Sentences with phrase «where other writers»

Because I love hanging out in cool places like book festivals and any place where other writers, authors and readers meet, I belong to — and blog about — the Palm Beach Writers Group.
It's a crowdsourcing platform where other writers can edit the text you submit, sentence by sentence, paragraph by paragraph.
Hang out where other writers do, and build strong relationships.
I'm considering including a page on the website where other writers who also want to participate independently in the challenge rounds can post links to their own writing.
I've attend a couple of workshops where other writers talk about how they detail almost every move a character makes, and every step along the journey is mapped out.
As writers, we have to be where other writers are and do what they are doing.
Hi BG, They are good resources and as we talked about the other day, I think we need to concentrate more on where other writers are.
In today's episode, we go where no other writer has gone before: into the great unknown of artificial intelligence.

Not exact matches

«Your brain is wired not only to figure out where you sit in the professional and social pecking order against others, but to reinforce your position in that pecking order,» says writer Steve Errey, who continues: «When you get wrapped up in establishing or maintaining status, the moment your place in the hierarchy drops you're going to feel pretty horrible... Don't get into the status game — there are no winners.»
Editor / Primary Writer: Dr. Jeff Cornwall About The Entrepreneurial Mind: The Entrepreneurial Mind is a video blog where Dr. Jeff Cornwall, Professor of Entrepreneurship at Belmont University, interviews various entrepreneurs to learn their story and get their advice for other entrepreneurs.
But I always think best when I write, and I always appreciate the interaction from other thinkers and writers (that's YOU), and so am going to write this series of posts and see where they lead.
I remembered Brennan Manning — the man who has translated the love of God in a way that I could receive it more than probably any other writer — was addicted to alcohol and I re-read up one of his last books before he died: «All is Grace: A Ragamuffin Memoir» where he vulnerably writes about what this battle has cost him, even as he experienced the unending and unconditional love of God in the midst of it, how he experienced regret and pain and loss alongside of the love and tenderness of God in this dependency.
Well, there are a few places where Jesus seems to identify the Hebrew Scriptures as «the word of God» (e.g., Mark 7:13; Luke 4:4; 8:11, 21; 11:28; John 10:34 - 36; etc.) and various other NT writers seem to do the same.
This writer had me until this ending, where he appears to suggest you can not have one without the other.
For the story I'm writing, well - known published writers in our critique group, who were getting their stuff published in paper by CBA publishers commented, among other things: - «The scene where Tammy throws her bikini up into the tree would never get published by a CBA publisher.»
Ultimately, maybe these smaller writing project will get me to the place where I can be a full - time writer, and then tackle that project while also writing about other things.
«I hardly ever see a Christian post where the writer mocks and throws demeaning words at atheists and other unbelievers.»
But blogging in particular is one arena where passionate people write by themselves at home rather than in an office surrounded by other writers.
The biased nature of writers, you know, we saw it with others in the past, with Ted Williams and others, where maybe some people left them off because of personality reasons.
I'm sure if fans read other Liverpool websites they'll see the one thousand and one different writers expressing their opinions and views on where...
In October 2012 I did a special Crappy Collaboration series where I partnered up with other writers.
Then there are other scientists I go back to for comments on other people's research or to get a view of what's going on in the field; they're people who have a sense of where the field is going and what I, as a science writer, can write about effectively in my articles.
But regardless of where you end up publishing — most writers end up working several of the venues listed above — a great way to learn the terrain is to listen to others who already work in the field, either on the writing side or the hiring — that is, the editing — side.
Jan Berry is the writer and photographer of the blog The Nerdy Farm Wife, where she shares creative ways to turn herbs, flowers and other garden plants into pretty things that are fun...
Now, over to our guest article writer: «Senior dating is very much similar to any other type of dating where you will go through elation and great enthusiasm especially when everything is going well.
«Lean on Pete» calls to mind other greats as well — one imagines a pitch meeting where it was described as «The 400 Blows» meets «Wendy and Lucy» — but writer - director Haigh, working from the novel by Willy Vlautin, has his own way of telling this kind of story.
The movie (co-written by Robert Towne) is convoluted and complicated, which is exciting at first and makes you think of Chinatown, but then you realize that Towne and all the other writers probably didn't have the slightest idea where the movie was going.
