Archive for the ‘tips’ tag
Becoming A Writer

Professional Web Content Writers Provides Quality Work
The increasing competition among the online businesses have made the web content writers in high demand. This increasing competition among the businesses’ means the increasing number of websites. Here plays the role of content writers who develops the content of the website by using simple sentences and right keywords.
In fact the very first step for having a successful business is developing an impressive website. It is not only a good website design that can increase the traffic of the website, the website also needs to be optimized so that it ranks higher in the search engine results pages (SERP). Relevant content is also a very much crucial factor in order to make the site attention grabbing to the visitors. Anyone and everyone who knows writing English cannot write web content. For writing web content, professionally trained and experienced web content writers are needed.
So, if you hire a professional SEO content writer you can remain assured that you will have quality content for your website. There will also be no keyword usage issues for the professional writers knows what keywords need to be used for the content and how many times the keywords need to be used in the content. The quality work will make your web page rank high in the SERP. The higher the SERP, more will be the traffic on your website.
There are many web design and development companies that offer content writing services. But all the companies do not offer quality work to their customers. There are only a few in the industry that can provide quality content writing services to their potential customers. So, you must be very careful when choosing the professional website content writing services. All the companies will show off a long list of portfolio in order to impress their customers. Never choose the content writing company by seeing their portfolio. It is always better to choose website content writers after testing their skills.
Efficient content writers always use simple language while writing the content. The professional writers know the techniques of search engine optimization and can create original content. A good and experienced content writer can do different kinds of online write ups. Whatever work it is –whether it is website content, articles for marketing, blog, reviews or any other kind of work, they do the work with intense passion.
A professional and experienced web content writer keeps the content short and crisp and always provides relevant information to the visitors. Keyword enriched content is one of the key factors in enhancing the page rank of a site. So, always ensure to hire web content writers that can deliver content as per your needs.
About the Author
To make your website drive more traffic hire a professional SEO content writer. To know more about Web content writers log on to: /http://www.content-writers-india.com
Tony Kushner talks about Becoming A Writer
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London Calling/Novelist $1.99 … |
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The First Week (#5) The end of the first week (Black & White, 1967) $1.99 … |
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London Calling/Novelist [HD] $2.99 … |
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The Spell of the Sensuous: Perception and Language in a More-Than-Human World $8.99 David Abram’s writing casts a spell of its own as he weaves the reader through a meticulously researched work that gently addresses such seemingly daunting topics as where the past and future exist, the relationship between space and time, and how the written word serves to sever humans from their primordial source of sustenance: the earth. “Only as the written text began to speak would th… |
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Mechanically Inclined: Building Grammar, Usage, and Style into Writer’s Workshop $18.22 Some teachers love grammar and some hate it, but nearly all struggle to find ways of making the mechanics of English meaningful to kids. As a middle school teacher, Jeff Anderson also discovered that his students were not grasping the basics, and that it was preventing them from reaching their potential as writers. Jeff readily admits, “I am not a grammarian, nor am I punctilious about anythi… |
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Monster: The Autobiography of an L.A. Gang Member $8.89 After pumping eight blasts from a sawed-off shotgun at a group of rival gang members, eleven-year-old Kody Scott was initiated into the L.A. gang the Crips. He quickly matured into one of the most formidable Crip combat soldiers, earning the name Monster for committing acts of brutality and violence that repulsed even his fellow gang members. When the inevitable jail term confined him to a maximum… |
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USB2.0 Card Reader/Writer With Sim Card (Black) $14 USB2.0 Card Reader/Writer With Sim Card (Black) |
