Guest Post: Osho (Shree Rajneesh) on Intimacy book
Guest Posts , Latest Posts / July 20, 2015

Hindu philosophy is well known for being different and rather unique. It is a complex of simplicity and kindness along with profound depth and wisdom. It gives a sense of wholeness and completion but it does not make you better because according to the author beliefs, God made every human being just the way they are. We cannot become better. We cannot make ourselves better because it will mean that we attempt to go against the will of God, that he made us imperfect originally. It is a principle of monism, a practice based on God to be everywhere and in everything. People are divine just the way they are. The author himself is rather contradictory person and despite the things, he says in his books, his personality makes it to where you think whether it is worth of taking him as an example to follow. The fact of him to be called a sex guru deserves a special notice. He cracked rather offensive jokes as he was saying to shock people and motivate them to examination of their identities. Any divisions, either national, racial, religious or gender make a destructive effect. The intimacy book is based on conversational fragments….

Guest Post: The Best Tool for Marketing Your Book Effectively
Guest Posts , Latest Posts / March 21, 2015

Influential writer as well as the most dominating writer has a wrong perception about the content writing. They think just giving a smaller portion with their content around limited on-line petals they can direct the traffic circulation. Remember on-line searcher ought to be catered they will way to merely, if anyone failed giving them what they really want you possibly have misplaced a option of marketing Books Online.

3 Apps Every Book Lover Needs to Try
Guest Posts , Latest Posts / January 21, 2015

We’ve all heard it before – mobile technology is taking over and people are shedding physical books in favor of digital copies. We no longer use our fingers to turn pages, and instead, we slide them down touchscreens. Some say it’s good – as those who consume books digitally are statistically more likely to purchase books rather than borrow them – and some say it’s bad. Whether you’re for physical books or think that e-books are the future, there’s no denying how helpful mobile technology has become for readers everywhere.

Guest Post: America’s First Air Hero’s of WWII or “Just An Easy Day”
Guest Posts , Latest Posts / December 7, 2014

On the eve of December 6th, Lieutenants Kenneth M. Taylor and George S. Welch, dressed in tuxedos, attended a formal dance at the Officer’s Club at Hickam Field. They left around 11 p.m. and drove back to the Bachelor’s Officer Quarters at Wheeler Field. The usual Saturday night poker game at the BOQ was in full swing so they sat in to play. Welch turned in early. Close to 4 a.m. a weary Taylor left the game to hit the sack thinking Sunday would just be another easy day.

Guest Post: David Fennelly
Guest Posts , Latest Posts / December 3, 2014

Inkshares is the new frontier in publishing, combining the best of both worlds, hard copy and electronic. Inkshares is very ‘now’. Moreover, a legacy publisher takes 90% of the revenue, with just 10% going to the author. With Inkshares the split is 70-30, in the author’s favour. A much better deal for the writer.

Guest Post: What’s in a Name? by Don Bredes
Guest Posts , Latest Posts / November 12, 2014

Their influence on the culture can be far-reaching. The Wonderful Wizard of Oz was first published, to great acclaim, in 1900. Four years later, responding reluctantly to the demands of the novel’s admirers, the author published a sequel, The Marvelous Land of Oz. Baum’s eager, insistent readers would not let him stop there. His publisher released additional sequels in 1907, 1908, 1909, 1911, 1913, and every year thereafter until 1919, when he died.

The Bookish House of Belle
Guest Posts / October 16, 2014

We went to an attraction called Enchanted Tales with Belle, which takes place in Belle’s house. The house is full of books, of course, and I took some pictures of the wonderful décor.

Guest Post: Five Steps to Personal Freedom by Kingsley Gallup
Guest Posts , Latest Posts / October 8, 2014

Personal freedom is a liberated life experience. It’s a state of being in which one is self-determined and self-directed. It’s the ability to choose, to explore, to dream, to self-define, to be who one authentically is and to be unapologetic about it. It’s a state of mind. It’s a way of life. But how do we achieve it? Truth is, it takes work to break out and break free. It takes effort for life to become more effortless, to get into flow. But here are five of the basics. Buy this book Five Steps to Personal Freedom: LOOK yourself and your past straight in the eye. “The unexamined life is not worth living,” said Socrates. Turn toward yourself. Step into truth. Get ready to become part of your own solution. LEARN from all you’ve experienced. Get curious, identify lessons learned, and commit to staying teachable. Thank your experiences – all of them – for how they’ve shaped you and for the riches you can extract from them. LET GO of what’s been holding you back. Push back against limitations and restrictive legacies. Break free from all the coping and ‘adapting.’ Start responding rather than reacting to life. LISTEN for your…

Guest Post: Slingin’ Slang by Stephen Kozeniewski
Guest Posts , Latest Posts / August 25, 2014

Editing my first draft was something of a revelation. The novel is set in 1934, so that was a hard stop for all slang and references. That reference to Jiminy Cricket? Nope, that had to go. (Pinnochio didn’t come out until 1940.) What about “out the wazoo?” Doesn’t that just scream ’30s PI? Nope. Actually the term didn’t come into use until the late ’60s.

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