You'll have
no trouble getting published, so stop worrying.»
I've heard from contrarian scientists that they don't have
any trouble getting published and getting funded, but of course that also is only anecdotal evidence.
Not exact matches
Google wants meaning to be crystal clear in all advertisements
published on its network and you are liable to
get into a lot of
trouble if you ignore this really important Google Policy.
A new study,
published in the Journal of Pediatrics, has found that parents who have a hard time
getting their toddlers to sleep at night also often have
trouble getting their children to eat balanced meals.
«In the early years, I had great
trouble getting my research
published, and I was starting to think that maybe I would not be able to do this and
get to a stage where I could call myself an independent researcher.»
«How can you
get somebody in such
trouble over something that they didn't
publish?
Researchers have had some
trouble getting such papers
published, probably because it's hard to prove a negative, says Hammer.
Patricia Highsmith's The Price of Salt was
published early, her second novel after Strangers on a Train, under a pseudonym; it told the story of a passionate romance between two women, a subject that, of course, could
get the author into
trouble back in 1952.
Hattie
got into
trouble last year when TES
published an interview with the title «Hattie is against teachers being researchers ``.
Otherwise, you could
get in
trouble with your new publisher / self -
publishing platform.
If you are an author you may have difficulty
getting your book noticed by a large
publishing house, and if you self
publish you will have
trouble getting noticed by the bookstore chains.
If there is something in your writing or
publishing with which you are having
trouble, I am here to help
get you on track.
Have you
published a book and are having
trouble getting exposure?
It's been way too long since Link released a story collection, but the wait is almost over —
Get in
Trouble will be
published in just a couple of weeks.
The problem isn't that you'd
get in
trouble with Salviani — he probably wouldn't notice — it's that a new publisher won't want to
publish a book whose rights aren't completely free and clear.
It's so easy to
get published these days and so easy to
get into
trouble.
the
trouble is so many articles try to tell you to
publish on kindle, and other sites, and
get all muddled up with their info, but its not necessary, good luck and
get that book
published!
I do think that Amazon does have a problem — if they can't
get large number of traditionally
published books — even back lists — in KU, and they continue to lose those of us who do have books that readers like — they are going to have
trouble competing with the other subscription services.
However, while
getting traditionally
published offers a writer superb clout, by the time you've gone to the time,
trouble and expense of self -
publishing, you might not really care about a traditional
publishing deal.
The self -
publishing platform was what
got Amazon in
trouble last July, when it silently deleted all digital copies of 1984 and Animal Farm from its customers» Kindles after the real rights holder complained the titles were sold without permission.
That kind of
troubles me, because I feel a little bit like when
publishing does
get round to direct - to - consumer it will already be too late.»
This
gets so many unwary borrowers into
trouble that laws were passed recently requiring card companies to
publish the amount of time needed to repay the balance when making only the interest payment.
Signs of bad credit include
getting higher interest rates than
published rates, a history of late payments, or having
trouble getting approved for a cell phone contract.
With those, the company has ridden out any supposed slowdown in the number of titles
getting published: «A few years ago people thought that console development would really slow down and a lot of studios faced a lot of
trouble and fell by the wayside.
In this week's installment of people shouting at one another for very little reason, YouTuber TotalBiscuit
got himself into
trouble over this tweet,
published December 23: I should check out this new version of Twine.
I generally agree with David Ropeik (albeit with a bit less drama) that the overall communication is highly suspect and would be amazed if it
gets published at a reputable journal (and the «it's too important to wait for peer review» comment is particularly
troubling).
Also McIntyre and McKitrick had a lot of
trouble getting comments and replies to Mann
published in Nature, effectively given the runaround in what I would suggest was (to any reasonable person) not an even - handed
publishing process.
After some reflection over the last couple of months, and some thousands of dollars on legal fees — so far paid by the Institute of Public Affairs (IPA) that first
published the book that
got him into
trouble — Professor Ridd has decided to fight the final censure.
It's a warning
published more than 15 years ago that pretty accurately predicts the kind of
trouble we are
getting ourselves into.
I have very little sympathy for those like Pat Michaels and Ross McKitrick who are having
trouble getting weak papers
published.
Why go to all the
trouble of studying for and gaining an advanced science degree,
getting a job in a suitable institution and putting forward carefully researched papers for the validation of Peer Review before publlcation in a recognised scientific journal; much easier to rush some «facts» together, using all sorts of dubious sources from the madder fringes of the Green world and have them
published to continue stoking the prejudices of their faithful readership.
and
published it with a «reportedly» to
get them out of
trouble.