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Using A Writer’s Notebook Grd 3-4 $9.99 Standards-based lessons support the traits of good writing: ideas, organization, voice, word choice, sentence fluency, conventions, and presentation. The common thread that runs through the lessons is the use of a personalized Writer’s Notebook. The author encourages each student to create and maintain a Writer’s Notebook – a collection of cherished memories, stimulating conversations, thought-provoking ideas, colorful phrases, and helpful tips. Because the Writer’s Notebook is never graded, it is a safe place for a student to experiment in the art of writing – testing new words, phrases, and styles. It becomes a personal reference book to enhance a student’s writings. |
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Using A Writer’s Notebook Grd 5-6 $9.99 Standards-based lessons support the traits of good writing: ideas, organization, voice, word choice, sentence fluency, conventions, and presentation. The common thread that runs through the lessons is the use of a personalized Writer’s Notebook. The author encourages each student to create and maintain a Writer’s Notebook – a collection of cherished memories, stimulating conversations, thought-provoking ideas, colorful phrases, and helpful tips. Because the Writer’s Notebook is never graded, it is a safe place for a student to experiment in the art of writing – testing new words, phrases, and styles. It becomes a personal reference book to enhance a student’s writings. |
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Writer’s Craft: Models, Lessons, and More $24.99 Writer’s Craft features unique elements to help educators teach writing. The lessons emphasize the basic elements of effective writing: focus, organization, support, and conventions. Precise directions are given for how to begin, what to teach, and the order in which to teach the lessons as well as detailed examples. This book also includes actual student samples and rubrics. |
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USB2.0 Card Reader/Writer With Sim Card – GF-008 (Silver) $14 USB2.0 Card Reader/Writer With Sim Card – GF-008 (Silver) |
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Emergent Writer’s Workshop $21.99 After listening to stories, singing songs, learning new words, and completing art projects, children are eager to write their own stories with pictures and words. Each of 18 units culminates with a Mini Book.The activities target standards in these areas: the writing process conventions in writing high frequency vocabulary simple sentences |
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Hell fer Sartain and other stories $14.03 John Fox, Jr. (1862-1919) was an American journalist, novelist, and short story writer. He graduated in 1883 before becoming a reporter in New York City. After working for both New York Times and the New York Sun, he published a successful serialization of his first novel, A Mountain Europa, in Century magazine in 1892. Two moderately successful short story collections followed, as well as his first conventional novel, The Kentuckians in 1898. Fox gained a following as a war correspondent, working for Harper’s Weekly in Cuba during the Spanish-American War of 1898, where he served with the “Rough Riders. ” Six years later he travelled to the Orient to report on the Russo-Japanese War for Scribner’s magazine. Though he occasionally wrote for periodicals, after 1904, Fox dedicated much of his attention to fiction. The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come (1903) and The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (1908) are arguably his most well known and successful works. |
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”The Stars Belong to Everyone”: The rhetorical practices of astronomer and science writer Dr. Helen Sawyer Hogg (1905–1993). $49.99 Astronomer and science writer Dr. Helen Sawyer Hogg (University of Toronto) reached a variety of audiences through different rhetorical forms. She communicated to her colleagues through her scholarly writings; she reached out to students and the public through her Toronto Star newspaper column entitled “With the Stars,” which she authored for thirty years; she wrote The Stars Belong to Everyone, a book that speaks to a lay audience; she hosted a successful television series entitled Ideas; and she delivered numerous speeches at scientific conferences, professional women’s associations, school programs, libraries, and other venues.;Adapting technical information for different audiences is at the heart of technical communication, and Sawyer Hogg’s work exemplifies adaptation as she moves from writing for the scientific community (as in her articles on globular cluster research) to science writing for lay audiences (as in her newspaper column, book, and script for her television series). Initially she developed her sense of