7 posts tagged with Writing by Fizz.
Displaying 1 through 7 of 7.

Related tags:
+ (89)
+ (81)
+ (78)
+ (75)
+ (42)
+ (39)
+ (38)
+ (32)
+ (29)
+ (28)
+ (26)
+ (25)
+ (24)
+ (23)
+ (22)
+ (22)
+ (21)
+ (20)
+ (20)
+ (19)
+ (18)
+ (18)
+ (17)
+ (16)
+ (16)
+ (16)
+ (15)
+ (14)
+ (13)
+ (13)
+ (13)
+ (13)
+ (12)
+ (12)
+ (12)
+ (12)
+ (12)
+ (12)
+ (12)
+ (11)
+ (11)
+ (11)
+ (11)
+ (10)
+ (10)
+ (9)
+ (9)
+ (9)
+ (9)
+ (9)
+ (9)
+ (9)
+ (9)
+ (9)
+ (9)
+ (9)
+ (9)
+ (9)
+ (8)
+ (8)


Users that often use this tag:
Artw (109)
Joe Beese (15)
fearfulsymmetry (13)
Trurl (13)
Horace Rumpole (10)
zarq (9)
nthdegx (9)
MiguelCardoso (8)
reenum (8)
AceRock (7)
dobbs (7)
netbros (7)
Fizz (7)
Potomac Avenue (7)
Voyageman (6)
kliuless (5)
mattbucher (4)
divabat (4)
dersins (4)
Kattullus (4)
ColdChef (4)
matteo (4)
mathowie (4)
The Whelk (4)
rich (3)
stbalbach (3)
nickyskye (3)
semmi (3)
mediareport (3)
swift (3)
brundlefly (3)
Brandon Blatcher (3)
tellurian (3)
Blazecock Pileon (3)
otio (3)
filthy light thief (3)
anothermug (3)
Phire (2)
paduasoy (2)
shakespeherian (2)
jayder (2)
xod (2)
0bvious (2)
shivohum (2)
OmieWise (2)
Miko (2)
blahblahblah (2)
nospecialfx (2)
adamvasco (2)
mothershock (2)
plexi (2)
blasdelf (2)
NotMyselfRightNow (2)
chunking express (2)
four panels (2)
digaman (2)
gottabefunky (2)
stonerose (2)
Prospero (2)
kipmanley (2)
The Hemingway Papers: The legendary writer’s reporting from the Toronto Star archives, featuring historical annotations by William McGeary, a former editor who researched Hemingway’s columns extensively for the newspaper, along with new insight and analysis from the Star’s team of Hemingway experts.
posted by Fizz on May 28, 2012 - 13 comments

David Foster Wallace Writes to Don DeLillo: Among the many curiosities of this correspondence: “No offense intended” by the card’s image (a book cover from Sheldon Lord’s A Woman Must Love), the mention of Jonathan Franzen’s New Yorker piece on William Gaddis, the brick shithouse of a palm tree, and a request to eyeball DeLillo’s “new novel” (Cosmopolis?). So many of the sentences create space for wondering what more there is to know. [Via: The Outlet] [more inside]
posted by Fizz on Apr 13, 2012 - 21 comments

"Your sentences are so long," [L.A.Times] The point of the long and winding sentence - Pico Iyer’s essay on why he’s made the conscious decision to write longer sentences.
posted by Fizz on Jan 8, 2012 - 83 comments

Reader, I marinated it. [independent.co.uk] What if Virginia Woolf, Geoffrey Chaucer or Raymond Chandler had turned their talents to food writing? Mark Crick imagines the contents of the celebrity cookbooks of yesteryear.
posted by Fizz on Nov 28, 2011 - 26 comments

British Fantasy Award winner returns prize; Sam Stone hands back award after criticism of judging process. [The Guardian] "Controversy has riven the 40-year-old British Fantasy Awards, with the winner of the best novel prize handing her award back just three days after it was bestowed. But the organisation and presentation of the awards has been drawing criticism since then, culminating in Sam Stone, the winner of the best novel award – named after American writer and editor August Derleth – announcing yesterday that she is giving it back. The biggest attack on the awards was delivered by editor and anthologist Stephen Jones, who on Tuesday posted a lengthy blog decrying the organisation of the BFAs and making several allegations against awards co-ordinator and British Fantasy Society chairman David Howe."
posted by Fizz on Oct 6, 2011 - 27 comments

Post A Letter Social Activity Club: "Imagine a day when every personal e-mail you receive is in the form of a piece of mail, in envelopes of different sizes, papers of different colours and textures, handwriting of varying degrees of legibility. Wouldn’t that be pretty nice for a change?" [more inside]
posted by Fizz on Aug 22, 2011 - 18 comments

Past, I'd like to introduce you to the present. "Letters Home relies on contributions. We are nothing without readers who are willing to share their stories or respond to others. We don’t think we’re alone in wondering what’s happened to our childhood homes since we left. Or in wanting to share an important event that occurred there – from a birthday party to a marriage proposal, a secret revealed to a lie concealed. Write a letter to the present occupant (even if it’s still family), the owner of the store that now stands on that lot, whatever or whoever might be there now, and share your memory. Ask them to respond with their own story and photo. Their letter and photo will then be added to your post." How Letters Home works?
posted by Fizz on Oct 14, 2010 - 10 comments

Page: 1