Sentences with phrase «time writer living»

That doesn't mean that they were all full - time writers living the high life in New York.

Not exact matches

«This was the first time we saw self - publishing turn into an audition for commercial prime time,» says Nathan Maharaj, director of merchandise at Kobo, which recently launched Kobo Writing Life, a self - publishing e-book service for aspiring writers that Maharaj's team closely monitors for «opportunities that are worth mainstream attention.»
«My husband and I probably spend more than the average person on groceries, as we both love to cook... perhaps $ 168 per week,» says Delorys Welch - Tyson, a U.S. writer and painter who has lived in Nice full - time since 1998.
«If I could go back in time, I'd introduce my 22 - year - old self to a quotation by the writer Brian Andreas: «Everything changed the day she figured out there was exactly enough time for the important things in her life,»» Huffington writes.
And at the same time, Melissa and all the writers — a lot of which are female — absolutely have every right in the world to take that material and go there, because that's the world that they live in.
Since that time, she has also fulfilled a life - long dream of becoming a writer.
Many successful atheist writers lived long lives without violent deaths: Arthur C. Clark — 91 yrs.; Kurt Vonnegut — 85; Robert Heinlein — 82; James Randi, still going at 82; and many others that I don't have time to look up right now.
But I would like to highlight one crucial aspect of Nat's body of work that obituary writers in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Associated Press, and other mainstream media outlets (though not First Things) woefully downplayed: Nat stood steadfastly — sometimes at great professional and personal cost — for the sanctity and equality of human life from conception to natural death.
We each have different demands on our lives and on our time and on our energy, we all have differing capacity and needs as writers.
When secular song writers write about the hard times in their life they write about hopelessness, despair, revenge, and hate.
Of course if that writer intended something else, as he may well have done, namely that the «times», in the sense of the particular segment of history in which he lived, were indeed «evil» and were marked by wickedness, with a collapse of standards and the denial of all that is of abiding significance; if he intended that, there may well have been much truth in his statement.
Editor's note: David Van Biema, the chief religion writer at Time Magazine for ten years, is author of the illustrated biography «Mother Teresa: The Life and Works of a Modern Saint,» now being reissued and made available in Spanish as «La Madre Teresa: La Vida y las obras de una santa moderna.»
According to Enns, the only way we can begin to understand why New Testament writers handled scripture this way is to understand the hermeneutical conventions of their time, which are rooted in the literary conventions of the Second Temple period, and to appreciate the degree to which the apostolic writers positioned their reading of Scripture in light of the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus.
Her slim book «The Quotidian Mysteries: Laundry, Liturgy, and Womens» Work» and New York Times Bestseller «Acedia & Me: A Marriage, Monks, and a Writer's Life» saved my life a time or Life» saved my life a time or life a time or two.
White's work exemplifies just one more glaring omission by today's secular writers in their failure to provide accurate data on the Bible, Quiet Time, the teachings of Rev. Samuel M. Shoemaker, the life - changing program of the Oxford Group, the journal of Anne Ripley Smith (wife of AA.
If culture is the way people think and feel and behave as a people, and if spirituality is the way we live out the life and teachings of Jesus in this particular culture at this particular time, then the questions for thinkers, writers, theologians, and religious professionals must become: What cultural realities are challenging the Gospel now?
Tolstoy, for instance, is an epic writer, whose books overflow with physical details and frequently threaten to overflow their own narrative structures and become as vast and as inconclusive as life itself, while Dostoevsky is a dramatic writer, whose books are full of fraught and urgent voices, at times almost disembodied, trapped in situations of immediate and pressing crisis, and surrounded by a physical world usually having no more substance than a collection of painted canvasses or pasteboard silhouettes at the back of the stage.
It should be possible to form very useful, fully viable units of some twenty - five to forty students, some of whom would go out to work during the day, and study part time in the evenings in residential colleges of the sort in which this writer lived and taught for twelve years.
Following 9/11, the Saturday Night Live writers were faced with a daunting prospect — reinitiating a time to laugh in a country still in the throes of weeping.
But time and place are strong medicine for many in our world, where, to quote Flannery O'Connor, many people «ain't frum anywhere,» and where a contemporary writer like Warren's fellow Kentuckian Bobbie Ann Mason finds a sobering story in the lives of many of her characters who can't think of anything to do with themselves.
These texts and studies do not exhaust the various ways in which women were perceived, and their roles commented upon, by writers of the early church, but they offer points of departure for a discussion on the contribution of women to the life and witness of the early church without forgetting that the «ancient sources and modern historians agree that primary conversion to Christianity was far more prevalent among females than among males» [13] in the time of the early church.
If you have ever read the Psalms, you will see many times where the writers are skeptical and doubting God's involvement in their lives.
«At precisely those points of urgent need... Paul is most conscious that he is writing as one authorized, by the apostolic call he had received from Jesus Christ, and in the power of the Spirit, to bring life and order to the church by his words... This is not to say that the writers of the New Testament specifically envisaged a time when their books would be collected together and form something like what we now know as the cannon.