audience through a male perspective informed largely by her scholarly work with two men (Harlow Shapley and her husband, Frank Hogg) as well as the pervasive masculine culture of academic science.;This dissertation situates Sawyer Hogg in what is slowly becoming a canon of technical communication scholarship on female scientists. Toward this end, I discuss how she rhetorically engaged two different audiences, one scholarly and one popular, how Sawyer Hogg translated male dominated scientific rhetoric to writing for the public, and how science writing helped her achieve her professional goals. Complementing the archival research in addressing the questions of this study, I employ social construction analysis (also known as the social perspective) for my research methodology. She was ahead of her time and embodied the social perspective years before its definition as a rhetorical concept. In short, my study illuminates one scientific woman’s voice, |
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”The Stars Belong to Everyone”: The rhetorical practices of astronomer and science writer Dr. Helen Sawyer Hogg (1905–1993). $49.99 Astronomer and science writer Dr. Helen Sawyer Hogg (University of Toronto) reached a variety of audiences through different rhetorical forms. She communicated to her colleagues through her scholarly writings; she reached out to students and the public through her Toronto Star newspaper column entitled “With the Stars,” which she authored for thirty years; she wrote The Stars Belong to Everyone, a book that speaks to a lay audience; she hosted a successful television series entitled Ideas; and she delivered numerous speeches at scientific conferences, professional women’s associations, school programs, libraries, and other venues.;Adapting technical information for different audiences is at the heart of technical communication, and Sawyer Hogg’s work exemplifies adaptation as she moves from writing for the scientific community (as in her articles on globular cluster research) to science writing for lay audiences (as in her newspaper column, book, and script for her television series). Initially she developed her sense of audience through a male perspective informed largely by her scholarly work with two men (Harlow Shapley and her husband, Frank Hogg) as well as the pervasive masculine culture of academic science.;This dissertation situates Sawyer Hogg in what is slowly becoming a canon of technical communication scholarship on female scientists. Toward this end, I discuss how she rhetorically engaged two different audiences, one scholarly and one popular, how Sawyer Hogg translated male dominated scientific rhetoric to writing for the public, and how science writing helped her achieve her professional goals. Complementing the archival research in addressing the questions of this study, I employ social construction analysis (also known as the social perspective) for my research methodology. She was ahead of her time and embodied the social perspective years before its definition as a rhetorical concept. In short, my study illuminates one scientific woman’s voice, |
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1870s Short Stories (Study Guide): 1870 Short Stories, 1871 Short Stories, 1872 Short Stories, 1873 Short Stories, 1874 Short Stories $20.77 Purchase includes a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: 1870 Short Stories, 1871 Short Stories, 1872 Short Stories, 1873 Short Stories, 1874 Short Stories, 1875 Short Stories, 1876 Short Stories, 1877 Short Stories, 1878 Short Stories, 1879 Short Stories, Harap Alb, Dănilă Prepeleac, the Goat and Her Three Kids, the Most Incredible Thing, a Bundle of Letters, a Literary Nightmare, Madame de Mauves, a Gentle Creature, the Dream of a Ridiculous Man, in a Glass Darkly, God Sees the Truth, but Waits, a Drama in Mexico, Transcendental Wild Oats, Les Diaboliques, Dr. Ox’s Experiment, Tachypomp, the Peasant Marey, the Mutineers of the Bounty, Torrents of Spring, an Unfinished Race, Bobok, Sketches New and Old, the Adventure of the Hansom Cab, the Adventure of Prince Florizel and a Detective, Story of the Physician and the Saratoga Trunk, Story of the Young Man With the Cream Tarts, Story of the Bandbox, Story of the House With the Green Blinds, Story of the Young Man in Holy Orders. Source: Wikipedia. Free updates online. Not illustrated. Excerpt: “Harap Alb” or “Harap-Alb” (Romanian pronunciation: ), known in full as Povestea lui Harap Alb (“The Story of Harap Alb”), is a Romanian-language fairy tale. Based on traditional themes found in Romanian folklore, it was recorded and reworked in 1877 by writer Ion Creang, becoming one of his main contributions to fantasy and Romanian literature. The narrative centers on an eponymous prince traveling into a faraway land whose throne he has inherited, showing him being made into a slave by the treacherous Bald Man and eventually redeeming himself through acts of bravery. The plot introduces intricate symbolism, notably illustrated by the secondary characters. Among these are the helpful and sage old woman Holy Sunday, the tyrannical Red Emperor, and a band of five monstrous characters who provide |
