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ghostwriting
are their any schools for ghostwriting rap and hiphop music ?

alot of people like the way i rap! i might not be all their but i have great punchlines and lyrics! i jus need to dedicate myself more! but are thier any school for composing rap and hip hop music ?

Try to find an online rap forum where you can do battles and stuff like that. JR Writer used to be a e-rapper before he got signed to Diplomats.

Ghostwriter opening theme


Ghostwriting


Ghostwriting


$8.99



Ghostwriting


Ghostwriting


$13.30



Pulp


Pulp


$0.96


Pulp is a little-seen yet still entertaining black comedy from Michael Caine’s prolific mid-career period of the early 1970s. While Sleuth fared much better at the box office in 1972 (mainly due to the dynamic pairing of Caine and Laurence Olivier), there’s much to enjoy in this droll, wickedly sarcastic effort from Mike Hodges, who had previously directed Caine in the acclaimed 1971 thriller Get …

Ghostwritten


Ghostwritten


$15.95


A gallery attendant at the Hermitage. A young jazz buff in Tokyo. A crooked British lawyer in Hong Kong. A disc jockey in Manhattan. A physicist in Ireland. An elderly woman running a tea shack in rural China. A cult-controlled terrorist in Okinawa. A musician in London. A transmigrating spirit in Mongolia. What is the common thread of coincidence or destiny that connects the lives of these nine s…

Ghostwriting: For Fun & Profit (Writeriffic Writer's)


Ghostwriting: For Fun & Profit (Writeriffic Writer’s)


$9.50


An experienced and award-winning ghost-writer shares insider information on ghost-writing, one of the most lucrative careers in writing. Aspiring ghost-writers learn how to attract and evaluate clients, capture clients’ voices, master the mechanics of ghost-writing, write and sell ghosted proposals and synopses, and negotiate financial and legal issues. The advice and techniques provided apply whe…

Goodbye Byline, Hello Big Bucks: The Writer's Guide to Making Money Ghostwriting and Coauthoring Books


Goodbye Byline, Hello Big Bucks: The Writer’s Guide to Making Money Ghostwriting and Coauthoring Books


$9.99


Need a blueprint for getting into ghostwriting? Kelly James-Enger has written it. From the most lucrative markets to target, to tips for making more money and everything in between, Goodbye Byline is the comprehensive guide to becoming a ghostwriter. What I love most, however, are the many detailed templates she provides. You’ll save plenty of time and money by using her sample letters of int…



 Ghostwriting: The Ultimate Guide To Creating a Bestseller (2007 Edition)


Ghostwriting: The Ultimate Guide To Creating a Bestseller (2007 Edition)


$2.95


Joel Hochman, Larry Leichman,NOOKbook (eBook), English-language edition,Pub by Arbor Books, Inc.

 101 Ways to Find Six-Figure Medical or Popular Ghostwriting Jobs & Clients: A Step-by-Step Guide


101 Ways to Find Six-Figure Medical or Popular Ghostwriting Jobs & Clients: A Step-by-Step Guide


$16.39


Anne Hart,Paperback, English-language edition,Pub by iUniverse, Incorporated

 125 Ways to Make Money with Your Typewriter


125 Ways to Make Money with Your Typewriter


$0.99


Instructions and tips for 125 ways of making money through writing, such as:- Magazine articles- Ghostwriting- Advertisements- Instruction bookletsIncludes a hyperlinked table of contents.

 A Ghost's Memoir: The Making of Alfred P. Sloan's My Years with General Motors


A Ghost’s Memoir: The Making of Alfred P. Sloan’s My Years with General Motors


$4


The story of the ghostwriting of Alfred P. Sloan’s best-selling memoir, General Motors’s attempts to block the book’s publication, and the author’s eventual triumph over the corporation.

 A Ghost's Memoir: The Making of Alfred P. Sloan's My Years with General Motors


A Ghost’s Memoir: The Making of Alfred P. Sloan’s My Years with General Motors


$32


The story of the ghostwriting of Alfred P. Sloan’s best-selling memoir, General Motors’s attempts to block the book’s publication, and the author’s eventual triumph over the corporation.

 A Guide to Ghostwriting: An Overview, Its Role, Types, Medical, Religious, etc.


A Guide to Ghostwriting: An Overview, Its Role, Types, Medical, Religious, etc.


$21.75


Stella Dawkins,Paperback, English-language edition,Pub by Webster’s Digital Services

 Ancient Greek Literary Letters


Ancient Greek Literary Letters


$33.95


What was it about epistolarity that appealed so strongly to the Greek imagination?The first reference in Greek literature to a letter occurs in our oldest extant Greek poem, Homer’s Iliad. But letters can be found lurking in every corner of ancient Greek writing. This book aims to bring the literary letters themselves into clear view for contemporary readers. Many ancient writers included letters in other narrative genres: Euripides brought letters on stage; historians included letters as documents; Greek novelists sprinkled their stories with letters exchanged between separated lovers; and epigrammatists played with the epigram as letter. By the second and third centuries CE, many centuries after Homer’s epics, imaginative letters evolved into an established genre in their own right: Aelian and Alciphron excelled in epistolary impersonations, imitating the voices of the lower classes, and collecting their letters in anthologies; Philostratus emerged as a master of epistolary spin, taking one theme and subtly tweaking it in half a dozen letters to different addressees; and anonymous writers competed with one another in their particular form of ghostwriting for the rich and famous.Arranged chronologically, with introductory sections for each time period, this book studies this wide range of writers, genres and literary levels and suggests that there is more to a letter than just the information it communicates. Epistolary context is just as important as content, as will be rediscovered by Ovid, Richardson, Laclos, and a whole host of later European writers. Patricia A. Rosenmeyer has chosen a highly entertaining selection, which include translation ofpreviously inaccessible or untranslated works, and deftly opens up a neglected area of study to provide an enjoyable and significant survey for students of Greek epistolography.