In the hands of many other writers, the titular, self - proclaimed Lady Bird — real name Christine McPherson played by renowned Irish actress Saoirse Ronan — would come across as whiny, entitled, and unlikable to the point where the entire film comes crumbling down.
Director: Michael Grandage Writers: John Logan, A. Scott Berg (based on his novel) Cast: Nicole Kidman, Colin Firth, Jude Law, Guy Pearce, Dominic West, Laura Linney Synopsis: «A chronicle of Max Perkin's time as the book editor at Scribner, where he oversaw works by Thomas Wolfe, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald and others,» IMDb.
It's gonna» be our Apocalypse Now, where we disappear into the forest for weeks and lose our minds and discover who we are as men,» says Daniels, the lone directing duo at this year's Sundance Institute Directors Lab where they're joined by seven other nascent writer - directors and their projects.
The film sets true crime writer Ellison Oswalt (Ethan Hawke) in the house of a murdered family where he begins to unravel the mystery surround their deaths and other related murders.
«Toy Story Goes to Comic - Con» (3:39) takes us to the 2014 convention in San Diego where writer - director Steve Purcell, Kristen Schaal, composer Michael Giacchino, and other crew members tease the special to enthusiastic geeks.
Only insiders know the truth, but Intolerable Cruelty comes with three other credited writers besides Joel and Ethan, and it's difficult to tell where one stops and the other starts.
It's clear that writers Dante Harper and veteran John Logan want the story of Alien: Covenant to be one of answers and explanations rather than questions and mysteries where some are more warranted than others.
The first of those lists is now up at MSN, where I joined twelve other critics and film writers in a collective survey of the best of the year.
In another standout track, Small Fry's writer / director MacLane shares his influences (a day of fast food research in Portland, working in a ball pit) and the stories behind all of the short's characters, i.e. the fictitious movies and TV shows where Neptuna and others come from (more thought went into that than you might have guessed).
But while previews have eerie music and depictions of spooky creatures, Entertainment Weekly writer Chris Nashawaty says the film «forgets to be scary,» Variety writer Peter Debruge says there are «vacancies where the scares should be,» and Guardian writer Peter Bradshaw wrote that he is «less convinced by [director Guillermo Del Toro's] Halloweeny ghosts» than by other aspects of the film.
Clearly this was not an easy story to bring to life — St Aubyn's real - life story, where as a boy he was raped from the age of 5 to 8 and the people who were meant to protect him were either doing the damage or contributing to it by looking the other way (though St Aubyn eventually becomes a professional writer, marries, has children, kicks his habit and uses therapy to help as much as possible, so there's some semblance of a happy ending).
I run my own film review website, Thoughts On Film, where I also delegate and edit work by other writers.
Instead, writer / director Tom Gormican (one of many responsible for the production of «Movie 43») lets the pieces of the story haphazardly fall where they may, not letting his characters develop into anything other than the asses they started as (although Mikey is a decidedly smaller ass than the others).
Before that I had written a movie that Roland Emmerich is producing that became my writing sample that I got hired for Tomb Raider off of but, I also had just come out of the Transformers writers room which I don't know if you know much about writer rooms but basically, on some major pieces of IT the studio will bring together a team of writers to work, almost like they would work in a television writers room, where you work collaboratively with other writers and you come up with ideas.
Outside of his Harvard work, Weber is, among other things, an Emmy - nominated and Telly Award - winning writer and producer on CTV, where his work reaches over 12 million homes across North America.
He is currently a writer and an editor who has written on a range of subjects for Salon, where he was a staff editor, Travel & Leisure, The San Francisco Chronicle, Readerville, The San Jose Mercury News, The Sun, The Fessenden Review, and numerous other publications.
(I joined zoetrope.com where fellow writers give feedback on each other's work.)
Like other regional and city writers, the information is relevant to education no matter where you live.
Mr. Loescher, a teacher in SOTA, mentioned one new class in music theory and production, where students learn the basics of producing music by working in groups where students take on the roles of producer, engineer, writer, marketing manager, graphic artist, and others.
I enjoy week's where I collaborate with other writers.
Ideally this might take the form of a writers critique group, where other new writers can give you some objective opinions.
But then I see new books — good books — by writers in the region whose names I'm just beginning to recognize, and others by authors long familiar to me, and still others by people I've never heard of, and my confidence grows that no matter where the rest of the country is heading with the printed word, the South is moving in the right direction, and picking up speed.
Here the Philadelphia writer goes to Egypt at the turn of the 20th century, where two British scientists are attempting to communicate with Mars — but can barely interact with each other, much less the women in their lives.
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