I was goaded into the attempt by a former American publisher who's become a literary agent in New South Wales. |
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Unfortunately, U.S. sales of your magnum opus are inadequate to inspire the publisher to exercise those paperback rights he insisted on buying. |
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Unfortunately, they base their conclusions on a survey from a print-on-demand publisher. |
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The managing editor responded by telephoning the publisher and yelling at him angrily during the conversation. |
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In many cases, republishing an article may be as simple as gaining permission and crediting the publisher. |
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He began as senior writer and was promoted a year later to associate editor and associate publisher. |
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However, there were times when East himself was publisher as well as printer, in particular during the periods when the patent was in abeyance. |
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Finally, at the end of August last year, I gave my manuscript to my publisher. |
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Permission for reprinting must be secured from the publisher of the book or periodical from which the illustration is excerpted. |
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Unable to find another publisher, Huang elected to sell the book himself through the Web. |
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Forcing a publisher to publish something against their will is tantamount to censorship. |
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But now, it seems, one publisher, at least, has begun to address the problem. |
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And I can see why his publisher and agent must have jumped for joy when they read the manuscript. |
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A man can lose a contract from publishers by spending their advance on finishing a book for another publisher. |
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She does seem like the type who could think up such a thing and I'm sure a publisher wouldn't be averse to the idea. |
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In this way a library's readers see the subscribed pages at their original location, even though the publisher may no longer provide them there. |
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The role of the publisher could change markedly and perhaps be collapsed into that of the writers and their business managers and agents. |
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The publisher should consider adding a CD with pictures, animations, and PDF files of the major papers from the age of reason to the present. |
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It was never his intention to publish the manuscripts, but a friend who was a teacher read them and sent them to a publisher. |
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The prolific print publisher aimed his product at a broad public, and understood that Dutch culture was complex. |
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Now, a major publisher of top writers has flipped the kill switch on 40 of its ebooks on Amazon. |
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The book may be excellent of its kind, but not something that the publisher wishes to deal with. |
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The employees' problems are blamed on the black-hearted publisher rather than on the ideological system. |
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A compulsive workaholic and an absentee publisher, he has tried a number of different tactics to revive the papers. |
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Only two percent of YouTubers who had less than 5000 subscribers said they took money from a publisher. |
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Through his British publisher, Crane met the writer Joseph Conrad, who became his close friend. |
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The book became such a success in America that it has had to be reissued by another publisher. |
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A writer or publisher could take a tough stance on copyright, requiring all uses of the work to involve permission and fees. |
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Others relate to the conduct and decisions of the publisher or journalist concerned. |
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Just learned from my German publisher that he ordered a second print run of my book. |
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Soon after, he became editor in chief and associate publisher, positions he continues to hold today. |
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Users need this information to contact the publisher of the displayed metadata. |
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Mary Deanne Shears, terrorizing managing editrix of the Star, is widely considered toast now that publisher Lurch Honderich has got the sack. |
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This marks a profound sea change for the Company, which is arguably the largest B-to-B publisher online. |
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First there's the author, then the literary agent, publisher, distributor, bookseller and finally the customer. |
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Inscrutably, she changes the name on the title page to her own, sends it off to a publisher, and then goes on holiday with her best mate Lanna. |
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A decade of screenwriting followed, until a publisher asked him to turn a children's telemovie he had just written into a book. |
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It was argued that there must be read into this agreement an obligation on the publisher to act in good faith. |
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The publisher has reinvigorated its impressive backlist and new titles with stylish covers. |
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Bowling newspaper publisher Dan McDonough, also a Boy Scout official, tells about the two scouts who went bowling for the first time. |
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Installing himself as publisher, he practices the time-honored tradition of stealing the best writers from other journals. |
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With no real capital to speak of, the bookshop launched itself as a publisher primarily with the financial backing of a local pearl merchant. |