Heck, he'll be all right, and a taste of low life might educate him some» ¯ may be an interesting writer, and we might find that he's a fun person to spend a little time with.
He's spent time in Iowa — at the famed Iowa Writers Workshop — and has lived in Israel.
They contended that the biblical writers were conditioned by the times in which they lived, and that biblical religion, like all religion, was subject to historical development.
Written by chicken caretaker and veteran food writer Janice Cole, Chicken and Egg chronicles the amusing, exasperating, down - and - occasionally - dirty details in the life of a first - time chicken steward.
3p writers come from all walks of life including business leaders who share their perspectives from the field to journalists who cover the Triple Bottom Line full time.
We were practically neighbors for one year (1991 - 1992) before my first visit as I lived in nearby Oceanside, Calif., and was a freelance writer at the time.
In attendance were barbecue professionals, like chefs, restaurant owners, and competition cooks, hobbyists, and food writers like myself from the New York Times, Newsweek, New Orleans Times - Picayune, Atlanta Journal - Constitution, Gastronomica, Southern Living, and others.
Simeon Moses lives in Los Angeles, CA and is an occasional writer for Pacific Takes and full - time fan of the Washington Huskies.
Letters to SPORTS ILLUSTRATED should include the name, address and home telephone number of the writer and should be addressed to The Editor, SPORTS ILLUSTRATED, Time & Life Building, Rockefeller Center, New York, N.Y. 10020 - 1393.
Roger Frison - Roche, who lived in Chamonix at the time and went on to become one of the Savoie's most beloved writers, recalled that at evening events, black tie was routinely required for all guests — except athletes, who could attend wearing team uniforms.
If you liked the give - and - take between Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell in the 1940 film His Girl Friday, you'd cotton to life around the Lido Beach, N.Y. home of SI reporter Sandy Keenan and her husband, Mike Winerip, a writer for The New York Times.
He is a contributing writer to the New York Times Magazine and a regular contributor to the public - radio program This American Life.
If you'd like to respond to Time about «B» for Babies, please do so online using their letter to the editor web form or snail mail to: TIME Magazine Letters Time & Life Building New York, N.Y. 10020 «Letters should include the writer's full name, address and home telephone and may be edited for purposes of clarity and space.&raTime about «B» for Babies, please do so online using their letter to the editor web form or snail mail to: TIME Magazine Letters Time & Life Building New York, N.Y. 10020 «Letters should include the writer's full name, address and home telephone and may be edited for purposes of clarity and space.&raTIME Magazine Letters Time & Life Building New York, N.Y. 10020 «Letters should include the writer's full name, address and home telephone and may be edited for purposes of clarity and space.&raTime & Life Building New York, N.Y. 10020 «Letters should include the writer's full name, address and home telephone and may be edited for purposes of clarity and space.»
She is a contributing writer at Family Time Magazine and Broward Family Life Magazine.
Countless thinkers, scientists, and writers have returned time and again to wild places to rejuvenate their inner lives and set off on important internal discoveries.
She works as the lifestyles editor and writer at a San Francisco Bay Area newspaper, and her work has appeared in The New York Times, The Huffington Post, HuffPost Live, Mommy Tracked, Modern Mom, Divorce 360, and the anthologies Knowing Pains: Women on Love, Sex and Work in Our 40s and Nothing But The Truth: Women on Life's Transitions.
He is a contributing writer to the New York Times Magazine and a regular contributor to This American Life.
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?
«It was the first time in my life that I had to chair a scientific event of this sort escorted by the police,» says Daniela Ovadia, a science writer who was invited to moderate the event in Milan.
Hope envisions a future that would free academics of such pressures, letting them develop a portfolio career where they would only be employed part time by an academic institution and complement their working lives and incomes as freelance writers, consultants, industry - based researchers, or entrepreneurs.
On the eve of science writer Katie Worth's experiment to live on Mars time and blog about how it feels, she explains how living between time zones across the universe without guidance from sleep scientists can prove disastrous
It's time to move on to today's guest who is a certified Primal Blueprint expert, a health and life coaching writer, host of the wildly popular Primal Blueprint podcast, author of a new book called, «The Paleo of Thyroid Solution.»
* Shabu Shabu fanatic * art admirer * part time wino * beach bum * former swim instructor / lifeguard * mob movie junkie * serious day dreamer * lives in Rainbows * Child of an Aussie * water baby * wearer of too much black and maxi dresses * love is love is love * secret novel writer * fiercely loyal friend * reader of hundreds of halves of books * seeker of fascinating faces * walking contradiction * lover of one tall corn husker *
In a new anthology edited by Veronica Chambers, 16 writers reflect on what Michelle has meant in their own lives and how her time in the White House has influenced their own journeys.
Ideally, I'd love to go back to freelancing full time as a food stylist, photographer, and writer, but I also really love where I'm at in life right now.
But in her spare time, Packnett also manages to be both a writer and activist and is one of the Black Lives Matter movement's most well - known faces, thanks to her work coordinating the Ferguson protests and cofounding the police reform effort Campaign Zero.
Forbes writer Paul Brown claims to have «never met an entrepreneur who has achieved a work - life balance» and indeed, entrepreneurs» professional lives are more time - consuming than most.
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