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Beth Castrodale worked as a newspaper reporter until her love of books led her to the publishing field. She was a senior editor at Bedford/St. Martin's and is the founding editor of the book-review website Small Press Picks. Her début novel, Marion Hatley, was a finalist for a Nilsen Prize for a First Novel from Southeast Missouri State University Press, and an excerpt from her second novel, In This Ground, was a shortlist finalist for a William Faulkner – William Wisdom Creative Writing Award. In a review of Castrodale's third novel, I Mean You No Harm, critic Bethanne Patrick observed, “Castrodale is the real thing, a novelist who fuses mordant humor and great genre tropes with warmth and courage.” An excerpt from her fourth novel, The Inhabitants, landed Castrodale an artist grant from the Mass Cultural Council. The novel will be released by Regal House Publishing on September 10, 2024.Master of Your Crafts is a captivating podcast featuring conversations with individuals who have dedicated themselves to mastering their craft. Whether it's a gift, talent or skill that comes naturally to them, these individuals have taken ownership and honed their abilities to perfection. Through deep conversation, we delve into their inner dialogue, actions and life circumstances offering words of wisdom to empower and guide you on a journey to becoming the master of your own craft.For more information, visit our website https://masterofyourcrafts.com and Bright Shining Light Website: https://brightshininglight.comStay connected with us:- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/masterofyourcrafts- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/MasterOfYourCrafts/- Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1M0vp9HoK7kkP1w4ij7PJd?si=7d383a92b93b4e2c- ApplePodcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/master-of-your-crafts/id1512818795- Amazon Music: https://music.amazon.ca/podcasts/b15079de-bc6a-487c-b8f8-faca73d0f685/master-of-your-crafts- Google Play: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0...
Cody is from Macedonia, OH and wrestled for Bedford St. Chanel. He was a 3 time placewinner, earning 7th and 3rd before capturing a state title as a senior. Cody journeyed about 3 hours south to compete at Ohio University and established himself as a Bobcat great. Cody was a 3x team captain, 3x MAC champion, 4x NCAA qualifier and 2x AA. He amassed 30+ wins in 3 of his 4 seasons and was twice named Ohio University Male Athlete of the Year. Cody began his coaching career as an assistant at Gardner-Webb before stops at West Virginia and Nordonia HS. Fittingly, he is now back at his alma mater as an assistant under his former head coach, Joel Greenlee. So please, sit back, relax and enjoy, Assistant Coach Cody Walters!Euphoria Coffee website: https://www.drinkeuphoriacoffee2go.com/Let's Talk Wrestling website: https://letstalkwrestlingpodcast.my.canva.site/
MagaMama with Kimberly Ann Johnson: Sex, Birth and Motherhood
In this episode, Kimberly and Joelle discuss the joys, challenges, and complexities of writing a book and publishing. They met when Kimberly was pitching “The Fourth Trimester” and have connected ever since. Kimberly discusses her journey as an author in relation to her other work previous three books. They also discuss self-publishing, traditional publishing, how the publishing industry has changed because of social media, and the importance of book proposals. Joelle is currently enrolling for the Book Proposal Academy, a six month, robust course and mentorship program that supports new authors through the book proposal process. Register through the link below! Bio Joelle Hann is an award-winning writer whose essays and poems explore the nature of our deepest relationships, and whose articles have covered the highs and lows of yoga culture, as well as food, film, books and travel. She's worked in-house as a Senior Development Editor at Bedford/St. Martin's. A decade later she jumped ship to freelance as a book doctor and collaborator. Since then, she's developed and written many acclaimed books for authors in the realm of self-transformation, activism, spirituality, health, finance and business. Joelle is also a seasoned yoga teacher and practitioner. Her journalism has appeared in The New York Times, TimeOut New York, Poets & Writers, Yoga Journal, Yoga International, and other publications. Her essays have appeared on NPR, YourTango, Geist, and others. Joelle is also an award-winning poet with an MFA (poetry) and an MA (English Literature) from New York University's top-ranked program, and many publications in journals and anthologies including McSweeney's, Matrix, Painted Bride Quarterly, Drunken Boat, Breathing Fire: Canada's New Poets, Broken Land: Poems of Brooklyn and more. What She Shares: –Traditional versus self-publishing –Pitching your book idea –Tending to the voice within –Book Proposal Academy with Joelle begins April 17th! What You'll Hear: –Kimberly's process of book writing –Experiences with various kinds of publishers –Self-publishing process –Kimberly's upcoming book deal –Five main publishing houses