You can
read about the author at the end of the post.
http://gailhennessey.com/index.shtml?bullyingresources.html A great start to discussing bullying might be to read Hans Christian Andersen's The Ugly Duckling and
read about the author himself (I've written a play for kids on Hans Christian Andersen which you can find on my EdWord Exchange site (see below).
As a reader, I love
reading about the author's personal side... what are you currently working on, vacations, fun stuff.
Also in BookPage: Read an interview about There's Something About Christmas;
read about the author's marketing savvy.
Honestly, it will always sting for a nanosecond when
I read about authors winning awards that I can't begin to hope to win as an indie, or heading off on book tours, or getting picked to speak at big events, or receiving glowing reviews from notable publications, or hobnobbing with other big name authors.
And then I started
reading about authors that were doing it on their own and though it was scary for me because I thought I might be throwing away a possible career in traditional publishing if I went ahead and self - published myself, I just finally decided that I would take to a book five manuscripts I've already written and publish them, see how it went.»
Children often ignore the end matter that is so important in books, but I hope they will
read about the author and Tatum in the fascinating endnotes.
Every once - in - a-while
you read about authors behaving badly and that stems from insecurity, fragile egos, and fear.
Read about the authors, Glenna and Fiona.
It was interesting to
read about the author's journey through researching and writing this novel in the Author's Note.
Reading about the author getting into relationships with men that didn't really see her was tough, I imagine it was so much tougher to have lived it though.
It was interesting to
read about the author's journey through researching
I loved
reading about the authors shrines.
It is also a means for people to see my books and
read about author tips and issues on my blog.
Do not be too impressed by
reading about that Author who is selling 200 copies in a day; instead read about his or her struggling days.
With the advent of Amazon, media consumers could suddenly buy books online as soon as they saw, or heard about, or
read about the author... so book promotion opportunities could become sales opportunities, too.
I read about the authors taking out a page against Amazon.
and I looked over the very slick program, and
read about the authors, and sighed, explained to them that no — these authors are picked by a committee, who draws on the NYT best seller list and those books which hit in a big way.
To stay up - to - date, sign up for our newsletter, and
read about our authors below.
The guest blog posts featuring independent authors have been fairly popular with the blog's readers, and I will be continuing that in the weeks to come as I enjoy
reading about the authors who create the material I've been enjoying as much as you.
My usual reading habits of easing into a book took over and I fiddled with the table of contents,
read about the author, the epilogue.
Over the past few days, I've been reading The Dhandho Investor which reading led me to investigate a little more about the author, Mohnish Pabrai (I often like to
read about authors whose works I've enjoyed).
Instead of simply making a list of the top dividend investing blogs, we thought you would have more fun
reading about the author prior to read his blog.
Not exact matches
If you're unsure
about what your goal for the book is,
read this piece
about the mistakes that
authors make when framing the results they are looking for, and how to better frame.
I became obsessed with radical science, the future of technology, the future of biotech... I was
reading very interesting scientists and
authors that were speaking
about ideas of singularity, and life extension, and science fiction.
For example, if you know someone who loves to
read, send an article or book review
about his or her favorite
author.
(By the way, as you
read the conclusions keep in mind the
authors are not talking just
about high - tech entrepreneurs.
The
author is writing
about looking at the payout ratio of dividend paying stocks and evaluating their ability to sustain their dividends or even their financial strength and profitability Continue
reading →
The
author was... [
Read More...]
about Could you Earn the Boy Scout Personal Finance Merit Badge?
Read the Table of Contents
Read the Index
Read Excerpts
Read Endorsements From More Than 50 Entrepreneurs and Marketers
Read Reviews
About the
Authors About GREEN Guerrilla Marketing Have Shel Speak Order Now
This account I started this year after
reading about it from several different
authors on Seeking Alpha (side note: if you are interested in Dividend Growth Investing and managing your retirement portfolio you HAVE to check out this site, it's one of my main sources for stock research).
I come to these conversations based on what I
read from the
author and only contribute my own voice to counter what I feel is a diatribe of irrational and fantasy charmed people with letters after their names who have no idea of what they write
about.
We
read about them from the ideological perspective of the actual
author.
Reading the account of how this professor expressed himself
about the
author's experience with the dying begs the question in my mind, - How many religious scholars and clergymen are as truly enlightened
about life, death and the nature of things as they self - satisfyingly claim to be doctored in religion?
Don't you think that the lurid fantasy / sci - fi (or crazed, hallucinating)
author of Revelation
read (or heard
about) the book of Daniel?
In thinking
about your words â $ œtrue witnessâ $, I am reminded of a Scottish pastor / teacher /
author I once
read.
I post
about a hundred words, and you think I sound like the sort of person who
reads a certain
author?
Reading articles like this is so painful because it is so obvious the
author knows nothing
about any of the religions he's writing on.
I didn't
read it, but sometimes a book's title tells everything one needs to know
about both its
author and its contents.
That's one of the things I was pointing out to someone who
read a book on necromancy (long island medium) and was totally sold on everything the
author wrote and was now at «peace» from
reading about the endless cycles of death — i.e. soul coming back as such... dying then coming back again as another.
When you
read in the Bible
about proclaiming Jesus as Lord, following Jesus, taking up your cross, eternal reward, inheriting the Kingdom, life in the Spirit, faithful living, and on and on and on, the
author who wrote that text was primarily thinking of how we should live as followers of Jesus so that we can experience the life God meant for us to live.
Maybe the Holy Spirit is at work around the world to bring multiple
authors and pastors and theologians to similar ideas
about similar things all at once, and so when I
read something in someone else's book that sounds a lot like something I have written, but they don't give me credit, it is not that they «borrowed» from me, but because both of us were listening to what the Spirit has been whispering to minds all over the world.
It was only obvious to me because I have
read most of the books by
Author B and was shocked to see so many of his ideas and insights being written
about as if they belonged to
Author A.
One of the reasons I am thinking
about all of this is because of the book I just
read, Unmasking the Powers, and what the
author said in there
about the angels of nations, and how national pride and patriotism for the country could be a form of idolatry.
Although few of the
authors have
read anything
about him except that he talked to birds, they have raised poor Francis to the rank of first «ecological saint,» while conveniently ignoring his myriad admonitions
about asceticism and communal ownership of property.
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.
Ironically, as I was
reading this book
about how to live as Christians in a post-Christian era, I ran across an exchange between atheist Christopher Hitchens (
author of the best - selling book God is Not Great) and Suchin Pak (correspondent for MTV news).
I've
read plenty of Christian
authors, know a good deal
about fiction, publishing, and such.
What is funny
about this article is that the
author has clearly not
read the entire trilogy.
But when the Rev. Paul F.M. Zahl
read several of King's novels, he learned something new
about the
author: There's a lot of faith behind his fright.