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Yes, according to the publisher of this one, who lists another four such volumes on the back page. |
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The publisher of the Miami Herald, visiting New York, hands out eyewash and alcohol swabs, unloads trash bins, refills a huge coffee urn. |
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It is strange that a different publisher used the same title page, but the text is not distinguishable from the 1865 edition. |
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For Time Inc., the world's largest magazine publisher with 134 titles, coming up with a fresh idea for a new magazine gets harder and harder. |
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How much gumption does it take to pillory the malfeasant editors, reporters, and publisher who turned to compost ages ago? |
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He sent the publisher a letter asking for a real contract and the publisher never wrote back. |
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A Dutch publisher plans to release the complete series in a library of 12 hardcovers. |
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Behind every brilliant best-selling author is usually a perceptive, savvy publisher. |
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Yes, but the anthropologist had sold his manuscript to some publisher who had no notice of any of this. |
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To call the Canadian publisher harlequin a monopoly in the romance genre might be an overstatement, but not by much. |
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The elder Vidyarthi had gone to jail for his pains, and his son had continued in the family tradition, as a courageous anti-establishment publisher. |
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Not long after, the Iranian woman who had connected him with his German publisher was interrogated and threatened. |
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A study in 2012 from e-book publisher Bookboon revealed that 75 percent of students decided not to buy their required textbooks. |
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The fact that no paperback followed the hardback was a testament to the bad blood between Jackson and the publisher. |
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Media stocks were some of the heaviest fallers after publisher Pearson frayed nerves as it warned there was little sign of a let-up in the tough advertising conditions. |
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I told the publisher that I thought that was totally reprehensible. |
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The challenge facing most self-published authors is in balancing the business demands of a publisher with the creative drive that's in each author. |
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She also translated a French novel for the publisher andre Deutsch while in Devon. |
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The publisher will release images of the new supplements online soon, likely over the long Labor Day weekend. |
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So it is a delicate balancing act that the newspaper publisher must play. |
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Poet, publisher and ace volunteer discusses her literary loves. |
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But what a flawed hero is our Rupert.Like Hearst, he was never a pioneer or much of an innovator as a newspaper publisher. |
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In due course, the publisher himself appears, tieless like Baquet on a casual Friday. |
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Last year, the St. Louis-based publisher Really Big coloring Books released a Ted Cruz coloring book. |
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The book that introduced darby, The Missing, is currently the only one available from an American publisher. |
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We can hope the publisher will soon remedy this with a paperback edition. |
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In the interview, Ponomarev reserved some of his harshest words for Katrina vanden Heuvel, the editor and publisher of The Nation. |
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A conservative coloring book publisher is out with a new title imagining the tea party heartthrob as a Bona fide superhero. |
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The normal reaction of a publisher when faced with an author with a bee in his bonnet is to grab the check and run. |
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For years, Brooke even had trouble finding a publisher for his memoir, which was ultimately accepted by Rutgers University Press. |
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When the first edition was sold out, the rights in the book were sold to a mainstream trade publisher, who issued it with revisions and a slightly altered title. |
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On the other hand, the only reason that that cover is what it is is because the publisher wants to sell more Faulkner books. |
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He sought out rare and out-of-print books from antiquarian booksellers, including a set of delightful eighteenth-century guidebooks by the York publisher Thomas Gent. |
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The poet, publisher, and crusader for progressive causes died in 1965, leaving behind a boarded-up house in the south of France. |
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Hothouse by Boris Kachka A romp through the history of venerable publisher Farrar, Straus, and Giroux. |
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A statement issued on behalf of the publisher said that it reasserted its support for the original order and repeated that it would never knowingly contravene a court order. |
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The above paragraph, by the way, is written in a week when a leading publisher announced an advance payment of 500,000 to a previously unpublished author. |
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The praise for The Drop has been so great that the German-based publisher Droemer Knaur plus a French publisher are showing interest in the book. |
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This book cannot be copied without the express permission of the publisher. |
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The publisher decided to expurgate the love scene from the book, to make it more child-friendly. |