and politics –Differences between first-time proposing versus fourth –Lack of confidence in initial stage of process –Small advances versus large advances –The Fourth Trimester best selling back-listed book –Publicity and marketing during proposals –Making the case for your book –Author versus writer –BookTok as powerful engine for making authors –Power of readers to make best-sellers from BookTok –Hybrid publishing on the rise –Challenges of self-publishing –University publishing –Trauma angles need hope, tools, and resilience –Shorter and easy to digest are book preferences –Literary agent burnout –Soul calling towards writing –Tending to the voice within –Following and engagement from audience –Quality and marketability –Proposal is key in not getting lost in process –Proposal is a map for book –Artistry and practical vision –Joelle's Book Proposal Academy begins April 17th! –Runs for six months through 5 phases –Early bird sign-up begins April 3rd Resources Website: https://brooklynbookdoctor.com/bpa/ IG: @joellehann Book Proposal Academy Registration
Marian's love of books, along with a connection to students and colleagues, has made her years in education pure joy. She has spent more than 40 years teaching, finishing her career with 21 years at Florida State College in Jacksonville. Her academic writing includes a multi-colored array of topics, ranging from “A Thousand Acres: Not King Lear in a Cornfield” for the American Popular Culture Association and “It's Not Easy Being Green, Wal-Mart and Me,” recounting her neighborhood struggle to keep large oaks and tall pines from biting the dust. Her dream came true when she presented and published “God: Myth and Mystery from the Romantics through the Twentieth Century: Informing Global Religious Conflict” in magical Oxford, England. In 2011 Bedford St. Martin's textbooks published “Facilitating Cooperative Learning,” the mantra of her most effective teaching techniques. Now in her Third Act, she has embraced creative non-fiction with “Gutsy In Ukraine,” published in Sonia Marsh's My Gutsy Story Anthology (2014), Volume 2. In September 2016, her story “Making Love Edible: Lessons from Fanny Martin Longenecker” was published in The Mennonite magazine. In the fall 2018 issue, The Arts & Antiques show magazine published her article in Patient Profiles. She publishes her blog Plain and Fancy Girl on Wednesdays. Her book is entitled Mennonite Daughter: The Story of a Plain Girl, a memoir that depicts her sheltered life along with revealing family secrets. Make sure to check out this amazing author on Instagram author @marianbeaman You can listen to the podcast on Apple Podcast, Spotify, Google Podcast, or visit my website www.drkatherinehayes.com
American slavery may have been the most successful totalitarian system in history, lasting ten generations, far longer than comparable 20th century totalitarian regimes. In some ways, slavery's success as an economic and socio-political system was that it was just brutal enough to generate effective rates of return on investment. But it became even more brutal from the beginning of the 19th century to the Civil War, in part in response to slave rebellions, and to the attacks on the institution made by abolitionists. In part three of our six part episode on Abraham Lincoln and the Emancipation Proclamation, we analyze the economic institution of slavery as practiced in the Antebellum South, and its consequences for the black and white people that lived in it. And borrowing from the American writer James Baldwin, we try and understand why this institution led to so many racial attitudes that informed Lincoln's time--and our own. Part 3: Slavery and Human Rights Audio Clips: James Baldwin, “You're the Nigger” (1963): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=My5FLO50hNM Music Clips: “Long John,” Prisoners of Darrington State Prison Farm, Texas (1933/34?): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4G5KtQynWvc “St. Louis Blues,” Bessie Smith (1929): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Bo3f_9hLkQ “I Be So Happy When The Sun Goes Down,” Ed Lewis: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C-zlSq4mWiE “CC Rider Blues,” Ma Rainey (1924): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trtxZgF3Dns “Early in the Mornin',” Prisoners of Parchman Farm, Louisiana (1947): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zsiYfk5RV_Q “Berta, Berta,” Prisoners of Parchman Farm, Louisiana (1947):https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eWWgN7837Tk “Stackolee,” Woody Guthrie (1944): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccgyJQJEMsM Bibliography: Eugene Genovese, Roll, Jordan Roll: The World the Slaves Made (Vintage, 1976) Elizabeth Fox-Genovese and Eugene Genovese, Slavery in Black and White: Race and Class in the Southern Slaveholders' New World Order (Cambridge, 2008) Frederick Law Olmstead, The Cotton Kingdom: A Traveller's Observations On Cotton And Slavery In The American Slave States, 1853-1861 (1861; Bedford/St. Martin's 2014) Calvin Schermerhorn, The Business of Slavery and the Rise of American Capitalism, 1815-1860 (Yale, 2015) George Fitzhugh, Cannibals all! or, Slaves without masters (1857; Kindle, 2015) Mary Chesnut, Mary Chesnut's Civil War (1981; edited by C. Vann Woodward) J.H. Ingraham, The South-West By a Yankee. In Two Volumes. (1835; Kindle, 2017) Sally Hadden, Slave Patrols: Law and Violence in Virginia and the Carolinas (Harvard University Press, 2001) Richard Blackett, Making Freedom: The Underground Railroad and the Politics of Slavery (University of North Carolina Press, 2013)
