2020 Queensland Literary Awards Shortlists — At the BookShelf

The links below are to article reporting on the various shortlists for the 2020 Queensland Literary Awards. For more visit:– https://www.booksandpublishing.com.au/articles/2020/08/05/154726/queensland-literary-awards-2020-shortlists-announced/– https://www.booksandpublishing.com.au/articles/2020/07/24/154184/queensland-literary-awards-2020-peoples-choice-shortlist-announced/

via 2020 Queensland Literary Awards Shortlists — At the BookShelf

Writing as a series of lenses — Nathan Bransford | Writing, Book Editing, Publishing

Moby-Dick is my favorite novel of all time, and what I love about it the most is that it feels true on so many different levels. The experience of reading it really does feel like the Pequod’s long, insane voyage to the ends of the Earth. It’s a huge novel like the leviathans they’re chasing.…

via Writing as a series of lenses — Nathan Bransford | Writing, Book Editing, Publishing

Great Authors Err Too! — SENTENTIAE ANTIQUAE

Quintilian, Inst. Orat. 10.1.24-26 “Let the reader not be persuaded as a matter of course that everything the best authors said is perfect. For they slip at times, they give in to their burdens, and they delight in the pleasure of their own abilities. They do not always pay attention; and they often grow tired. Demosthenes […]

via Great Authors Err Too! — SENTENTIAE ANTIQUAE

Book Review| Lizzie’s Dream By Beverly J. Tucker| Wasn’t Crazy About This One… — THE CHRONICLES OF HISTORY

I recently read Lizzie’s Dream by Beverly J Tucker. The novel is an historical fiction that follows the life of young girl working in a mill and falling in love during WWI. It pains me that I am unable to give this book a raving a review because usually I enjoy most books that I […]

via Book Review| Lizzie’s Dream By Beverly J. Tucker| Wasn’t Crazy About This One… — THE CHRONICLES OF HISTORY

This Five-Hundred Year Old Italian Word Can Teach You a Lot About “Effortless” Blogging — The Art of Blogging

Great content is often fascinating because it seems effortless. It appears to be the collective effect of inspiration, genius, and eureka moments. There’s an old Italian word for this, sprezzatura, which Seth Godin describes as, “a combination of elan and grace and class.” It is addictive, in part, because it seems to be the embodiment […]

via This Five-Hundred Year Old Italian Word Can Teach You a Lot About “Effortless” Blogging — The Art of Blogging

The Wee Lassie’s Top Eleven Elderly Badasses from Fiction — The Wee Writing Lassie

I bet you’re thinking I probably want to take it down a notch with my irritation at the current situation. Well…psyche! We’re gonna talk about elder abuse.

via The Wee Lassie’s Top Eleven Elderly Badasses from Fiction — The Wee Writing Lassie

17 Literary Magazines Accepting Submissions from Young Writers – by Erica Verrillo… — Chris The Story Reading Ape’s Blog

on Publishing … and Other Forms of Insanity: School literary magazines have long been a tradition in high schools and colleges. But since the advent of the Internet, youth-oriented literary magazines have expanded to include submissions from students all over the world. A good number of these magazines are staffed by students themselves. Some of […]

via 17 Literary Magazines Accepting Submissions from Young Writers – by Erica Verrillo… — Chris The Story Reading Ape’s Blog

Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg Teach ‘Screenwriting 101’ — My Site

Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg have been collaborating since they met in a bar mitzvah class at age 12. Beginning with 2007’s Superbad, they’ve written films that include Pineapple Express, This Is the End, Sausage Party, and, most recently, An American Pickle. Now, the duo break down writing films in our latest 101 video series, “Screenwriting 101.” Rogen and Goldberg kick off with a…

via Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg Teach ‘Screenwriting 101’ — My Site

Who are America’s most talented but under-appreciated writers? — Literary Hub

Every year, Longwood University’s John Dos Passos Prize sets out to celebrate one vital but under-appreciated writer. Previous recipients include Colson Whitehead, Tom Wolfe, and Annie Proulx. (Obviously, they were awarded the Dos Passos Prize before they won, say, two Pulitzer Prizes.) This year’s finalists were announced today. “These finalists represent everything the Dos Passos Prize…

via Who are America’s most talented but under-appreciated writers? — Literary Hub

Trailer: “Non-Fiction” with Juliette Binoche — Pas De Merde

Alain and Léonard, a writer and a publisher, are overwhelmed by the new practices of the publishing world. Deaf to the desires of their wives, they struggle to find their place in a society whose code they can no longer crack. Director Olivier AssayasStarring Guillaume Canet, Juliette Binoche, Vincent Macaigne, Nora Hamzawi Non-Fiction isn’t a surrender, nor is it a […]

via Trailer: “Non-Fiction” with Juliette Binoche — Pas De Merde

Review: Fruit of the Drunken Tree by Ingrid Rojas Contreras — Thoughts on Papyrus

Fruit of the Drunken Tree [2018] – ★★★ Ingrid Rojas Contreras is a Colombian writer and Fruit of the Drunken Tree is her debut book in which she tells the story of seven-year old Chula and her family living in the 1990s in Bogotá, Colombia in the shadows of the unpredictable world of Pablo Escobar […]

via Review: Fruit of the Drunken Tree by Ingrid Rojas Contreras — Thoughts on Papyrus

In My Hands Today… — In My Hands Today

The Satapur Moonstone – Sujata Massey India, 1922: It is rainy season in the lush, remote Sahyadri mountains, where the princely state of Satapur is tucked away. A curse seems to have fallen upon Satapur’s royal family, whose maharaja died of a sudden illness shortly before his teenage son was struck down in a tragic […]

via In My Hands Today… — In My Hands Today