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In 2005, some 206,000 books were published in the United Kingdom and in 2006 it was the largest publisher of books in the world. |
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The Encyclopaedia continued to be published in Edinburgh until 1898, when it was sold to an American publisher. |
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A free weekly newspaper is published by the same publisher, Johnston Press, called The Journal. |
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He stretched the funding to include his planned books on geology, and agreed to unrealistic dates with the publisher. |
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Submissions sent directly to a publisher are referred to as unsolicited submissions, and the majority come from previously unpublished authors. |
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This policy shifts the burden of assessing and developing writers out of the publisher and onto the literary agents. |
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The publisher must estimate the potential sales in each market and balance projected revenue against production costs. |
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The book is written, edited, and designed as usual, but it is not printed until the publisher receives an order for the book from a customer. |
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Once a book, newspaper, or another publication is printed, the publisher may use a variety of channels to distribute it. |
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Within the book publishing, the publisher of record for a book is the entity in whose name the book's ISBN is registered. |
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Robert Thomson, previously the paper's US managing editor, was the editor of The Times and is now the publisher of the Wall Street Journal. |
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In a period of revolution in book design, he illustrated for the publisher Johann Froben. |
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So too did the publisher Edward Blount, in the dedication of Hero and Leander to Sir Thomas Walsingham. |
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Unable to contact anyone else, he wrote to the writer and publisher Samuel Richardson. |
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In this period, Pope was also employed by the publisher Jacob Tonson to produce an opulent new edition of Shakespeare. |
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In 1809, Coleridge made his second attempt to become a newspaper publisher with the publication of the journal entitled The Friend. |
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In 1832 his publisher, John Murray, released the complete works in 14 duodecimo volumes, including a life by Thomas Moore. |
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By 1822, cautious acceptance by the public had turned to outrage, and Byron's publisher refused to continue to publish the works. |
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In September 1895 Chesterton began working for the London publisher Redway, where he remained for just over a year. |
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All these became his friends and collaborators, with the exception of Disraeli, and he met his first publisher, John Macrone, at the house. |
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Following the overwhelming success of Jane Eyre, Charlotte was pressured by George Smith, her publisher, to travel to London to meet her public. |
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Hardy's first novel, The Poor Man and the Lady, finished by 1867, failed to find a publisher. |
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In 1863, he had taken the unfinished manuscript to Macmillan the publisher, who liked it immediately. |
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Four days after the meeting Blyton sent the text of the first two Noddy books to her publisher, to be forwarded to van der Beek. |
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Pollock was editor of the book department in the publishing firm of George Newnes, which became her regular publisher. |
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In honour of the 125th anniversary of her birth, 25 contemporary mystery writers and one publisher revealed their views on Christie's works. |
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Pratchett died at his home on the morning of 12 March 2015 from his Alzheimer's, according to his publisher. |
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The merger made the new company, then valued at over half a billion dollars, the third largest music publisher in the world. |
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The publisher refused to print both halves of the book, and original prints were by two companies. |
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Romantic fiction was especially popular, with Mills and Boon the leading publisher. |
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Pinter's publisher, Stephen Page of Faber and Faber, accepted the Nobel Diploma and Nobel Medal at the Awards Ceremony in his place. |
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Higgins was the publisher of the Something Else Press, a concrete poet married to artist Alison Knowles and an admirer of Marcel Duchamp. |
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Caton, a publisher of barely legal pornography, who also issued serious fiction as a cover for his core activities. |
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When he went to relinquish his rights to the book, he discovered the publisher had gone bankrupt. |
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In 2009, Emin along with book publisher Rizzoli released a book titled One Thousand Drawings. |
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The Times was founded by publisher John Walter on 1 January 1785 as The Daily Universal Register, with Walter in the role of editor. |
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She moved to London and, assisted by the liberal publisher Joseph Johnson, found a place to live and work to support herself. |
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Most of Part I was ready for printing in 1946, but Wittgenstein withdrew the manuscript from his publisher. |
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Denied a licence to publish, in August 1722 Voltaire headed north to find a publisher outside France. |