Crowned With Confidence And Thriving in Christ Jesus, Guest Speaker, Dr. Shana Lewis, from the South Union Church of Christ-Houston, TX
53. Bölüm: Sinemada melodramın ustası olarak kabul edilen yönetmen Douglas Sirk'e ayırdığımız program serisinin üçüncü ve son bölümü. Önceki programlarda yönetmenin hayatından kesitler ve geri plan bilgisi vardı. Bu defa da Sirk'ün 1955 yılında çektiği ve zaman içinde bir kült filme evrilen “All that heaven allows”; bizde bilinen adıyla, “Her Şey Senin İçin”e yakından bakıyor; bazı sahnelerin analizini yapıyoruz. Bu konuyla ilgili olarak John Cheever Dev Radyo (öykü incelemesi) ve Rebel without a cause / Asi Gençlik (iki bölümlük film okuma serisi) bölümlerine Derslik Podcast arşivinden ulaşabilirsiniz. Yararlandığım KaynaklarRobert B. Pippin. 2021. Douglas Sirk: Filmmaker and Philosopher. Bloomsbury Publishing: London.Victoria L. Evans. 2019. Douglas Sirk, Aesthetic Modernism and the Culture of Modernity. Edinburgh Unversity Press: Edinburgh. Harry M. Benshoff & Sean Griffin. 2009. America on film. Wiley-Blackwell: West Sussex.Tom Ryan. 2020. The Films of Douglas Sirk: Exquisite Ironies and Magnificent Obsessions. University Press of Mississippi.Harry M. Benshoff & Sean Griffin. 2009. America on Film. Wiley-Blackwell.William H. Phillips. 1999. Film: An Introduction. Bedford/St. Martin's."Sirk, Douglas." Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2020. Encyclopædia Britannica Online, 2020-07-02. Web.Veysel Atayman & Tuncer Çetinkaya. 2016. Popüler Sinemanın Mitolojisi. Ayrıntı Yayınları.
The Secrets We Share - A mesmerizing, twisty suspense novel perfect for fans of Mary Kubica and Riley Sager from an acclaimed author! Explore the deep bonds—and deadly secrets—between two very different sisters haunted by the crimes of their father murdered nearly twenty years earlier…At first glance, Natalie Cavanaugh and Glenn Abbott hardly look like sisters. Even off-duty, Natalie dresses like a Boston cop, preferring practical clothes and unfussy, pinned-up hair. Her younger sister, Glenn, seems tailor-made for the spotlight, from her signature red mane to her camera-ready smile. Glenn has spent years cultivating her brand through her baking blog, and with the publication of her new book, that hard work seems about to pay off. But her fans have no idea about the nightmare in Glenn and Natalie's past. Twenty years ago, their father's body was discovered in the woods behind their house. A trauma like that doesn't fit with Glenn's public image. Yet, maybe someone reading her blog does know something. There have been anonymous online messages, vague yet ominous, hinting that she's being watched. And with unsettling coincidences hitting ever closer to home, both Glenn and Natalie soon have more pressing matters to worry about, especially when a dead body is found in an abandoned building . . . Natalie is starting to wonder how much Glenn really knows about the people closest to her. But are there also secrets Natalie has yet to uncover about those she herself trusts? For two decades, she's believed their father was murdered by their neighbor, with whom he was having an affair. But if those events are connected to what's happening now, maybe there's much more that Natalie doesn't know. About their father. About their neighbors. About her friends. Maybe even about herself. But there are no secrets between sisters . . . are there?Edwin Hill is the author of LITTLE COMFORT, THE MISSING ONES and his latest Hester Thursby WATCH HER. He was born in Duxbury, Massachusetts, and spent most of his childhood obsessing over The Famous Five, Agatha Christie, and somehow finding a way into C.S. Lewis's wardrobe. His parents were fond of taking his sister and him on month-long family camping trips across the U.S. and Canada, and one of his best memories is of finishing a copy of The Seven Dials Mystery while the rest of the family visited Mount Rushmore. Growing up when VHS tapes were new meant that watching Alien, Jaws, The Shining, or Halloween whenever he wanted seemed luxurious, and still does today. Like Hester Thursby, he watched these movies – and others like them – a lot.After attending Wesleyan University and graduating with a B.A. in American Studies, he headed west to San Francisco for the original dotcom boom. Later, he returned to Boston, earned an MFA from Emerson College, and switched gears to work in educational publishing, where he served as the vice president and editorial director for Bedford/St. Martin's, a division of Macmillan Learning, for many years before turning to writing full time.He lives in Roslindale, Massachusetts with his partner Michael and his favorite reviewer, their lab Edith Ann, who likes his first drafts enough to eat them.
