4511 readers"The Fingertips of Duncan Dorfman" by Meg Wolitzerʌ ʌ (2 carets up)What a wonderful book for young readers. Whether interested in language or not, this is an enjoyable book and I'll bet anyone who reads it will discover a new found enthusiasm for vocabulary, parts of speech, and morphology.If the cover image didn't give it
822 readersHave you done any pieces on published novelists and hiring your own publicist? I have chatted with the one from he publisher, she's doing fine, but only locally, and I am trying to get outside New York to promote. A friend paid $5000 to promote her first novel, but less than a decade
7058 readersAdvertise here via BSA
Today, Grace Myers gives us some important advice on scoring those corporate writing jobs. They may not always be the most fun, but they can pay the bills!
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Large corporations are always in need of organized and skilled freelance writers for help writing or editing projects. Corporations – with their numerous departments and
4622 readersThe catchphrase on this cup reads "good on cold" or perhaps "good in cold," but I'm pretty sure McDonald's means to say "good and cold."This is a minor catastrophe compared to many others I have posted on this site, but since it was committed by McDonald's, I can't let it go.
2379 readersStudent r0bw00d was playing “Sherlock Holmes: The Hound of the Baskervilles” (loosely based on the book of the same name) when he discovered my side job as a game developer! Yes.. it’s hard to believe that in between researching word [...]
752 readersOdyl, a New York-based company that works with publishers to create Facebook campaigns for books, has built a new social discovery tool for books called Riffle.
Riffle, which is currently in beta, lets readers share and discover books with friends. Though details about the tool are limited, the website has sign-up details: “Riffle is about books. Get
3875 readersOf the various writing modes in The Marshall Plan® novel writing system, perhaps the least understood and most underused is summary mode. In summary mode you report your story action in a condensed, narrative form. You tell the reader what is happening rather than show it; there’s no blow-by-blow description of events as there would be
6633 readersToday a Bay Citizen article about rising suicide rates in San Francisco shared the story of a beloved publishing veteran, Barbara Sue Beaver.
Beaver (pictured, via) worked in all corners of the Northern California publishing world, including Book Passage, Faherty Associates, Hearst Books and Chronicle Books. She took her own life in May.
Here’s more from the
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3753 readersIf you’ve done your homework in establishing rates, chances are you have a basic minimum rate below which you know it isn’t worth your time to take a project on. But do you have a maximum rate? When do you raise your rates beyond that—if you do?
In this blog post, I’m not discussing raising your
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3671 readersA Guest Post By Sean DSouza of Psychotactics
Imagine you were to start up an Internet-based business.
And told that to promote your business, you would not be allowed to do any affiliate marketing. Or joint ventures. Or any external publicity. No Twitter, no Facebook, no social media. No pay-per-click advertising. No goo