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On his return to France, he secured a second publisher in Rouen, who agreed to publish La Henriade clandestinely. |
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From December 1727 to June 1728 he lodged at Maiden Lane, Covent Garden, now commemorated by a plaque, to be nearer to his British publisher. |
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Peer review quality and selectivity standards vary greatly from journal to journal, publisher to publisher, and field to field. |
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In open access publishing, a journal article is made available free for all on the web by the publisher at the time of publication. |
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It was inherited as the title by the first publisher of the complete collection, Lady Charlotte Guest. |
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He wrote a famous biography of the great Liberal publisher Thomas Gee, whose work influenced Jones throughout his life. |
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It is intended to add new issues of the titles as they emerge from the embargo period agreed with the publisher. |
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After a review of Kohnstamm's guidebooks, publisher Piers Pickard agreed that no inaccuracies had been found. |
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Muscat, the capital of Oman, was named the second best city to visit in the world in 2012 by the travel guide publisher Lonely Planet. |
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It is the official publisher for the General Convention of the Episcopal Church in the United States. |
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The title was a suggestion by the publisher and is meant as a sarcastic reference to the Bauer Brothers and their supporters. |
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Edward Cave, a publisher, obtained a licence and set up machines in a warehouse in London. |
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At 77 he walked to York, where he related a detailed account of his life to a publisher. |
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I told my writers... by the end of the term they'd have to bring in either a rejection slip or a check from a publisher. |
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Also in 1775, Massachusetts Spy publisher Isaiah Thomas moved his radical newspaper out of British occupied Boston to Worcester. |
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Both are owned by independent publisher the CN Group, formerly Cumbrian Newspapers. |
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When he published his first book it was privately, as he could not face the prospect of finding a publisher. |
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From 1963, the Westmorland Gazette became his publisher, and its name appears on the first impressions of Books Six and Seven. |
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The process, patented by the artist and publisher Henry Bradbury, impressed a specimen on to a soft lead plate. |
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From 1963, Westmorland Gazette also became the publisher, and their name appears as such on the first impressions of Books Six and Seven. |
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Illustrations was published in February 1832 in an edition of just 1500, since the publisher assumed it would not sell well. |
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Some of Ransome's early works were The Nature Books for Children, a series of children's books commissioned by publisher Anthony Treherne. |
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Only three of the six planned volumes were published before the publisher went bankrupt. |
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The publisher Daniel Macmillan dined with the couple every day during the trial so that Ivy could not quarrel with Arthur. |
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Thompson, who's the digest's publisher, says bird watching is a hobby, a pastime and a spectator sport that can be enjoyed anywhere. |
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Punch was named publisher and as his first act fired Amory Bradford. |
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This helps companies maintain an honest relationship with the software publisher and protects against versionitis. |
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So I did what any self-respecting publisher would do, got out of the car, ran across, got him in an armlock and pulled him out of the shot. |
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Heymann chose not to return messages left with his publisher, atria Books. |
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The AAS was founded 200 years ago by Isaiah Thomas, Worcester's famous publisher, printer, newspaper editor and antiquarian. |
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On Dec 5, the publisher filed a writ of summons in the Kuala Lumpur High Court to seek a declaration on the use of the word. |
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Angles of Attack is available for purchase online through the author's website, from the publisher, Amazon. |
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Stacy also said family members of the late Libyan strongman Moammar Qadhdhafi owned shares in the book's publisher. |
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His publisher, the Penguin Randon House Group, also paid tribute to Thomas yesterday. |
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Some small, artier shops like PictureBox, a Grammy-winning publisher operating at Third and Bond streets, have opened. |
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The publisher has been very aggressive in promoting the book. |
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Hang Chakra, publisher of the Khmer Mchas Srok newspaper, was sentenced in absentia and fined 9 million riels. |
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The free newspaper Metro, a joint venture with publisher Rossel, recorded the best results in its 10-year history. |
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Then he thought the rotundly affable Peter Bates, publisher of a local glossy magazine, was pinching Wallace's latest girlfriend's behind. |
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Taking Bratz to the big screen might make Bratz too ubiquitous, said Jim Silver, publisher of Toy Wishes. |
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It takes backbone and a firm commitment to professional standards for any publisher to resist the slide into boosterism. |