Edwin Hill is the author of the critically-acclaimed Hester Thursby mystery series, the first of which, Little Comfort, was an Agatha Award finalist, a selection of the Mysterious Press First Mystery Club and a Publishers Marketplace Buzz Books selection. Formerly the vice president and editorial director for Bedford/St. Martin's (Macmillan), he now teaches at Emerson College and has written for the LA Review of Books, The Life Sentence, Publisher's Weekly, and Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine. He lives in Roslindale, Massachusetts with his partner Michael and their lab, Edith Ann.https://www.edwin-hill.com/Today's episode is brought to you by John's full series of crime thrillers available right now. You can get them through Amazon here: https://www.amazon.com/John-A.-Hoda/e/B00BGPXBMM%3Fref=dbs_a_mng_rwt_scns_share You can also sign up for the newsletter at http://www.JohnHoda.com to get a free copy of John's new novella Liberty City Nights.Thank you for listening. If you have a moment to spare please leave a rating or comment on Apple Podcasts as that will help us expand the circle around our campfire. If you have any questions please feel to reach out to me via my website http://www.johnhoda.com
52. Bölüm: Sinemada melodramın ustası olarak kabul edilen yönetmen Douglas Sirk'e ayırdığımız program serisinin ikinci bölümü. Önceki programda yönetmenin hayatından kesitler vardı. Bu defa da Sirk'ün 1955 yılında çektiği ve zaman içinde bir kült filme evrilen “All that heaven allows”; bizde bilinen adıyla, “Her Şey Senin İçin”e yakından bakmaya başlıyoruz. Yararlandığım KaynaklarHarry M. Benshoff & Sean Griffin. 2009. America on film. Wiley-Blackwell: West Sussex.Tom Ryan. 2020. The Films of Douglas Sirk: Exquisite Ironies and Magnificent Obsessions. University Press of Mississippi. Harry M. Benshoff & Sean Griffin. 2009. America on Film. Wiley-Blackwell. William H. Phillips. 1999. Film: An Introduction. Bedford/St. Martin's. "Sirk, Douglas." Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2020. Encyclopædia Britannica Online, 2020-07-02. Web.Veysel Atayman & Tuncer Çetinkaya. 2016. Popüler Sinemanın Mitolojisi. Ayrıntı Yayınları.
51. Bölüm: Bu kaydımızla birlikte iki bölümden oluşacak yeni bir seriye adım atıyoruz. Konumuz melodramın ustası Douglas Sirk. İlk bölümde Douglas Sirk'ün hayatından kesitler var. Bir sonraki kaydımızda da yönetmenin 1955 yılında çektiği ve zaman içinde bir kült filme evrilen “All that heaven allows”; bizde bilinen adıyla, “Her Şey Senin İçin”e yakından bakacağız. Yararlandığım KaynaklarTom Ryan. 2020. The Films of Douglas Sirk: Exquisite Ironies and Magnificent Obsessions. University Press of Mississippi. Harry M. Benshoff & Sean Griffin. 2009. America on Film. Wiley-Blackwell. William H. Phillips. 1999. Film: An Introduction. Bedford/St. Martin's. "Sirk, Douglas." Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2020. Encyclopædia Britannica Online, 2020-07-02. Web.Veysel Atayman & Tuncer Çetinkaya. 2016. Popüler Sinemanın Mitolojisi. Ayrıntı Yayınları.
