Sentences with phrase «thing writers want»

The last thing writers want to do is make it more difficult for editors to publicize their books.
In the midst of all the agonizing over a manuscript, one of the last things a writer wants to do, is add another task to her «to - do» list.
Decent deal, job security, all the things a writer wants from her career.
The last thing a writer wants to be is a snooty elitist who only seeks opportunities and sources that he / she deems worthy of his / her talents.

Not exact matches

This writer from Huffington Post loved that it gave her the perfect way to run with her phone while being able to carry all the other things she wanted to bring with her.
I usually say the same thing to people who want to become professional writers.
No wonder Stephen King advises that «if you want to become a writer, you have to do two things above all: Read a lot, write a lot.»
I just wanted to point out a couple of things to the writer of the letter.
Many of this stories were contracted to professional writers to fill voids in the sequence of events and things they wanted to include in this book.
14 Best Falafel Recipes: Brit + Co — February 2017 10 Best #Foodspo Bloggers on Instagram: Delicious Magazine — February 2017 12 Hearty Weekday Meals: MyDomaine — February 2017 7 Foodie Instagram Accounts To Follow In 2017: My Home — January 2017 Our Favourite Foodies To Follow On Instagram — Lifestyle Food — 2016 10 Of Australia's Best Food Blogs: Margin Media — August 2016 Must Read Links For Food Writers & Bloggers: Dianne Jacobs — June 2016 The Full Helping: Weekend Reading — May 2016 Instagram Love: Hale Mercantile Co — April 2016 Best Food Blogs: First Site Guide — Feb 2016 8 food blog links we love: Food52 — Feb 2016 Watermelon Cake Recipe: Delicious Magazine — Jan 2016 Falafel Is A Winner / The Kitchn — Dec 2015 Yahoo Cake Of The Day — Sep 2015 10 Best Australian Blogs: Margin Media — June 2015 Hayden Quinn / Unrefined Series — June 2015 Cook Republic Workshop / Hannah Mccowatt — April 2015 6 Food Bloggers Whose Lives We Want To Steal: The Urban List — April 2015 Summer Lassis: Buzzfeed — June 2014 8 food blog links we love: Food52 — March 2014 15 creative vegan smoothies: Buzzfeed — March 2014 8 Australian food bloggers to know on Breakfast With Audrey — January 2014 100 Best Foodie Blogs Of 2013 by Institute Of The Psychology Of Eating — January 2014 Zucchini Coconut Bread Recipe: I Quit Sugar Blog — August 2013 40 Delicious Blueberry Recipes: 3 Loud Kids — July 2013 Quinoa Cookies: Popsugar Mums — June 2013 Top 3 Australian Blogs — Women's Fitness Magazine June 2013 Sneh Roy is Best Australia Blogger 2013 — Mumbrella 50 Quinoa Recipes: Wunda Woman Wellness — May 2013 5 Good Things For Friday: Justb Australia — May 2013 Top Finds Of The Week: hardtofind — May 2013 Top 10 Food Bloggers: Huffington Post — April 2013 AthleanXX For Women — March 2013 Bembu: 50 Healthy Dessert Recipes — March 2013 Bembu: 50 Healthy Vegetarian Recipes — March 2013 Better Homes And Gardens: Best Of The Blogs — March 2013 Whipperberry: 36 Fresh Spring Recipes — February 2013 Brit + Co — February 2013 Dark Chocolate Recipes: Huffinton Post — February 2013 Blisstree: Cauliflower Recipes — February 2013 10 Best Juice Brews: Camille Styles — January 2013 Delicious Things To Cook In January: Buzzfeed Food — January 2013 Bloglovin Up & Coming — January 2013 Gourmet Live — December 2012 Blogs We Love: Relish — December 2012 Best Holiday Snacks: Greatist — December 2012 Easy Fudge Recipes: Huffington Post — December 2012 Holiday Truffle Recipes: Huffington Post — December 2012 Babble: 20 Yummy Ways To Enjoy Hot Chocolate — November 2012 Wholesome Cook Blog — November 2012 101 Cookbooks Blog (Quinoa Croquettes)-- November 2012 50 Delicious Fudge Recipes — Six Sisters Stuff — November 2012 Drizzle And Dip: Chilli Cola Chicken — October 2012 Monday Morning Cooking Club blog — October 2012 Mint Design Blog — Take 5 — Spetember 2012 GLAM media's first cookbook Foodie — Back To School Launch issue of The Simple Things magazine by