How to self-publish–and share your writings
Given the clutter in social media, sifting through a lot of fluff to find voices and ideas that really matter becomes increasingly difficult. A small press expo called BLTX (Better
Given the clutter in social media, sifting through a lot of fluff to find voices and ideas that really matter becomes increasingly difficult. A small press expo called BLTX (Better
During a general launch of titles by OMF Literature Inc., it was easy to sense the positive aura of the authors, illustrators and officials in the room, and that if it were to rain hard, as it did before that force the launch to be rescheduled today, it was certain this time that the words written in those books would be heard come hell or high water.
I’ve known some columnists to wonder what real use they have. I happen to have been one of them once, a self-styled arbiter of omnifarious issues, handing down his ruling in 800 words or so every week. Others have done it as often as three, even four, times a week; I guess the oftener you do it the less time you allow for self-doubt—or the more chances you have to make up for the stinkers you belatedly realize you have produced.
To try to bring back the forgotten art of letter writing in the age of email and 140-character limitations of Twitter, the Department of Education is urging high school students to take part in World Post Day activities.
Lately I’ve been thinking a lot about aging. I suppose it comes with the territory of realizing that the big 5-0 is but a few weeks away.
You will now be punished with the keynote speech I gave on Palanca Awards night this September.
The first thing I did when I got home from my three-week trip to Dumaguete, where I was one of 15 fellows to the 53rd Silliman University National Writers Workshop, was create a playlist
Aspiring writers must remember that more than anything else writing is a social responsibility.
In this age of instant communication, I attract attention every time I attend a presscon with mostly young media people in attendance.
His death mourned around the globe, Gabriel Garcia Marquez was a giant of modern literature, a writer of intoxicating novels and short stories that illuminated Latin America’s passions, superstition, violence and social inequality.
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