https://www.edwin-hill.com/ Edwin is the Edgar- and Agatha-award nominated author of three novels in the Hester Thursby series: Little Comfort, The Missing Ones, and Watch Her. He was born in Duxbury, Massachusetts, and spent most of his childhood obsessing over The Famous Five, Agatha Christie, and somehow finding a way into C.S. Lewis's wardrobe. His parents were fond of taking his sister and him on month-long family camping trips across the U.S. and Canada, and one of his best memories is of finishing a copy of The Seven Dials Mystery while the rest of the family visited Mount Rushmore. Growing up when VHS tapes were new meant that watching Alien, Jaws, The Shining, or Halloween whenever he wanted seemed luxurious, and still does today. Like Hester Thursby, he watched these movies – and others like them – a lot. After attending Wesleyan University and graduating with a B.A. in American Studies, he headed west to San Francisco for the dotcom boom. Later, he returned to Boston, earned an MFA from Emerson College, and switched gears to work in educational publishing. He served as the vice president and editorial director for Bedford/St. Martin's, a division of Macmillan Learning for many years before turning to writing full time. He lives in Roslindale, Massachusetts with his partner Michael and his favorite reviewer, their lab Edith Ann, who likes his first drafts enough to eat them. A lot of people helped him create this series, and he is a big believer in paying forward. Don't be a stranger. VOX VOMITUS: Sometimes, it's not what goes right in the writing process, it's what goes horribly wrong. Host/Literary horror novelist Jennifer Anne Gordon with help from her co-host/author Allison Martine, chat with some of the best authors of the day. www.jenniferannegordon.com www.afictionalhubbard.com #EdwinHill #TheSecretsWeShare #voxvomitus #VoxVixens #JenniferAnneGordon #JenniferGordon #AllisonMartineHubbard #AllisonMartine #podcast #interview #books #hotelseries #bourbonbooks --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/voxvomitus/support
It is that time of year again where we interview some of the Agatha Award Nominees. Watch Her by Edwin Hill (Kensington)Best Contemporary FictionEdwin Hill is the author of LITTLE COMFORT and THE MISSING ONES. He was born in Duxbury, Massachusetts, and spent most of his childhood obsessing over The Famous Five, Agatha Christie, and somehow finding a way into C.S. Lewis's wardrobe. His parents were fond of taking his sister and him on month-long family camping trips across the U.S. and Canada, and one of his best memories is of finishing a copy of The Seven Dials Mystery while the rest of the family visited Mount Rushmore. Growing up when VHS tapes were new meant that watching Alien, Jaws, The Shining, or Halloween whenever he wanted seemed luxurious, and still does today. Like Hester Thursby, he watched these movies – and others like them – a lot. After attending Wesleyan University and graduating with a B.A. in American Studies, he headed west to San Francisco for the original dotcom boom. Later, he returned to Boston, earned an MFA from Emerson College, and switched gears to work in educational publishing, where he served as the vice president and editorial director for Bedford/St. Martin's, a division of Macmillan Learning, for many years before turning to writing full time. He lives in Roslindale, Massachusetts with his partner Michael and his favorite reviewer, their lab Edith Ann, who likes his first drafts enough to eat them.A Dead Man's Eyes by Lori Duffy Foster (Level Best Books)Best First NovelLori Duffy Foster is a former crime reporter who writes from the hills of Northern Pennsylvania, where she lives with her family. She was born and raised in the Adirondack Mountains of New York State, where part of her heart remains. Never Broken is book two in her Lisa Jamison mystery/suspense series.