Future Publishing Ltd On the panel of judges for Eat Drink Blog Australia 2012 Photography Competition Village Voice (kidspot.com.au)-- 10 Healthy Quinoa Recipes — August 2012 Domessblissity — 16 Ways To Use Quinoa — June 2012 Fine Cooking Magazine (Basic Beautiful Pizza Feature)-- June 2012 Baking Bites — May 2012 Frankie Magazine Newsletter Bon Appetit — April 2012 Gourmet Live — April 2012 Top 100 Australia Food Twitterers Top 100 Australian Women Bloggers The Cheese Mag Saveur — Sites We Love Foodbuzz Top 9 Delicious Shots Magazine: Valentine's Issue, February 2012 Foodista Blog Of The Day, January 22 2012 Huffington Post, January 2012 Babble — 15 Chutney Recipes To Try, December 2011 Foodista — Must Try 5 Perfect Polenta Cakes, September 2011 Yummly — Cozy Into Fall With Savoury Seasonal Soups, September 2011 Foodie Crush — 5 Recipes For Hot, Barbecue & Buffalo Wings, September 2011 Love From The Oven — White Chocolate Recipes, July 2011 Luna Cafe — Fresh Blueberry Roundup, June 2011 Kalyn's Kitchen — South Beach Diet Recipes, June 2011 Foodista — Give A Fig Recipes, May 2011 Tipnut — 101 Homemade Fudge Recipes, November 2010
Stacey Ferguson, Justice Fergie [«Cheer for Your Cheerleaders»] Kristin Shaw, Two Cannoli [«You Know Your Child Best»] Aviva Goldfarb, The Scramble [«Always the Potential for Good»] Margo Porras, Nacho Mama [«Your Kids Will Do What You Do»] Emily McKhann, The Motherhood [«You Are Courageous»] Jane Maynard, This Week for Dinner [«Savor Even the Hard Seconds»] Mary Ann Zoellner, producer at NBC's TODAY [«Play Like a Dad»] Lian Dolan, Oprah.com [«Life is Serious Enough»] Maria Bailey, Mom Talk Radio [«Take Time to Celebrate You»] Christie Matheson, Stroller Traffic [«Nothing Better Than Coming Home»] Carla Naumburg, Psychcentral.com [«You Are Not Your Thoughts»] Jenny Lee Sulpizio, JennyLeeSulpizio.com [«I'm Not Above Mom Jeans»] Kimberly Coleman, Foodie City Mom [«Follow Your Own Inner Voice»] Missy Stevens, Wonder, Friend [«Nice Things Are Still Just Things»] Rachel Jankovic, Femina Girls [«It's Not Supposed to Be Easy»] Megan Brooks, Texas Health Moms [«The Love Language of Listening»] Carissa Rogers, Good N Crazy [«Here's to Embracing Change»] Dina Freeman, BabyCenter [«Learn to Swim in the Deep End»] Elizabeth Grant Thomas, Elizabethgrantthomas.com [«It's Easier to See Light in Darkness»] Wendy Hilton, Hip Homeschool Moms [«They Want to Make Us Happy»] Renée Schuls - Jacobson, Rasjacobson.com [«Beware of Emotional Vampires»] Shannon Lell, ShannonLell.com [«Don't Be Afraid to Sparkle»] Bunmi Laditan, Honest Toddler [«What Makes You a Writer»] Erin Dymoski, Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms [«What I'd Tell My Younger Self»] Lyss Stern, Divamoms.com [«Those Who Matter Don't Mind»] Debra Shigley, In Deb's Kitchen [«Feeling Bad?
I mean, that's one of the things that I guess made me want to be a writer; there was something almost magical about that, [that] not only can you put words together in such way that it gets somebody else to have a feeling just by reading it; you don't, but then I realized, you don't have to be there.
Most of all I wanted to have a digital copy of the final text on my computer so that I could do all the things that writers like to do with text on a computer: paste it into e-mail messages, post a paragraph on the Web, grab a few sentences to include in a footnote in a new article.
Reading was my thing, and when I got into high school I knew I wanted to be a writer.
But does that piece of paper come with a guarantee that I'll be a «good writer,» a writer who has meaningful things to say, or a writer that other people want to bother to read?
I'm not quite ready to assign Robert Galbraith / JK Rowling to the ranks of my fave mystery writers, but only because I want to read the other books in the Cormoran Strike series and see how things pan out.
Some excellent special effects are in Monday night's episode, but nothing particularly shocking because it's become abundantly clear by now that The Dome can do any damn thing The Dome — or the writerswant.
