-LSB-...] example is last July,
when authors around the world gave away copies of their ebooks for free on Digital Book Day (a similar initiative to World Book -LSB-...]
Not exact matches
The
authors are also proponents of «what goes
around comes
around» in the link building
world — called «preciprocration» by them — advocating that you freely and willingly look for places to cite work done by others, link to useful sites, etc.,
when appropriate and relevant.
Maybe the Holy Spirit is at work
around the
world to bring multiple
authors and pastors and theologians to similar ideas about similar things all at once, and so
when I read something in someone else's book that sounds a lot like something I have written, but they don't give me credit, it is not that they «borrowed» from me, but because both of us were listening to what the Spirit has been whispering to minds all over the
world.
«
When you look at forests
around the
world today, you don't see many forests dominated by evergreen flowering plants,» said the study's lead
author, Benjamin Blonder.
Around 2007, just
when most people were starting to think you couldn't find anything in the publishing
world worse than a typical vanity press,
Author Solutions proved us all wrong.
The biggest mistake
authors make
when creating a
world is that they let the
world dictate the story, instead of the other way
around.
Debate has been brewing in the UK since July,
when crime and thriller
authors from
around the
world gathered at the popular annual Harrogate Crime Writing Festival.
Earlier this year, a paper by Michael Mann - for years a leading light in the IPCC, and the
author of the infamous «hockey stick graph» showing flat temperatures for 2,000 years until the recent dizzying increase - made an extraordinary admission: that, as his critics had always claimed, there had indeed been a» medieval warm period»
around 1000 AD,
when the
world may well have been hotter than it is now.
Lead
author Lucas Joppa of Microsoft Research in Redmond, Washington, said: «We live in the middle of the Information Age but are effectively flying blind
when it comes to understanding what is threatening biodiversity
around the
world.»
In 1873,
when the French
author Jules Verne published his famous novel,
Around the
World in Eighty Days, it perpetrated many colonial stereotypes and agendas.