in part, in Australia, but we're also taken on a wild ride through Japan and New York in a novel that has received exceptional
reviews from all prepublication
review sources (including three starred
reviews), and has been variously described as «a masterpiece», «a certifiable hoot», «edgy, irreverent,
often hilariously profane», «sharply observed, well
written, and acerbically witty».
On the whole Amazon should be praised
for trying to clean up its
reviews and guidelines, but they continue to go about it in a rash way,
often punishing the authors as much as those that
write fake
reviews.
When I talk to readers about
reviews I
often hear that they would like to
write a
review for their favorite author, but aren't sure how to go about it.
It is disfigured by being stickered or
written on — most
often with the message «
Review Copy - Not
for Sale».
Some of these are books I've been given, and others are books I bought (
often with my Koorong vouchers —
for those of you who live in Australia or New Zealand, Koorong.com.au gives you a $ 10 voucher
for every four
reviews you
write on their site, or every two video
reviews.
Professional reviewers
often work
for large publications or companies (like Publishers Weekly or Kirkus
Reviews) but many others
write for independent websites, such as those covered in an an earlier BookWorks post.
Research found that «women were responsible
for buying two thirds of books sold in the U.S. and U.K.,» however
reviews often cover more books
written by men.
For Broad Street
Review, critic Mark Cofta
writes that the «nuanced» and «muscular» production offers «material
often abstract and unrealistic with a grounded - ness that draws us in.»
Lawyers and law professors
often write books and law -
review articles about cases in which they have been personally involved, especially as the attorney
for one of the parties.
Mr. Roessler
often combines his passions
for writing and law by contributing pieces to legal publications such as the North Carolina Law
Review, the Charlotte Law
Review, and the Southwestern Law
Review.
The research evidence in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander tobacco control is growing quickly, even though there are still many gaps, and the
review will be useful to the recommendations
for the future
for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander tobacco control, as will evidence from other settings,
often written by Australia's many world - leading tobacco control researchers.
So I directed them to other sites, but
often times my client's couldn't figure out how to
write the
reviews on google, yelp or yellow pages,
for one of many reasons, they didn't have an account or use google
for their mail, or didn't use yelp regularly so the
reviews wouldn't show up.