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Wald is the publisher of Beyond the Bris, a website geared to those families. |
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Since December 2006, Gardner Business Media, publisher of Plastics Technology, has computed a business index for the metalworking industry. |
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He is the editor and publisher of Card Times, a long-running monthly magazine for cartophilists worldwide. |
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Once it was chosen as Philadelphia's first One Book, sales skyrocketed, forcing the publisher to print another 40,000 copies, Cary says. |
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The publisher recently formed a new education division, Sourcebooks EDU, which made its first acquisition on Friday of managingcollegecost. |
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Ankerwycke is a new trade-book publishing imprint created in 2014 by the American Bar Association, a leading publisher of legal trade books. |
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But the newsletter publisher is as much in the marketing business as in the communication business. |
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The fact that Zondervan is also publisher of the NIV and Today's NIV should not be missed. |
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In a special arrangement the publisher Wayzgoose and ScotRail have agreed for the book to be sold on the catering trolleys of the rail operator's trains. |
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For those works that are particularly rich in illustrations, the publisher may contract a picture researcher to find and license the photographs required for the work. |
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At the instigation of his American publisher, George Doran, he made his first lecture tour of the US in 1919, receiving an enthusiastic welcome wherever he went. |
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Oscar Wilde, a critical study had been prepared under the guidance of publisher Martin Secker, but Granville had promised better returns and a guaranteed and steady income. |
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It was also a useful recruiting ground for assistants, on some of whom Ruskin would later come to rely, such as his future publisher, George Allen. |
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Bingley also printed a volume of his poems in 1833, and Coleridge lived in his house until the contract came to an end through the bankruptcy of the publisher. |
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In 2015 a manuscript for an unpublished book was discovered by Jo Hanks, a publisher at Penguin Random House Children's Books, in the Victoria and Albert Museum archive. |
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Fine art publisher and licensing company Wild Apple Graphics has added to its growing art staff with the appointment of Mike Schick as art director. |
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Wainwright was a supporter of animal rights and explained that the publisher of his books gave most of the profits from his books to animal charities. |
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His friend Henry Marshall, Chief Librarian of Kendal and Westmorland, took charge of publicity and administration, and his name appears as publisher on the early impressions. |
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The British publisher Collins' COBUILD monolingual learner's dictionary, designed for users learning English as a foreign language, was compiled using the Bank of English. |
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For a submission to reach publication, it must be championed by an editor or publisher who must work to convince other staff of the need to publish a particular title. |
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On January 31, he gave the manuscript to publisher Joseph Johnson. |
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The Thorvaldsen museum also has an alliterative poem, Thunravalds Sunau, from 1841 by Massmann, the first publisher of the Skeireins, written in the Gothic language. |
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For works written independently of the publisher, writers often first submit a query letter or proposal directly to a literary agent or to a publisher. |
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Lonely Planet is the largest travel guide book publisher in the world. |
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Between 1834 and 1842 he lived in Paris, where he worked for the English language publisher Galignani and edited several editions of Galignani's Paris Guide. |
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When Duffy was 15, June Scriven sent her poems to Outposts, a publisher of pamphlets, where it was read by the bookseller Bernard Stone, who published some of them. |
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According to Macpherson's prefatory material, his publisher, claiming that there was no market for these works except in English, required that they be translated. |
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Information on a teach-in for action presented by Essential Action, a project of Multinational Monitor's publisher Essential Information, and other groups is posted at www. |
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Duncan also helped to make Dundee a major centre for the Celtic Revival movement along with artists such as Stewart Carmichael and the publisher Malcolm C MacLeod. |
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The second edition of The Vindication of the Rights of Man was published on 18 December, and this time the publisher revealed Wollstonecraft as the author. |
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Callahan's law firm has pursued misclassification cases against the publisher of the San Diego Union-Tribune, the Sacramento Bee and the Fresno Bee. |
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During the Who's hiatuses in the 1980s and 90s, Townshend developed his skills as a music publisher to be financially successful from the Who without recording or touring. |
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The anthology was published by Fortune Press, in part a vanity publisher that did not pay its writers and expected them to buy a certain number of copies themselves. |
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Gaiman and artist Mark Buckingham collaborated on several issues of the series before its publisher, Eclipse Comics, collapsed, leaving the series unfinished. |
