Sentences with phrase «other authors like»

, the ansible has become a staple of science fiction, with many other authors like Orson Scott Card using it in their books as well.
And I started the podcast to get to know other authors like back then.
Amazon wants authors to put up author pages, which is mutually beneficial, but we help them sell our books by listing other authors we like, reviewing other author's books, and occasionally writing blogs for them about books we like to read.
Many writing forums on the Internet feature other authors like yourself who provide useful information about which publishers are genuine and which you should avoid.
And I'm happy that I can also work with other authors like those here at the Independent Bookworm.
There's rather a lot of expertise available to the average self - publishing author, and if that author can't afford to pay for certain services or wishes to retain creative control, that's that author's prerogative — and no one is forcing Russo and other authors like him to read anything he doesn't want to read, or publish any differently than he always has.
I'll tell you who does know who I am and several other authors like me — READERS!
Being on KindleBoards lets other authors like myself know that I care enough about their triumphs and pitfalls to comment on them.
Other authors like John Green and Hugh Howey used platforms like Facebook and YouTube to build their fanbases as they became more popular.
Amazon has given me and many, many other authors like me a second life, in fact a life where I now make more each year than I ever did when I was traditionally published.
But last year, I heard about how some other authors like Joe Konrath and Karen McQuestion are doing well with ebooks.

