We no longer live in a world
where writers have to shelve creative projects in perpetuity because they fall outside of their existing brands.
Links to e-books should be posted on social networking websites
where writers have a presence.
This is
where writers have an advantage because we're so used to the written word so crafting articles should be easy.
Looking back from this side of traditional publication, I've come to recognize that there are steps along the path to publication
where we writers have control, and there are steps where our control is minimal.
First, Sourcebooks will edit and produce select new Wattpad - branded editions of young adult stories into print and e-book platforms, as part of Wattpad's recently announced Fan Funding experiments
where writers have an opportunity to enlist their fans and the Wattpad community to help fund their dreams.
His reply, «It's what keeps me alive,» seems to be an aside joke
where the writers have acknowledged that the Bond image is what remains attractive to audiences, even though the stories seem out of date in the post Cold War era.
The story in the game works well in presenting a scenario
where the writers have the choice to inject humor or references to some of the classic movies and TV shows.
That's particularly true in early season games where writers haven't had the opportunity to study game film.
They would hear the accordion - wheezing from the press box,
where writers would ruefully shake their sad heads.
First of all, I would like to applaud this absolutely amazing article on Crave Online
where the writer has indeed done a magnificent job on telling us why The Phantom Pain could be Konami's biggest triumph yet.
«I can't imagine
where the writers would take it,» Metcalf added.
Vanity Presses existed in the past
where writers would pay to print their books with the potential to make their money back through royalties or selling them themselves.
Query Shark is a blog run by an agent, in which she dissects queries submitted to the website (but not those sent to her agency) pointing out
where the writer has gone wrong and what they can do to improve.
I have had a few times
where the writer has been late on my papers or had to send my paper back and few times instead of getting a perfect copy to begin with, but for the most part this is a good company.
It would probably be indiscreet to name names or give other identifiers, but there is one publisher who stands out from the herd as a case
where writers would be well advised to have their manuscripts professionally edited before submission — or indeed after acceptance.
It's great to see the publishing world opening up to so many writers, but in the past
where writers would work hard to study the craft and make their writing the best it can be, more and more today are throwing their writing out there without the legwork then complaining when it doesn't pan out.
And I think it's safe to say that the immense majority of published writers would join O'Connor in saying that the «theme» tack won't even come close to causing students to put their focus
where the writer would like them to.
Nothing worse than reading a review
where the writer has obviously been paid to talk a bad game up.
The functional format emphasizes what has been learned and the skills acquired, not
where the writer has worked.
Unlike a chronological resume, it isn't necessary to outline
where the writer has worked in the past.
Not exact matches
On Nov. 15 — the release date of its latest hit — Assassin's Creed: Revelations, Ubisoft co-founder and CEO Yves Guillemot spoke to Canadian Business staff
writer Jeff Beer about how the industry
has changed in the past 25 years,
where games and movies will meet and Canada's potential as a video - game powerhouse.
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.
Ferriss told us that he used to read passages about compassion by Buddhist
writers and think, «OK, if you're sitting in a monastery,
where your schedule is set and you
have very few uncontrolled variables, that's fantastic that you can do loving / kindness meditation, but that's not the world I live in.»
With an image of the Bastille being stormed by a rabble of freelance
writers, part - time cooks and itinerant Caribbean fruit pickers in mind, perhaps it's relevant to consider the current situation in Europe,
where generations of abundant labour regulation
have robbed much of the Continent of employment flexibility — sorry, precarious work.
Our world - class conferences and seminars are held in some of the most beautiful and historic cities on earth, and that's
where you'll get to meet the International Living
writers and staff members you
've seen in videos and read in the daily postcards and in International Living magazine.
The co-author of 2 personal finance books, Jennifer
has covered financial topics for several national publications, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, Worth, Money, and Newsweek,
where she was a staff
writer and editor for seven years.
Rob Artigo: Ray, I recently read an opinion piece
where the
writer made the case that most successful entrepreneurs
have one major trait in common.
