TECHNICAL WRITING CAN BE REWARDING By Susan Bilheimer

Would you like to earn a great living as a writer on a steady basis? If you answered yes, consider technical writing. It isn’t sexy, and it won’t make you famous. But working as a technical writer has provided me with a terrific income, and exponentially increased my creative writing skills. Furthermore, I’ve enjoyed my […]

TWO PEOPLE BESIDES MY MOTHER RECOGNIZE MY BYLINE By Pat Hensler

After college I started submitting personal essays to freelance newspaper columns that receive anywhere from 200 to 500 entries a week. In one, I wrote about a relationship falling apart as if it were a divorce. Another was a tribute to my family doctor on his retirement. A couple of my articles were published, which gave me hope that I might have some talent.

BOOKLOCKER.COM GRANTS MAN’S DYING WISH By Bea Sheftel

Editor’s Note: We receive lots of letters of praise over the course of a week and we appreciate each and every one. I save them all in a “kudos” folder in my emailbox and read them when I’m feeling down (usually after I’ve had to deal with a “jerk”). Since Tony Amato’s book was made […]

WONDER OF WONDERS By Johnnie Ann Gaskill

The Christmas my first book was being published, my younger daughter gave me a beautiful pen engraved, Johnnie Gaskill, Author. As I blinked back tears over the gift commemorating my arrival at that significant milepost, I realized I could never have reached that destination without the help of other writers.

A LITTLE LUCK AND TALENT By Miss Humera Abdul Basith

I never knew that one day I would become a freelance writer, had it not been for my father’s encouragement and belief in me. I was first published at the age of seven in a local children’s magazine. It was a small poem, with my photograph published alongside it.

RESIDENT SCHOLARS – AN INCOME OPPORTUNITY By C. Hope Clark

RESIDENT SCHOLARS – AN INCOME OPPORTUNITY By C. Hope Clark

The term Resident Scholars creates visions of poet laureates or literary masters in a college setting with anxious young protégés around their feet awaiting wise and noble direction. While very Victorian in thought, this picture is not the reality of today where resident scholars exist in every state. And while some may work at colleges, […]

PROTECTING YOUR RIGHTS AS A FREELANCER By Cathi Stevenson

Whether in Canada or the US, freelancers have two areas in which they are especially vulnerable: copyright infringement and payment; often the two go hand in hand. While outright theft of work may be difficult to avoid, a background check and a good contract will go a long way in protecting your rights. RESEARCH WHO […]

WHAT 9/11 TAUGHT ME ABOUT MY FUTURE By John Peters

Here it is again, September. Like so many people I know Autumn is my favorite time of year. I remember the first real Fall-like day of 2001. The calendar said it was still summer, but driving to work that day the cool air, the crystal blue sky dotted with a few wispy clouds all said Fall was here. It was, as far as I was concerned, the first day of Autumn.