Not exact matches

Today, thanks to ebooks and Amazon (amzn), self - publishing is a global phenomenon — an independent route intentionally chosen by more and more authors — that has spawned not only mega-bestsellers like Fifty Shades of Grey, but also hits in other realms, such as the movie version of The Martian.
In our view, the result of reading all three papers and others like them leads to a conclusion: we do not know the answers to the major problems the authors raise.
But according to happiness expert and author Christine Carter there's a more fundamental problem with adjusting your behavior to please others — not only does it harm you, but science shows that other people don't actually like it much either.
Follow the platinum rule, which authors Tony Alessandra and Michael J. O'Connor defined in their book The Platinum Rule, «Do unto others as they'd like done unto them.»
This ever - changing construct represents a way of communicating for people who like to inform each other about their daily activities and share common points of interest, according to Wikipedia authors Lambert M. Surhone, Mariam T. Tennoe, and Susan F. Henssonow.
Neil Pasricha, author of «The Book of Awesome» and «The Happiness Equation» on how to practice happiness like any other habit
Today, he is an author and authority on corporate management — in other words, an ideal «expert» for the new Fortune Fantasy Sports Executive League (Anyone can play, and scoring depends, in part, on how closely the player's picks match those of experts like Stengel.)
The NYT piece — along with other reporting about Amazon by people like author Brad Stone, in his book «The Everything Store,» — describes people sleeping in their cars in the company parking lot, or not sleeping at all for days.
Some mergers, like the 1999 Exxon Mobil juggernaut, have been near seamless, while some others, like the infamous 2001 Hewlett - Packard Compaq merger, have been bumpy, says Ben Dattner, an organizational psychologist and the author of The Blame Game: How the Hidden Rules of Credit and Blame Determine Our Success or Failure (Free Press, 2011).
Most of the other books I've read recently you've already had podcasts with the authors, like Sapiens I read recently, which I really enjoyed.
New York Times best - selling author and noted hedge fund trading specialist D.R. Barton made it his mission to bring the previously hidden investment strategies of legendary traders like George Soros, Warren Buffett, Jesse Livermore, and others into the open.
3) The discussion about scaling vs. keeping it small is a very interesting one: I liked that the author presented real - life cases for either scenarios for food for thought instead of advocating one or the other (e.g. presenting a single «formula» as the golden rule that all shall follow)-- I can see how this particular decision can be case sensitive and there really is no «right» answer as long as it works for the entrepreneur!
Initially, this list was made up of influencers we found by tracking keywords (like «content marketing») in Google Alerts, authors in industry trade publications, those who were talking about the topic on Twitter, and other bloggers that we just found interesting.
Authorship of John — many if not most NT scholars believe that John nor one of 12 wrote John; James — most agree not authored by James, and sometime in 2nd century AD; Peter — a mystery — some think that it could have been an early template for the other gospels; Luke — a mystery; Mark — finally it seems like we really might have another original author here — or were he and later Paul just using a very early Peter story?
All Fall Down by Jennifer Weiner:: I've liked some of this author's novels but others....
It seems to me that the author is also hoping that the president, and others like him, can revitalize a form of progressive Christianity that has fallen out of favor with the rise of the right - wing, mega-churches.
But like you say — if most of an author's ideas and content are being pulled from the ideas of authors in other books, it is only right and fair to give them more crthan two footnotes especially if content, argument structure and illustrations are similar (credit: Jeremy Myers).
That is why we have so much confusion about «religion», the Devil is the author of confusion and he wants us all mixed up and at each others» throats just because we all don't agree or we all don't act like a Christian should act.
The author's need to attach Christianity to a mass murder is strange... but he's stuck like all other liberal minded.
In this very article, the author undermines his own point by including the fact that this murderer plagiarized from other works that had nothing to do with Islam or Christianity, like the unabomber's manifesto.
However, just like the authors are conservative in allowing for other sources of this novelty, for the sake of argument I'll concede I could be wrong here.
Like other early church fathers, the author warns Christians against overemphasis on dress or cosmetics.
At the other end of the evangelical spectrum from Lindsell and Schaeffer are those like Dewey Beegle and Stephen Davis who believe that one must admit there are errors in the text of Scripture, even in areas related to the author's intention.24 Such errors, however, do not involve any of the basics of the faith.
Think of it like buying a book or attending a conference where the author and other attendees are all hanging around to talk with you.
And what are these dangers the author keeps mentioning but not enumerating and how do they compared to the dangers posed by organized religion and other organized philosophies like fascism and communism, «manifest destiny» and other philosophies that those oh so nobly «organized» people have «blessed» us with over the centuries?
The author of this article does little to move away from the critism we have for he and others like him.
Burge, like the other authors reviewed here, recounts the atrocity carried out by Jewish terrorists at the Arab village of DeirYassin just prior to the declaration of the Israeli state in 1948.
Of course, in a book like this, it is inevitable that those of us who tend to identify with one side or the other will nitpick some of the author's characterizations or claims.
@Weight These are not yeahs words on each post they are copied from other authors, just like all the information Yeah posts.
Noll, like many other recent authors, notes the growth, spirit, and enthusiasm of these new churches.
Did you ever hear that there were other books, letters, and documents that were written near the time the books of the Bible were written, claiming to be by authors like the Apostles Andrew, Thomas, Peter, and Paul, but which are not found in our Bible?
The author is just a liberal (like all the others on CNN)!
Several influential Christians are among this group, including Donald Miller, author of Blue Like Jazz and other books that speak meaningfully to younger believers.
«We're such a wealthy, spoiled culture that we feel like we have a right to fly on airplanes,» says Fulwiler, author of «Something Other than God,» which details her journey from atheism to Christianity.
The cities of which Mayernik writes» and I have been blessed to have spent time in all five» and others like them captivate us to this day; and whatever else can be said about such places, they demonstrate, in the author's words, that «the costs of building great cities can't be justified in purely pragmatic terms.»
And when I look ahead to upcoming books from first - time authors like Sarah Bessey, Elizabeth Esther, Glennnon Melton, Micha Boyett, and others, I feel so privileged to be part of what I consider a movement.
Like most authors, I have about 97 other book ideas on my computer that I want to write.
The authors of this paper, [Cozma - Petruţ et al 2017] noted that for IBS, further research studies are needed to elucidate the role of milk and dairy products in IBS [because other proteins beyond lactose, like casein, may be involved].
It's not that I have an issue with catering to special diets (and it's great to have resources like this for counselling patients if needed), but other than being «trendy» I can't tell why the author has chosen to do this.
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