 Ancient Greek Literary Letters


Ancient Greek Literary Letters


$33.95


What was it about epistolarity that appealed so strongly to the Greek imagination?The first reference in Greek literature to a letter occurs in our oldest extant Greek poem, Homer’s Iliad. But letters can be found lurking in every corner of ancient Greek writing. This book aims to bring the literary letters themselves into clear view for contemporary readers. Many ancient writers included letters in other narrative genres: Euripides brought letters on stage; historians included letters as documents; Greek novelists sprinkled their stories with letters exchanged between separated lovers; and epigrammatists played with the epigram as letter. By the second and third centuries CE, many centuries after Homer’s epics, imaginative letters evolved into an established genre in their own right: Aelian and Alciphron excelled in epistolary impersonations, imitating the voices of the lower classes, and collecting their letters in anthologies; Philostratus emerged as a master of epistolary spin, taking one theme and subtly tweaking it in half a dozen letters to different addressees; and anonymous writers competed with one another in their particular form of ghostwriting for the rich and famous.Arranged chronologically, with introductory sections for each time period, this book studies this wide range of writers, genres and literary levels and suggests that there is more to a letter than just the information it communicates. Epistolary context is just as important as content, as will be rediscovered by Ovid, Richardson, Laclos, and a whole host of later European writers. Patricia A. Rosenmeyer has chosen a highly entertaining selection, which include translation ofpreviously inaccessible or untranslated works, and deftly opens up a neglected area of study to provide an enjoyable and significant survey for students of Greek epistolography.

 Ancient Greek Literary Letters: Selections in Translation


Ancient Greek Literary Letters: Selections in Translation


$92.5


What was it about epistolarity that appealed so strongly to the Greek imagination?The first reference in Greek literature to a letter occurs in our oldest extant Greek poem, Homer’s Iliad. But letters can be found lurking in every corner of ancient Greek writing. This book aims to bring the literary letters themselves into clear view for contemporary readers. Many ancient writers included letters in other narrative genres: Euripides brought letters on stage; historians included letters as documents; Greek novelists sprinkled their stories with letters exchanged between separated lovers; and epigrammatists played with the epigram as letter. By the second and third centuries CE, many centuries after Homer’s epics, imaginative letters evolved into an established genre in their own right: Aelian and Alciphron excelled in epistolary impersonations, imitating the voices of the lower classes, and collecting their letters in anthologies; Philostratus emerged as a master of epistolary spin, taking one theme and subtly tweaking it in half a dozen letters to different addressees; and anonymous writers competed with one another in their particular form of ghostwriting for the rich and famous.Arranged chronologically, with introductory sections for each time period, this book studies this wide range of writers, genres and literary levels and suggests that there is more to a letter than just the information it communicates. Epistolary context is just as important as content, as will be rediscovered by Ovid, Richardson, Laclos, and a whole host of later European writers. Patricia A. Rosenmeyer has chosen a highly entertaining selection, which include translation of previously inaccessible or untranslated works, and deftly opens up a neglected area of study to provide an enjoyable and significant survey for students of Greek epistolography.

 Ancient Greek Literary Letters: Selections in Translation


Ancient Greek Literary Letters: Selections in Translation


$20


What was it about epistolarity that appealed so strongly to the Greek imagination?The first reference in Greek literature to a letter occurs in our oldest extant Greek poem, Homer’s Iliad. But letters can be found lurking in every corner of ancient Greek writing. This book aims to bring the literary letters themselves into clear view for contemporary readers. Many ancient writers included letters in other narrative genres: Euripides brought letters on stage; historians included letters as documents; Greek novelists sprinkled their stories with letters exchanged between separated lovers; and epigrammatists played with the epigram as letter. By the second and third centuries CE, many centuries after Homer’s epics, imaginative letters evolved into an established genre in their own right: Aelian and Alciphron excelled in epistolary impersonations, imitating the voices of the lower classes, and collecting their letters in anthologies; Philostratus emerged as a master of epistolary spin, taking one theme and subtly tweaking it in half a dozen letters to different addressees; and anonymous writers competed with one another in their particular form of ghostwriting for the rich and famous.Arranged chronologically, with introductory sections for each time period, this book studies this wide range of writers, genres and literary levels and suggests that there is more to a letter than just the information it communicates. Epistolary context is just as important as content, as will be rediscovered by Ovid, Richardson, Laclos, and a whole host of later European writers. Patricia A. Rosenmeyer has chosen a highly entertaining selection, which include translation of previously inaccessible or untranslated works, and deftly opens up a neglected area of study to provide an enjoyable and significant survey for students of Greek epistolography.

Written by admin

September 9th, 2011 at 11:34 am

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