Sentences with phrase «what writers want»

Any discrepancy between what the writers want in terms of W / m2 in or out is conveniently changed by unmeasured aerosol changes.
Ms. Robinson, whose books are not published by Hachette, said that «what writers want is a long - term healthy publishing ecosystem, not a temporary windfall.»
Lorin not only has nearly two decades of experience in the publishing industry, she's an expert at honing in on what writers want — what they need — and offering workshops tailor - made for them.
The input of 5,000 self - published, traditionally published, and hybrid authors provided information useful to the publishing industry (which, for some reason, does not already understand what writers want).
This outfit has thought through what writers want and made it fun to stay on the website and learn about how to be a better author entrepreneur.
The problem with the disconnect between what readers want to read and what writers want to write
This outfit has thought through what writers want and made it fun to stay on the website and learn about how to be a better author entrepreneur.
Reading the Bible this way does not rule out inspirational reading, but it does insist that we know what the writers wanted to say only by historical study.
Positively, it helps us to hear what the writer wants to say; in fact, this is the only real justification for the whole discipline.
Analyze what the writer wants you to interpret out of what he conveys.
And I'm not sure, despite Richard Nash's considerable experience with publishing and working with writers, that he really knew what writers wanted and needed in a site like Red Lemonade.

Not exact matches

I feel very dispirited when I meet young writers who say, «Oh, I want to write vampire fiction because that's what's in.»
Everyone wants to be the director, CEO, the manager, the writer — well, guess what?
It's a bit of a savior for me now, giving me the freedom to communicate effectively as a writer and think through what I want to say (and when).
We tend to equate happiness with freedom, but, as the psychotherapist and writer Adam Phillips has observed, without obstacles to our desires it's harder to know what we want, or where we're heading.
To avoid bad but vaguely plausible start - up ideas — what the Y Combinator team calls sitcom ideas, i.e., the kind of ideas TV writers would make up if a character on a show had a start - up — choose something that some people want a lot rather than something lots of people might sort of want a little.
If you want to ensure you get the big returns from stocks that investment writers highlight when urging you to invest in equities, you need to buy during bear markets to make up for the lousy returns from those years when you buy at what proves to be the top of a bull market.
It is sometimes hard to know what the writer - editors want to convince us of.
But God has worked throught he writers of the Bible to get «in there» what He wants known about Himself.
So before atheists throw out the baby with the bathwater, they might want to consider that there is a difference between lyrics that speak to an annoyance with organized religion, and what the writer of those lyrics actually meant.
I'm doing what I always wanted to do — making a living as a writer, traveling the country talking about my books, working on projects that I care about.
At this point in the course, I would want my students to grasp what was just beginning to become clear to the Renaissance humanists themselves: that there are fundamental commonalities between humanistic culture and Christianity that bring them together objectively, irrespective of the wishes and plans of writers, artists, and intellectuals.
Each of the Gospel writers made Jesus say what they wanted him to say, and changing his questions into mysticism would be a similar move, I think.
I want to read serious writers who take Jesus return seriously, who have some clue about what they are talking about and are sincerely interested!
It seems that maybe what John, Peter, James, and Jude did was go to a professionally trained letter writer and provided them with the basic ideas, arguments, and points they wanted to make in their letter, and then let the professional letter writer compose the letter according to the letter writing standards of that day.
As a writer, I often know what I want to say but not now to say it.
It is, in particular, the second of evangelicalism's two tenets, i. e., Biblical authority, that sets evangelicals off from their fellow Christians.8 Over against those wanting to make tradition co-normative with Scripture; over against those wanting to update Christianity by conforming it to the current philosophical trends; over against those who view Biblical authority selectively and dissent from what they find unreasonable; over against those who would understand Biblical authority primarily in terms of its writers» religious sensitivity or their proximity to the primal originating events of the faith; over against those who would consider Biblical authority subjectively, stressing the effect on the reader, not the quality of the source — over against all these, evangelicals believe the Biblical text as written to be totally authoritative in all that it affirms.