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1938 Comics Characters Debuts: Superman, Clark Kent, Jimmy Olsen, Jor-El, Human Torch, Crimson Avenger, Zatara, Tex Thompson $20.68 Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Superman, Clark Kent, Jimmy Olsen, Jor-El, Human Torch, Crimson Avenger, Zatara, Tex Thompson. Excerpt: Clark Kent Clark Joseph Kent (middle name is also Jerome according to some versions) is a fictional character created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster . He serves as the civilian and secret identity of the superhero Superman . Over the decades there has been considerable debate as to which personality the character identifies with most. From his first introduction in 1938 to the mid-1980s, “Clark Kent” was seen mostly as a disguise for Superman, enabling him to mix with ordinary people. This was the view in most comics and other media such as TV (starring George Reeves ) and radio. In 1986, during John Byrne ‘s revamping of the character, the emphasis was on Superman being the alter-ego of Clark Kent, the side of the character he most identifies with. Different takes persist in the present. Overview Through the popularity of his Superman alter ego , the personality, concept, and name of Clark Kent have become ingrained in popular culture as well, becoming synonymous with secret identities and innocuous fronts for ulterior motives and activities. His name alludes to two pulp characters: Doc Savage , whose full name is Clark Savage Jr., and The Shadow , whose alias in the pulps was Kent Allard (though in the radio serial it was Lamont Cranston). Another theory is that “Kent” was a combination of the real and pen names of Doc Savage’s creator, Lester DENT, who wrote as KENNETH Robeson. Superman’s co-creator and first writer was an avid fan of the pulp genre. Beginnings In the earliest Superman comics, Clark Kent’s primary purpose was to fulfill the perceived dramatic requirement that a costumed superhero cannot remain on full duty all the time. Clark thus acted as |
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2008 Poetry And Stories $16.95 I write to discover my soul; I read to discover yours.Why is a publication of student writing worthy of awe and celebration? It is worthy of such response because of the miracle it represents. When students engage in writing,everything becomes more than it seems. Writers become more than students in seats. Poetry becomes more than an assignment. Teachers become more than knowledge keepers. Discovery becomes the way of life. This compilation of student writing represents an FMS habit of becoming”more.” Student writing is beautiful not because of its form or its structure, but rather because of its representation of individuality and thought. When students write,they begin the process of discovering their souls. Writers take a risks when they compose thoughts that represent how they process the world in which they live and solidify their place in it. At the same time, the reader also takes a risk to embrace an opportunity to make meaning in their own lives. This reciprocal meaning cements a relationship between reader and writer that cannot be defined or fragmented.Many times, in the classroom, student success is dependent upon ability to arrange external information in clear and concise forms. We all know that life is rarely clear and concise and the most effective method for relaying our interpretation of it typically rests within ourselves, not someone else. Transformations abound beyond the cover of this book. Words become passages to understanding for everyone involved. To the student writers of Fairfield Middle School, thank you for this opportunity to look at my own precious life. The beauty of your words inspires all. |
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365 Ways to Boost Your Brain Power $6.98 An apple a day doesn’t just keep the doctor away, it can also improve memory. From eating the right foods to knowing the right exercises, becoming smarter isn’t always about textbooks and tests. With this practical, interactive guide, you can amp up your IQ in no time! Filled with 365 tips and tricks to better the brain, you’ll learn that: Gingko Biloba increases blood flow to the brain; learning a new language improves brain function; classical music will help your problem-solving abilities; sitting up straight doesn’t just elevate your body, it improves your thinking process; taking a brisk walk builds a better connection between brain cells; eating at least one cup of blueberries a day reduces the effects of Alzheimer’s disease or dementia; and other brain boosting facts! This book is all that’s needed for smarter living—starting now. Carolyn Dean, M.D. (City Island, NY), is a medical doctor and a naturopathic