The first women's public toilets in London opened on Bedford St on 11th February, 1852 - attempting to capitalize on the success of George Jennings' ‘monkey closets', used by over 800,000 visitors to the 1851 Great Exhibition.Unfortunately, even though the facility had been fought for by campaigning women's sanitary organizations, middle and upper class Victorian ladies were not yet prepared to pee in public - and the toilets closed a year later.In this episode, Arion, Rebecca and Olly explain where the phrase ‘spending a penny' (probably) comes from; reveal why ‘the urinary leash' came to describe the predicament of women's lives; and investigate why the number of 21st century public toilets continues to fall… Further Reading:• ‘Pamphlets of the Ladies Sanitary Association' (Wellcome Collection): https://wellcomecollection.org/works?query=%22Ladies+Sanitary+Association.%22• ‘London's long-term lav affair: A history of public toilets in the capital' (BBC News, 2022): https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-59785477• ‘Victorian realities - how did they use the toilet??!' (Prior Attire, 2016): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NUHeSTDv_24Enjoy this episode? There is SIX MINUTES MORE available to our subscribers on Apple Podcasts and our top two tiers of supporters via Patreon. Sign up now to support the show and receive bonus content every single week!#1800s #Victorian #Sexism #Inventions #Funny #UK See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this session I cover the complex history of the southwest in terms of population and who has the "rightful" claim to the land. References Alcaraz, Ramon. 2010. The Other Side: Or, Notes for the History of the War Between Mexico and the United States. Charleston: Nabu Press. Armas, Marissa. 2020. “Hispanic, Latino & Chicano: What's the difference?” KOAT. https://www.koat.com/article/hispanic-latino-and-chicano-whats-the-difference/35024551. Calloway, Colin G. 2008. First peoples : a documentary survey of American Indian history. N.p.: Bedford/St. Martin's. Chasteen, John C. 2006. Born in blood and fire : a concise history of Latin America. N.p.: W.W. Norton & Company. Cotto, Ingrid. 2020. “Latino, Hispanic or Latinx, how do you identify yourself? We explain the differences here.” Orlando Sentinel. https://www.orlandosentinel.com/espanol/el-sentinel-in-english/os-ex-english-latino-hispanic-latinx-definitions-identity-20201028-od6kmzrnbbgere7sdmqn6zatjy-story.html. Delay, Brian. 2007. “Independent Indians and the U.S Mexican War.” The American Historical Review 112, no. 1 (February): 35. Noe-Bustamante, Luis, Mark H. Lopez, and Jens M. Krogstad. 2020. “US Hispanic population reached new high in 2019, but growth slowed.” Pew Research Center. https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2020/07/07/u-s-hispanic-population-surpassed-60-million-in-2019-but-growth-has-slowed/. Woodward, Colin. 2020. “The 11 Nations of the United States and Their Cultures.” Business Insider. https://www.businessinsider.com/the-11-nations-of-the-united-states-2015-7.
In this Teaching Matters podcast series, produced by The Race Equality and Anti-Racist Sub-Committee (REAR) at The University of Edinburgh in collaboration with Teaching Matters, we hear from different academics at the University about what Decolonising the Curriculum means for them, and how they have put this into practice in their learning and teaching or research. They also share some readings that they have found useful. In this episode, Professor Emerita Rowena Arshad, Chair in Multicultural and Anti-Racist Education talks to Ayanda Ngobeni a Law Student at The University of Edinburgh, Black and Ethnic Minority Liberation Campaign Officer and Mastercard Foundation Scholar African Leadership Academy Alum (Class of 2016). Ayanda Ngobeni's Recommendations: Angelou, Maya. “Still I Rise.” Making Literature Matter: An Anthology for Readers and Writers, edited by John Schilb and John Clifford, 7th ed., Bedford/St. Martin's, 2020, pp. 127-131
About this Episode: J Jaggers (2x NCAA Champ) shares his experience at Bedford St. Peter Chanel and what lies ahead this season for the Buckeyes (@wrestlingbucks). Associate Head Coach since 2016, and coach since 2009, Coach Jaggers has helped lead the Buckeyes to National Title in 2015 and 3 B1G Titles. Give him a follow on Twitter at @jjaggers2x ABOUT WRESTLING PHILOSOPHY SHOW: Hosted by Jared Opfer (Twitter & Instagram @jaredopfer), the Wrestling Philosophy Show focuses on in-depth interviews with the wrestling community about perspectives, beliefs & techniques. Check out our friend Corner Rug Smitty for the best Corner Rugs in Wrestling. Custom patches and felt back. Email Smitty at smitty43952@gmail.com to get your tournament classed up. Head over to https://www.recruiting-accelerator.com/ and check out Coach Sewell's services. Use code "wrestlingphilosophy" for $100 discount. For the latest shows, subscribe or follow us on... Apple Podcasts: Wrestling Philosophy Show Instagram: WrestlingPhilosophy Twitter: WRPhilosophy Spotify: Wrestling Philosophy Show Youtube: Wrestling Philosophy Show Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/wrestlingphilosophy