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Richardson was an established printer and publisher for most of his life and printed almost 500 different works, including journals and magazines. |
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Website content can largely be provided by the publisher, or interactive where users contribute content or the content depends upon the user or their actions. |
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Instead of publishing with an academic press, he signed a contract with Bantam Books, a mass market publisher, and received a large advance for his book. |
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The Pilgrim's Progress was published in 1678 by Nathaniel Ponder and immediately became popular, though probably making more money for its publisher than for its author. |
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In 1797, a British publisher issued The Young Man's Valentine Writer which contained scores of suggested sentimental verses for the young lover unable to compose his own. |
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Know that your publisher understands and loves them and that your publisher wants you to get a record deal so that they can start making money off you via the mechanicals. |
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Hueffer then commissioned the story Odour of Chrysanthemums which, when published in that magazine, encouraged Heinemann, a London publisher, to ask Lawrence for more work. |
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She stayed at the house of John Chapman, the radical publisher whom she had met earlier at Rosehill and who had published her Strauss translation. |
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In November 1797, George Austen wrote to Thomas Cadell, an established publisher in London, to ask if he would consider publishing First Impressions. |
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Charlotte's Jane Eyre, Emily's Wuthering Heights, and Anne's Agnes Grey, appeared in 1847 after many tribulations, again for reasons of finding a publisher. |
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When Coleridge arrived back in England he travelled to the North with their publisher Joseph Cottle to meet Wordsworth and undertake a proposed tour of the Lake District. |
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After his father's death, Blake and former fellow apprentice James Parker opened a print shop in 1784, and began working with radical publisher Joseph Johnson. |
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After being turned down for a job at Ashbourne, he spent time with his friend Edmund Hector, who was living in the home of the publisher Thomas Warren. |
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An online survey by the dictionary publisher Merriam-Webster concluded that the 2006 Word of the Year was truthiness, credited to Comedy Central's Stephen Colbert. |
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An indictment for seditious libel followed, for both publisher and author, while government agents followed Paine and instigated mobs, hate meetings, and burnings in effigy. |
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Spenser seems to have had no difficulty in receiving payment when it was due as the pension was being collected for him by his publisher, Ponsonby. |
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Konstam speculates further, suggesting that Johnson may have been the English playwright Charles Johnson, the British publisher Charles Rivington, or the writer Daniel Defoe. |
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The university's publishing arm, the Cambridge University Press, is the oldest printer and publisher in the world, and it is the second largest university press in the world. |
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In providing a work to the general public, the publisher takes responsibility for the publication in a way that a mere printer or a shopkeeper does not. |
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The publisher of record may or may not be the actual publisher. |
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Indeed, the first publisher will often print sufficient copies for all markets and thereby get the maximum quantity efficiency on the print run for all. |
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The Chow Down by Lynn April, publisher Halo Publishing, Int. |
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Each year Priestley travelled to London to consult with his close friend and publisher, Joseph Johnson, and to attend meetings of the Royal Society. |
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To counter this lack of detail, the publisher listed a Reitsch biography readers can consult to gain a riffler understand of this fascinating woman. |
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The publisher also confirmed that this content, and the rest of the game's expansions, will be developed by the game's main team, Rocksteady Studios. |
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Perhaps, that would be a male beauty contest, however, everything suggests that the publisher would come up with some entirely fresh, out-of-the-box idea. |
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Retransmission is unlawful without written permission from the publisher. |
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My publisher M me they were selling it as being in atherine Cookson genre. |
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Rhys Ifans plays Xenophilius Lovegood, publisher of the Quibbler magazine. |
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The publisher usually controls the advertising and other marketing tasks, but may subcontract various aspects of the process to specialist publisher marketing agencies. |
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On a March weekend in 1978, about 100 people gathered at the Jack Tar Hotel in San Francisco at the behest of then-Advocate publisher David Goodstein. |
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The publisher is the Rotograph Company of New York, although the card is clearly related to the St Louis World's Fair series issued by Adolph Selige Publishing Company. |
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This proof shows the book precisely as it will appear once printed and represents the final opportunity for the publisher to find and correct any errors. |
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Weil is also the official publisher of Montana Supreme Court cases. |
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No date or publisher is cited for Mahshevet Yisra'el be-Sefer Bereshit. |
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