Yes, a Christian should «live» the life in conformity to the image of Christ everyday; however, the writer of this article wants to muzzle what is apparently natural to Tim.
The writer said that his spiritual journey made a huge turn when big questions about the NT (specifically Paul's theology) started emerging, especially in light of the fact that Paul started his series of letters (to the Galatians) with words very similar to what many ignorant Christians (Jeremy's term) use today: «I want you to know, brothers, that the gospel I preach is not something that man made up.
So is Christianity really following Jesus or the writers of these gospels... oh and the Hebrew chapters has not clue who and when was it written... my suggestion is to spend sometime to know what you believe and what you want to believe... also if you really like to know about what real Jesus was, please read Quran... more eighty times the name of Jesus is mentioned in this book... where there is a chapter with Jesus» mother name «Mary» chapter 19, there is another chapter name «ale imran'the grand father of Jesus, chapter 3... and then compare what Jesus really was dear brother in mankind...
As a writer, I spend about 90 percent of my time figuring out what I want to say and 10 percent of my time saying it.
I am more than disappointed that the Tony Jones» support team is unable to appreciate what's good about the U.S. Constitution and the First Amendment and the rights they use all of the time as pastors / speakers / bloggers / writers and authors but don't want anyone else to have!
I did not want to be classified as one, so I wondered in what way I'd offended that I would not get credit for being a serious writer.
I don't know yet what article the author was criticizing, but the verbiage sounded like disorganized stream - of - consciousness dissatisfactions with arguments the writer did not want to accept.
I want freshness and excitement and movement, and yet I am swimming against what feels like an insurmountable tide of writer's and photographer's block to deliver even a single post.
When I shyly admitted to someone then that what I really wanted to do was write, really, I remember his snide remark which crushed all my hopes of being a writer.
I found so much solace in writing that when someone first asked me what I wanted to be — I said with unshaken conviction and innocent sincerity — that I wanted to be a writer.
I wanted to tell her how much I admired her skill as a teacher and writer, how as a self - taught cook I had learned much of what I knew from her never - fail recipes, and that she had always been my «favorite cook.»
«She said she was taking some grad school classes at Harvard, but what she always wanted to do was become a sports - writer.
«What we want to do is neutralize Ali's jab,» he told a writer.
@the writer of the this article, we all know giroud has been in spectacular form since his return from injury, barring the monaco (1st leg) game, so save us the stats... what I want to know is; If he's not our problem, then what / who is?
I feel competent people want wenger in or atleast let him finish his contract this writer wrote facts were winning silverware and no matter what we win or how far we make it the wenger outs just need that negative element to feed they make it obvious when they have no facts to stand on oyher than we lost a final that we beat last years champions to get into and lost to this years champion who have been the best team in england not much to stand on
The Seventy Two has canvassed the opinion of several Football League writers from a variety of different clubs to ask one simple question: what do you want from your football club?
Mark Bittman, the esteemed food writer and home chef, recently said in a column in the New York Times that he never made separate meals for his kids when they were young, but allowed them something simple that they could make themselves — think a peanut butter sandwich, bowl of cereal or toast — if they did not want to eat what was cooked for dinner.
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?
When next you want to know what IPOB is saying and the events concerning Biafra, go to Family Writers Press (FWP) and stop forming your opinion out of people like you, who can sell even their boss, for political relevance.
Their online guide «So you want to be a science writer» does exactly what it says on the tin, and the bi-monthly London media briefings for members are a fantastic networking opportunity.
BECOMING a writer of novels, even novels fuelled by science, was far from any destiny I would have chosen if you'd asked my younger self what it wanted to be.
Robert Taylor, a member of the DCSWA board and a cofounder of consulting firm SAGE Analytica in Bethesda, Maryland, is assembling a session for the association's Professional Development Day «about alternate careers for science writerswhat they might do if they want to move on from journalism, book writing, or being a press officer,» Taylor writes in an email to Science Careers.
A dozen or so years ago, while living in a cottage in the woods with limited electricity and no heat, Simon Van Booy arrived with certainty at the realization that he wanted to be a writer - that writing was what he was most capable of doing.
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