Long before she embarked upon the journey that is now the Corporation for Social Security Claiming Strategies, Cheryl was an avid researcher and
writer as Managing Editor of the Law Review and clerk in the appellate screening division of the Rhode Island Supreme Court
where she
had several successes.....
The sort of remark I
have in mind is the kind
where, in a post about an unrelated topic, an author feels the need to bring up some moral accusation against the
writer he is discussing and make very clear that he, the blogger, is on the right side of that debate.
Topher is now digging deep into his Bible to come up with
where those story
writers said animals don't
have a conscience.
A prominent Jordanian Christian
writer has been shot dead in front of the courthouse
where he was on... More
To seriously entertain the possibility that the Christian tradition may hold some of the answers for which they are looking
would be to go backward, even though for most of these
writers it
would be going back to
where they
had never been except as children with a Sunday School impression of Christian doctrine.
I am not sure if this is really the best place to ask but do you people
have any thoughts on
where to hire some professional
writers?
«I understand that the
writers want to create tension and resolve it, but they push it to a spot
where if you haven't read Genesis, you wouldn't know whether Noah is really a man of faith or not.»
Ideas, thoughts, as well as deeper emotional or «affective» states, are included in this category
where the classical
writers would place meditation, contemplation, and the various stages of «union with God» about which the mystics
have given us reports.
If this
writer was such a non-believer then why doesn't she realize that there are rational, realistic reasons for not being an alcoholic and wouldn't need to use some «higher power» as a crutch to understand that when you do anything to the point
where it physically damages your body then it's time to realize that you
've taken it too far?
Hold the Dark, then, is an anti-Oresteia, one that follows with silent terror as a nature
writer stumbles into a place
where the rule of society and of the «younger gods»
have broken down.
However, I read / heard somewhere (though I can not recall
where) that the
writers had their own reasons for what they wrote and how they wrote it.
At the time when
writers from Augustine to Aquinas to (even) C. S. Lewis were domesticated insiders speaking religio «speak to the choir, Schaeffer was saying, «Yes, you [postmodernists]
have something there... lets see
where it goes.
For those who blasted the
writer of this article for not keeping her participation in AA anonymous, we're now in an age
where it's chic to admit that you
've been in a program... that you
've reached out for help.
These individuals best qualify as Catholic
writers, and yet they are currently the least visible in a literary culture
where at present only the third group, the dissidents,
has any salience.
The best chapters in this book recount O'Connor's time at the Iowa
Writers» Workshop and later at Yaddo,
where she met Robert Lowell (to whom she may
have felt a romantic attachment) and her editor, Robert Giroux.
His essays on life and faith
have been featured at Prodigal Magazine
where he
has recently been added as a Featured
Writer, as well as at Church Leaders and Faith Village.
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.
This
writer had me until this ending,
where he appears to suggest you can not
have one without the other.
Not in the form of some «how to» guide or some «five step» program, but, first and foremost, by way of metaphor: «If the state of contemporary Catholic literary culture can best be conveyed by the image of a crumbling, old, immigrant neighborhood, then let me suggest that it is time for Catholic
writers and intellectuals to leave the homogeneous, characterless suburbs of the imagination, and move back to the big city —
where we can renovate these remarkable districts which
have such grace and personality, such strength and tradition.»
A few years ago, I studied at a university in Jerusalem that
had a cemetery on campus
where a famous hymn
writer was buried.
Pastor,
writer and speaker Rob Bell
has released an excerpt from his latest book in an article called «
Where Did the Bible Come From?»
I
have found that to be really true with my experience as a
writer — that even going into a project like Moxie, which
had a pretty decent structure already, there is an element of mystery in every writing project
where sometimes the process of writing leads my thoughts and my heart and my soul into territory that I didn't plan for.
L. Ron Hubbard, a science fiction
writer back in the days when science fiction was worth about two cents a word, is said to
have decreed to a gathering of fellow
writers that religion was
where the real money could be found.