If you are
a regular reader of my posts, you know how much I hate query letters!
If you're
a regular reader of my posts and books you know that I strongly believe you need to invest in your own ISBNs.
The investment thesis for DGTC is simple, and the company name should ring familiar to
any regular reader of my posts (if not, see my writeups on SPLP).
Not exact matches
I do owe my
readers more updates and I'll try to get back on a
regular weekly schedule
of posting my latest purchases.
Well, you know you have those
of us who are
regular readers and would miss your writing, but maybe you can think about just
posting when a topic really excites you in some way, and not feel obligated to write otherwise.
A
reader recently commented on a
post asking me about the difference between nutritional yeast and
regular yeast, which made me realize that it may be an unsual ingredient for many
of you.
For
regular readers, this will
post will probably give you a sense
of déjà vu.
Most
of my
regular readers are probably aware
of the fact that all
of my
posts are vegan at this point, while my diet is largely, though not completely, plant based.
In a really busy year, this month seems to have been the busiest
of the lot; I've tried to be creative by combining as many entries to blog challenges as possible —
regular readers will have spotted this from earlier
posts.
This
post was inspired by a link I was sent by one
of our
regular readers (thanks John — the link is further down the page, incidentally) and it's a really great article, a real conversation starter, so
As my
regular readers will know, I've written a number
of posts over the past while on nursing on airplanes.
This is what every blogger wants — lots
of regular and loyal
readers who come back over and over and leave comments or share the
posts, building the readership and the «link juice» to help their
posts appear in google searches (see this
post on «growing your network «-RRB-.
As
regular readers of The Lunch Tray know, many
of us wrestled with just this issue last week, in response to my
post, ««Good» Food /» Bad» Food: How Do We Teach Healthful Eating Without Driving Kids Nuts?»
Very informative
post, i'm
regular reader of your site.
Regular readers of TLT know about our semi-
regular feature called the «Kids» Snack Hall
of Shame»: outraged parents send in photos or descriptions
of the horrible snacks fed to their kids at parties, sporting events, school functions, etc. and I
post them here.
I recently read a
post by another mom, a terrific writer who fills her numerous blogs with all kinds
of «great mother» articles: gardening, cooking, natural parenting, crafting, just the kind
of articles that make the
reader (me) feel inadequate that I'm not doing those kinds
of things on a
regular basis in MY house.
«
Regular readers of this blog will know that we have
posted numerous warnings in recent years about the very poor fire safety standards at Grenfell Tower and elsewhere in RBKC [Royal Borough
of Kensington and Chelsea].
Regular readers of a newsgroup devoted to a particular topic get justifiably upset when people start
posting messages on an entirely different subject.
If you're a
regular reader, you know that I
post recipes that fall into a variety
of diets like vegan, paleo, vegetarian and raw, and / or are gluten and dairy free.
But in early days
of your blog your traffic and
regular readers may not be enough to do justice to your content.That's when guest
posting on authority sites help.
I'm so excited to be guest
posting here at Loop Looks, as I'm a
regular reader and fan
of Erin's cool, classic style.
** Warning this
post contains some rude language ** If you are a
regular reader of my blog you will know that...
If you don't know what a blog party (Also called a Blog Hop and a linky party) is, it's a
regular post where other bloggers can share their best articles and
readers can find a great collection
of similar
posts that they are interested in.
If you're a
regular reader you knew I was going to have a crazy week with multi-state travel, relatives, horses and more, so writing two more
posts seemed a bit
of a pipe dream.
If you are a
regular reader of ours than you'll know that normally you get two homes in one
post when it comes to our home tours but this year Vanessa and I each have our own special day!
Regular readers will know we have a diverse team
of daters writing occasional
posts for 30 Dates, the youngest being «The Student» — a Sheffield Uni student, who has shared the ups and downs
of her uni love life with us all for her entire third year.
readers will continue to see the
regular types
of posts that they have come to expect.
Posted by Victoria Strauss for Writer BewareSo... if you're a
regular reader of this blog, you know I love the crazy stuff, the little nuggets
of publishing weirdness that I run across from time to time.
Posted by Victoria Strauss for Writer Beware If you're a
regular reader here, you'll know that I love the strange and twisted stuff that happens (mostly) at the outer fringes
of the publishing and writing worlds.
Blake Crouch (www.blakecrouch.com),
of the Wayward Pines series,
posts videos and a
regular weekly show to keep in touch with his
readers.
The feature also allows authors and publishers to get the books into the hands
of non-reviewers (i.e.,
regular readers), who are then encouraged to
post a review, usually before the book's publication date.
Kindle 3:
Regular readers of this blog knew this would be on the list (to be honest, it's what prompted the idea for this blog
post).
My
regular one has such a mix
of readers on it — some who like one series, some who like another, and some who've never read my books and just signed up because
of my blog
posts.
Regular readers know that I'm not especially enthusiastic about investing in real estate (see here and here for examples
of why), so this
post won't come as a big surprise.
On another note — For those
of you who don't check for
post comments on a
regular basis, a
reader suggested I ask all
of you for input on what has worked for you and what hasn't when developing and working your own trading models.
UPDATE: NOON 8/21 — One emendation,
regular reader Steve pointed out one bit
of sloppiness in the above
post.
Some
of my
readers who vehemently disagreed with the original version
of this
post appear to be
regulars at Ritz - Carlton.
I have found a lot
of new followers through the fb page, people who were most likely not
regular readers of this blog — I
post links from the blog there along with other interesting travel stories and it reaches many more people.
I'm also a
regular reader of the Right Tourism blog, which has very informative
posts on responsible tourism.
Regular readers of our site (and if you are, we thank you) might have noticed that we haven't
posted a review for Sea
of Thieves.
2:32 p.m. Corrected The sharp eyes
of a
regular reader, Kip Hansen, noted that two photographs
of forests and agricultural land were mixed up in the initial version
of this
post.
Regular readers may recall some
of the
posts here, here, here, and here, where the sea ice data presented by NSIDC and by Cryosphere today were brought into question.
In this
post Balasubramani lays out in detail some
of the pros (branding; chance to move to a better platform; fresh start with no baggage) and cons (loss
of «google juice;» loss
of subscribers /
regular readers during the transition)
of scrapping his current blog.
Regular readers of this blog may remember that I have written a number
of posts about Derek Bluford, a one - time rising star on the legal tech start - up scene whose star fell after I reported in 2016
of his settlement
of a lawsuit charging him with impersonating a lawyer, forging legal documents and fraudulently swindling two clients.
Regular readers of this blog may remember that I have written a number
of posts about Derek Bluford, a one - time rising star on the legal tech start - up scene whose star fell after I reported in 2016
of his settlement
of a lawsuit charging him with impersonating a lawyer, forging legal documents and fraudulently swindling two -LSB-...]
Regular readers might recall my
post from this past February, bringing your attention to the groundbreaking new website
of our client Harrison Pensa.
Guest posters Michael Geist and David Vaver gave us generously
of their talent; all
posts were interesting and helpful; and the comments came not just from
regular readers but also from a few we haven't heard from before.
But it was always with the good faith intention
of returning to a
regular schedule that I warned my
readers of the current paucity
of postings.
Although I have been a
regular reader of Slaw for many years, this is the first time I have felt compelled to comment on a
post, as I am truly disappointed to see Slaw used as a forum to redistribute unattributed government PR materials verbatim.
I won't tip any more
of his hand — you'll have to read that
post for yourself — but his
regular readers will be happy to see he revisits the two - tier partnership model again in this
post, «Why Did You Go Two - Tier, Again?»