Containing engaging interviews with Didion fans and friends including Calvin Trillin, David Hare and Hilton Als, «Joan Didion: The Center Will Not Hold» does that thing that the best documentaries about writers to: it makes you want to return to its subject's work as soon as possible.
From Steven Knight, the director of HUMMINGBIRD, writer of such brilliant films as DIRTY PRETTY THINGS and EASTERN PROMISES, as well as being the creator of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?
The writers said, «We wanted to make sure in the final episode of season 1 of Agent Carter that Howard said something to the effect of «Steve Rogers is the greatest thing I ever did.»»
Documenting the evil growing inside two ten - year old twins, writer - director Christopher Denham's Home Movie creates a completely believable film in the much - maligned found footage genre, using mostly faux - Camcorder footage shot during holidays or special celebrations — those times when people do actually film things they want to keep as memories.
The best thing I can say is to think of where you want students to be skills-wise by the end of the year and build in opportunities to have students practice to reach that goal... Starting small allows you to develop a path to guide them on and build them up so their confidence as scientists / writers will be sufficient to carry them through the module!
If you want to be a better writer, then you're going to have to do the same thing.
The first thing you have to do if you want to be a writer is get on with it.
You can't afford to take things personally if you want to develop as a writer.
Like you say Kait, I do not think it is a good thing for those writers who want to make a true name for themselves.
The big snews (social news) of the week is Chuck Wendig's ramble — 25 things I want to say to so - called «aspiring» writers.
Since you want to get picky about it, Two things I noticed right away, you are not AN writer, you are A writer and AN author.
I consider big publishing the ultimate for writers who don't want to handle the business side of things, spend a lot more time on their product, and want to maximize readership and building a personal brand.
The writers, who get to pursue their dreams or a few nervous, old school throwbacks, who desperately want things to remain the same in order to keep their fragile egos intact?
Ashley Prentice Norton on Writing Whenever people find out I'm a writer, the first thing they always want to know is what my «process» is.
And should writers want to read one of their own doing a point - by - point refutation of the horrors, our dependable colleague and author David Gaughran's Why Amazon's Purchase of Goodreads Is A Good Thing offers a lot of sensible solace, ticking off the points, as I've done, that are being flatly refuted — fully on the record, remember — by the players involved.
who want to discuss the things we love (writing, publishing, book marketing) with other writers.
I wonder though, with all the writers who WANT to get pubbed by Harlequin, who attend the conference or belong to RWA because of that, will they still be loyal to RWA, in spite of this horrendous thing Harlequin have done?
Katrina, considering the number of books being published each year, there are two things every writer should be concerned about if they want a large audience: 1) putting in the time to build your author platform, and 2) producing a book that really stands out from the crowd in terms of quality.
Or, maybe the writer has been working on their book for three months, or a year, or many years, and they're so tired of looking at the thing that they send it off because they just want to be done with the process.
All we wanted to do was create a long list of the things that writers should consider before publishing a book, things they needed to know if they were going to self - publish or if they were courting a traditional or hybrid publisher.
I know a lot of people, a vast number of people in agent - land and traditional publishing, don't want newer professional writers to know things have changed.
Sure, some writers need to do more than one draft, but if doing another draft is an excuse to not mail it for fear of the story being rejected or not read by readers, and this fear has a bunch of your stories sitting in files not mailed, maybe you might want to think of not doing that final polish and daring to be bad and mailing the thing or publishing it indie.
In that vein, Midnight Publishing's staff of professional editors and content writers wanted to share some of our favorite options for workshops in Phoenix, as they address two very important things: honing and bettering your craft, and meeting other writers who want to do the same!
As a writer you sort of grow up wanting one particular thing, but now, getting closer to it, some people, including myself are re-evaluating that.
Rather than continue to respond to writers one at a time, repeating the same things, I want to compile in one place a list of links to places where you can find valuable information, resources, tips, and advice.
They wanted to know why I forbade new writers from doing things that are perfectly okay for established writers.
It's the most important thing to remember if you want to be a writer....
If there's one thing every good writer wants, it's to become a better writer.
I've had this same experience, both the squeeze in the nonfiction end of things, and the disappearance of writers who want a copyedit basically for nothing.
If you want to learn a thing or two about the term paper structure and academic writing in general, however, we recommend you to communicate with the writer as much as possible.
They seem more inclined to think out of the box in their offerings while providing the writer editing and promotional support — things that are expensive if one wants to go the self publishing route and still put out a good product that gets noticed.
The last thing any decent writer wants to do is to enter a literary competition, award or prize with a flawed copy of their work.
They wanted things done a certain way and were hoping the writer they hired would provide just that.
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