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For Writers

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Written by laurareviews on
When you think about children’s games, what comes to mind? Nintendo Wii or Game Boy? World of Warcraft or Battleship? But what about backyard games like ‘kick the can’ or ‘ghosts in the graveyard’? Shouldn’t these be included too? For Marlene Byrne, a children’s author and mother of two from Chicago’s Edgebrook neighborhood, the answer is YES, they should. For the first time at Laura Reviews, I’m happy to feature a children’s book author and share our conversation about the creation of Project Play . Byrne is determined to bring back classic backyard games, a tradition she believes teaches children valuable skills like creativity ... Read Full Story
 
Written by reedmercado on
Finding the right article spinner software reviews can be a difficult process, you would think it would be easy because there are so many, but it isn’t precisely because of this.  It is difficult because almost all article spinner software is paid and there isn’t any way of figuring out whether it is a good program withouth paying first. Most of these article spinning software companies don’t offer any trials and require the money up front, and when you try to find out something about the product from reviews, you come to find out that the reviews are written by the company itself. A ... Read Full Story
Written by laurareviews on
In the spirit of including all types of authors and artists who have changed the world of words, I'm excited to launch the inaugural edition of Interviews with Awesome Musicians , featuring award winning singer and songwriter Dayna Malow . With a long career as a musician, Dayna has produced three fantastic albums: "Anywhere But Here, "Tangled Up in You," and recently released "What's the Worst That Could Happen." She regularly performs throughout the Midwest and also has opened for numerous artists, including Billy Ray Cyrus and The Doobie Brothers. A little known fact is that Dayna is my former singing coach. Which means ... Read Full Story
 
Written by knownhuman on
The number of Internet users, 1.5 billion, surpasses the combined populations of North America and Europe, and that number is growing. Estimates put the total number of websites currently online at over 162 million. Facebook, the web’s dominate social network, marked it’s 200 millionth registered user a scant eight months after it’s 100 millionth user joined, and a measly five years after it was founded. Twitter, which recently reported a year-to-year increase of over 1300%, has helped to take the internet mobile, creating a constant flurry of short communications which is nothing short than a global realization of Hemingway’s Movable Feast. The Internet is ... Read Full Story
Written by knownhuman on
Write to please just one person. If you open a window and make love to the world, so to speak, your story will get pneumonia. -Vonnegut Photo by Lauren Baker I’ve done a great deal of thinking on this very subject over the past few weeks, and that mental wrangling was one of the reasons why I ended up taking a small publishing vacation recently. Of all the rules Mr. Vonnegut has provided so far, this one shows the highest level of information crammed into a relatively small space. It makes me think that if Kurt had gotten into Twitter, he would have done ... Read Full Story
We had to read Slaughterhouse Five in our high school literature course, and it changed my view of what books and writing can do to help the human mind and soul evolve. After that, I read everything of Vonnegut's that I could get my hands on. Absolu...  
From experienceproject.com ()
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An excerpt from the full review: “Unpublished is not a word we identify with a Kurt Vonnegut short story,” Sidney Offit notes in his foreword to “Look at the Birdie,” a new collection of Vonnegut’s early, and unpublished, short fiction. Perhaps more than any of his contemporaries of similar stature, Vonnegut was until early middle age a practical and adaptable writer, a guy who knew how to survive on his fiction. In the era of the “slicks...  
From blogger.com ()
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I have always loved the hilarious, classic Kurt Vonnegut essay about writing conferences Teaching the Unteachable. It contains one of my favorite Vonnegut quotes, which I have paraphrased for years: "The idea of a conference for prose writes is an absurdity. They don't confer, can't confer. It's all they can do to drag themselves past one another like great, wounded bears." Every time someone new to writing asks me if I recommend this...  
From open.salon.com ()
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When a renowned author dies, two critical processes begin: first, placing the writer in the pantheon; and second, digging out every jot, every piece of juvenilia, every previously unseen word the deceased wrote.  
From philly.com ()
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The Star-Ledger - NJ.comBooks: 'Look at the Birdie' by Kurt Vonnegut, and 'Kurt Vonnegut's America'The Star-Ledger - NJ.com... “Player Piano” to “Sirens of Titan” to “Mother Night.” I've reread them all now, except “Bluebeard.” Betsy Willeford is a freelance writer living in Miami.and more »  
From news.google.com ()
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-"Look at the Birdie: Unpublished Short Fiction," by Kurt Vonnegut; Delacorte Press (272 pages, $27)  
From modbee.com ()
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