Sentences with phrase «writers and authors forget»

It's something that I think a lot of writers and authors forget.

Not exact matches

The writer of a devotional book I read more than forty years ago — a book whose author and title I have forgotten — made an interesting point about the Holy Spirit.
Previously a reporter, writer and editor with Newsweek magazine, she is also author of The Forgotten Cure, which is about bacteriophage viruses and their potential as weapons against antibiotic resistance.
Authors of Eat Fat, Be Lean, Chinese herbalist and acupuncturist Dr Natalie Kringoudis and director of wellness centres, health writer, TV presenter and author of 7 Things Your Doctor Forgot to Tell You and The Modern Day Mother Andi Lew, explain why eating fat and protein helps makes you lean!
Starting Out in the Evening was praised but largely overlooked when it was released in the awards season, and if you ask me Frank Langella was robbed of an Oscar nomination for his beautifully modulated performance as a quiet, emotionally closed - in author struggling with writer's block and facing the reality that he's been forgotten in the years since he last published.
If you're looking for some spooky reading this Halloween, then try a ghost story... but forget the obvious male authors, women writers have got you covered, and always have had, says David Barnett
interesting but totally wrong you must of forgotten your start when you became a writer or what every your are, myself I'm amatuer writer trying to make it anyway I can and if that mean to self publish do to the funding I'm limited too to get started I guess that mean I'm fake granted I have two poetry books published on Amazon, Kindle and LuLu also a third one coming out in Apr also a short story coming out this Mar and also working on a Gothic Novel I guess that means I'm a fake and not an Author
As a writer, I'm often overly self - conscious as I read — I focus too much on how the author is putting together the story or constructing the voice, and I forget to enjoy myself.
Let's not forget that some of our greatest authors and writers and poets in the past were self - published before they were accepted by a publisher or agent.
As a film writer and author of Infographic Guide to the Movies, I can say that this 160 - page book is so engaging that people will forget they're learning things while reading it.
From Bernard Cornwell, the New York Times bestselling author whom the Washington Post calls «perhaps the greatest writer of historical adventure novels today,» comes a saga of blood, rage, fidelity, and betrayal that brings to center stage King Alfred the Great, one of the most crucial (but oft - forgotten) figures in English history.
Yet maybe the authors forgot the thrill of seeing each new review posted, a review possibly clutched at, read and re-read, and the overjoyed shout in the writer's mind that cried, «My book really does exist!»
It's easy to forget that the early work of every writer, no matter how gifted, is usually mediocre at best... (in the past) the publishing industry was a lot more receptive to writers who hadn't yet mastered their craft... Writers tended to stick with a single publisher as well, so an editor like Max Perkins could nurse budding authors like Hemingway and Fitzgerald through their early, less masterful works, knowing they would stick with Scribners once they hit their writers who hadn't yet mastered their craft... Writers tended to stick with a single publisher as well, so an editor like Max Perkins could nurse budding authors like Hemingway and Fitzgerald through their early, less masterful works, knowing they would stick with Scribners once they hit their Writers tended to stick with a single publisher as well, so an editor like Max Perkins could nurse budding authors like Hemingway and Fitzgerald through their early, less masterful works, knowing they would stick with Scribners once they hit their stride.
Let's not forget about the Dublin Writers» Conference in Ireland (founded by Laurence O'Bryan in 2015) or the London Book Fair's numerous talks and workshops for indie authors.
About Blog Historical True Crime Detective [Est. 2013], where you will discover forgotten crimes and criminals lost to history.This blog is the official website for true crime writer Jason Lucky Morrow, author of four books including the popular series: Famous Crimes the World Forgot, Volume I and Volume II.
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