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Posted by Gary R. Hess
Finding a publisher can be very strenuous. In fact, it may even be harder than actually writing the book itself.
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Posted by Dan Ohler
Do you believe in natural laws? Laws like: • What goes up, must come down • What you sow, you reap
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Posted by Gerald Ybañez
Pollution nowadays affects everyone,
The day makes not so lively.
It kills the nature gradually
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Posted by Gary McLaren
One magazine. Hundreds of writers. Thousands of queries. One editor. One desktop ... and a trashcan that appears to be incredibly, almost unimaginably deep. Where exactly will your submission go?
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Posted by Paul Daniels
There are a number of possibilities as to how this might be done. Sometimes, a conference organiser or corporation will provide a translator who sits in a sound proofed booth, simultaneously translating what you say, and feeding that translation into headphones worn by those who speak the foreign language. In that situation, little adjustment is needed, other than to perhaps briefly meet with the translator beforehand, to let them know about any unusual words or phrases that you plan to use.
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Posted by Lance Winslow
Apparently some professional writers think (if you can call it thinking) that amateur authors are somehow lesser or that somehow what they have to say is less important. Ms Lawrence, a self-proclaimed and possibly Prozac induced practitioner of the pen has absolutely attacked amateur authors aggressively.
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Posted by Dr. Gary S. Goodman
Writers can ply their trade for lots of audiences: academic, television, radio, Internet, young, old, domestic, or foreign.
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Posted by Chris Stewart
It's important to have a space set aside in your home for writing. It can be a big cushion in a corner of your closet with a notebook and pen, if that's all you have room for, or perhaps the back seat of your car because that's the only place you can get some peace and quiet, but it should be all yours, waiting for you whenever it's time to write.
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