Kyle Stedman (@kstedman) reads the bad idea "The Five-Paragraph Essay Transmits Knowledge" by Susan Naomi Bernstein and Elizabeth Lowry. It's a chapter from Bad Ideas about Writing, which was edited by Cheryl E. Ball (@s2ceball) and Drew M. Loewe (@drewloewe). Don't miss the joke: the author of the chapter is disagreeing with the bad idea stated in the chapter's title. Keywords: academic writing, banking model of education, five-paragraph essay, problem posing, transition to postsecondary education Susan Naomi Bernstein is an adjunct assistant professor of English at Queens College, City University of New York, and a former co-coordinator of the Stretch Writing Program at Arizona State University–Tempe. Her publications include “Occupy Basic Writing: Pedagogy in the Wake of Austerity” in Nancy Welch and Tony Scott's collection Composition in the Age of Austerity; "An Unconventional Education: A Letter to Basic Writing Practicum Students” in Journal of Basic Writing 37.1; and "Theory in Practice: Halloween Write-In" co-authored with Ian James, William F. Martin, and Meghan Kelsey in BWe: Basic Writing e-Journal 16.1. She has published four editions of Teaching Developmental Writing with Bedford/St. Martin's and wrote the Bedford Bits blog, Beyond the Basics, from 2011-2019. (2020 bio) Elizabeth Lowry received her Ph.D. in rhetoric and composition from Arizona State University, where she now holds a lecturer position in rhetoric and composition. Her research interests include public spheres, material culture, and 19th-century women's rhetorics. Her work has been published in Rhetoric Review, Word and Text, and in edited collections. (2017 bio) As always, the theme music is "Parade" by nctrnm, and both the book and podcast are licensed by a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. The full book was published by the West Virginia University Libraries and Digital Publishing Institute; find it online for free at https://textbooks.lib.wvu.edu/badideas. All ad revenue will be split between the NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund and the Computers and Writing Graduate Research Network.
Summary:Author Beth Castrodale shares how her grief actually interrupted progress on her novel and what she did to move past this. She offers suggestions for how you might benefit from putting thoughts and feelings in words and writing them down, even if you think you can't write.Episode Notes:Writing can often be cathartic and is frequently suggested by therapists, as well as in bereavement groups. There are additional advantages to writing as sometimes these memories can be shared with other members of the family, even generations later. Whether it is in a journal or a computer-generated document, putting your thoughts on paper may well help you free them and allow you to continue on your grief journey.Beth Castrodale worked as a newspaper reporter until her love of books led her to the publishing field. She was a senior editor at Bedford/St. Martin's and is the founding editor of Small Press Picks. Her short fiction and essays have appeared in numerous publications, including Live Write Thrive, Printer's Devil Review, the Smoky Blue Literary and Arts Magazine, and Writing and Wellness, which featured her article “How to Write Your Way Through Loss and Grief.” Her debut novel, Marion Hatley, was a finalist for a Nilsen Prize for a First Novel from Southeast Missouri State University Press, and an excerpt from her second novel, In This Ground, was a shortlist finalist for a William Faulkner – William Wisdom Creative Writing Award. Her latest novel, I Mean You No Harm, is forthcoming from Imbrifex Books.If you sign up for Beth's email newsletter, you'll get a free copy of her novel Gold River. To Contact Beth:Website: www.bethcastrodale.comEmail: bcastrodale@gmail.comContact Us: www.asiliveandgrieve.com info@asiliveandgrieve.com Facebook: As I Live and Grieve Instagram: @asiliveandgrieve
By the way...LORENZO RAFFA (“The Lorenzo Commentaries?) presents RADIO OPEN MIC 5 Friday night, November 16th 7:30-9:30 (Local Motives/Stay Rude's usual time slot) Simply drop by WMPG Studios (92 Bedford St., Portland) Friday, November 16th between 7:15 to 9:15 PM with (or without) instruments (acoustic preferred, but if not, we can deal) and sing &/or play a song or two LIVE on WMPG 90.9 & 104.1 FM and streaming on wmpg.org! Up to five performers at once; no drum kits, please! Comedians/spoken word artists also welcome! Can't make it in? No problem! Send an MP3 to radioopenmic@gmail.com & he'll play it! (Deadline for MP3s: 5PM, 11/15/07) Be a part of radio history!!! FMI check out wmpg.org or e-mail radioopenmic@gmail.com