doctor. She attended Dalhousie Medical School in Nova Scotia, Canada and Ontario Naturopathic College and sits on the board of the Canadian College of Naturopathic Medicine in Toronto. Dr. Dean is the health expert for www.yeastconnection.com, has been featured on their “Ask the Experts” column, and she is a regular guest on The View. She is the author of The Everything Alzheimer’s Book.Valentine Dmitriev, Ph.D. (Greenbank, WA), is a writer, educator, global lecturer, and consultant on education, cognitive development, and speech. She is the author of The Everything Build Your Vocabulary Book. Donna Raskin (Rockport, MA) is a personal trainer, yoga teacher, and group exercise instructor certified by ACSM (The American College of Sports Medicine), ACE (American College of Exercise), and Reebok Spinning. She is the author of The Everything Easy Fitness Book. |
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A Beginner’s Guide to Immortality: Extraordinary People, Alien Brains, and Quantum Resurrection $1.99 A Beginner’s Guide to Immortality is a celebration of unusual lives and creative thinkers who punched through ordinary cultural norms while becoming successful in their own niches. In his latest and greatest work, world-renowned science writer Cliff Pickover studies such colofrul characters as Truman Capote, John Cage, Stephen Wolfram, Ray Kurzweil, and Wilhelm Rontgen, and their curious ideas. Through these individuals, we can better explore life’s astonishing richness and glimpse the diversity of human imagination.Part memoir and part surrealistic perspective on culture, A Beginner’s Guide to Immortality gives readers a glimpse of new ways of thinking and of other worlds as he reaches across cultures and peers beyond our ordinary reality. He illuminates some of the most mysterious phenomena affecting our species. What is creativity? What are the religious implications of mosquito evolution, simulated Matrix realities, the brain’s own marijuana, and the mathematics of the apocalypse? Could we be a mere software simulation living in a matrix? Who is Elisabeth Kübler-Ross and Emanuel Swedenborg? Did church forefathers eat psychedelic snails? How can we safely expand our minds to become more successful and reason beyond the limits of our own intuition? How can we become immortal? |
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A Bell, a Song, an American Journey $13.45 What are the solutionsto illegal immigration, Middle East peace, and human suffering and hope?In A Bell, a Song, an American Journey, the author recounts his experiences, first as a university student studying in the U.S. and then as an illegal alien when his funds for schooling became nonexistent. His experiences included several stays at psychiatric hospitals-the result of a head injury suffered in a physical attack. The delusions he suffered included some relating to the First Family, and those delusions eventually resulted in his deportation from America. This book is about building bridges of good, commonly-shared values between the citizens of the U.S. and citizens of other countries living in America.Included in the book are the author’s views on the issues that he cares most about. This is his first work to be published, written in English, a second language he learned while living in America. The author raises deep questions and offers answers, but also leaves the reader the freedom to come up with his own answers.Born in the Middle East, the author came to America to continue his life-long pursuit of learning and happiness. Having lost his immigration status for unforeseen reasons, he made his living at hard menial jobs completely unrelated to his field of study. In the 1980′s and 1990′s he engaged other Arab immigrants in discussions on America, democracy, and peace, while working to develop his English skills with the intention of becoming a writer. He would only be able to write after leaving the United States. His writings emanate from both profound suffering and profound hope. Having succeeded in overcoming these limitations, he now teaches English and writes from his homeland. |
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A Blind Eye (Frank Corso Series #3) $0.99 Beneath the rotting floorboards of an abandoned shed are human bones — lots of them — the last things a runaway rogue true-crime writer and his photojournalist ex-lover expected to find when they took shelter from a vicious Wisconsin blizzard. The grisly nightmare Frank Corso and Meg Dougherty have uncovered is nothing they can turn a blind eye to. The hideous slaughter of a family, undetected for fifteen years, must be avenged, as the hunt for a killer carries Corso halfway across the country, and through a chilling history of violence, terror, and bloodshed. But becoming an instrument of justice has made him a target of a rage-driven maniac — and it’s leading to ashocking truth hidden in an isolated place where death lives … and where no law protects the innocent. |