Anna Holmes writes about two girls — Harriet and Scout — who were not “girly girls.” Who, I wonder, did they grow up to be?
Harriet M. Welsch, Scout Finch, and How to Be a Good Bad American Girl : The New Yorker
can't help telling stories
Anna Holmes writes about two girls — Harriet and Scout — who were not “girly girls.” Who, I wonder, did they grow up to be?
Harriet M. Welsch, Scout Finch, and How to Be a Good Bad American Girl : The New Yorker
This is a new marketing twist. I have mixed feeling about it. I used to run a book club at a newspaper, and we had a few free conference calls with authors.
Is this the “new” book tour?
Meet The Author Who’s Giving A Whole New Twist To Book Clubs
Tecnology is great, but here’s a case for letting your sleuth hit the streets.
Solving Cold Cases Depends on New Witnesses, Not DNA
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/03/140306-cold-cases-murder-csi-forensic-science/
Here’s who dunnit and how.
Raymond Chandler’s Ten Commandments for Writing a Detective Novel « Open Culture
Feeling stuck? Can’t see yourself with that published work? Imagine it almost done.
To Reach Your Goals, Make a Mental Movie – Srini Pillay – Harvard Business Review
http://blogs.hbr.org/2014/03/to-reach-your-goals-make-a-mental-movie/