Writing Articles (Sorted by popularity)

The Basics of Ghostwriting

Everyone has a story to tell. We’ve all experienced love, hate, heartache, joy and fear; we’ve seen good times and bad, and we all have little beads of wisdom to pass down to younger generations.
Laura CollegeApril 15, 2006

Proofreading Your Own Document

You've just written an important paper, business communique, or other document that will be read by others and perhaps will be the basis for a classroom grade, a prospective business arrangement, or provide necessary information for a specific...
Jan KovarikSeptember 17, 2005

A Few Keys to Writing Effective Dialogue

Every writer expends a great deal of creative energy developing a story line and limning well-balanced prose with evocative sentences. That's what writing is all about, after all.
Karyn Follis CheathamNovember 08, 2004

End Of History? Not Quite.

A visitor to Moscow would be immediately struck by the fact that an otherwise dull Kremlin now seduces one to break the sound barrier in a mike, rediscover one self on a Compaq or simply feel Warner in a Pringles.
Mithun BhattacharyaJuly 08, 2003

Book Publishing: Vanity Publishers Will Take You To The Cleaners

Many more people than you might think believe that they have a book or two inside of them, and they are yearning to get it out. In fact, almost every day I get e-mails from folks asking for help or information on how to write and publish a book or...
Shaun FawcettAugust 29, 2006

Many Writers, One Clear Voice

Imagine creating your first book, one on which hangs the future of your company-and maybe even the industry you love. Imagine you have a publishing contract, five editors, a eighty contributing authors, hundreds of draft pages, a deadline in five...
Susan RaabNovember 05, 2005

Uncover Your Reader's Personality

When researching magazines, writers naturally look to the types of articles published and their length, and the number of them that are freelance written.
Pamela WhiteNovember 13, 2006

Food Writing: Finding Your Niche

An overused bit of advice aimed at new writers is to write what you know. It's also pushed on experienced writers.But like other aphorisms, this one rings true.
Pamela WhiteAugust 29, 2006

How To Outgrow 'Write What You Know'

Every writer has heard it time and again, and it’s not without merit: “Write what you know.”When I began freelancing, I was just out of college, so what did I write about? College.
Jenna GlatzerAugust 11, 2005

The Subject And Object Theory

I am Tushar Jain, a student of literature. This subject, literature, is one which is susceptible to every clause scripted, every letter sculpted, and is liable to get one enamored by vacuous words like ‘subjective’.
Tushar JainJanuary 01, 2005