Check out Rhymes of the Times: A lighthearted look at life through rhyme (Rhythm and Rhyme Book 1) by: Judy E Martin in the Online Book Store or click the image below! Also visit her blog at http://www.edwinasepisodes.com/! For more information on promoting your book through https://aopinionatedman.com please visit the following link! https://aopinionatedman.com/book-promotion-terms/
The new-look TED.com homepage — TED Blog
This month, TED celebrates a very special anniversary — ten years since we published our first six TED Talks online. It was a bold, some said foolhardy experiment to take what happened at a small conference in Monterey, California, and share it with anyone who might be interested. And boy, were you interested! Because of…
Review: The Sudden Appearance of Hope by Claire North — Tesscatiful
DNF @ 34% – I tried, but a lot of reviews told me it wasn’t going to get any better. Once again, Claire North thinks up an interesting concept but entirely fails to deliver. If you’re like me and you found The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August a disappointment, then I’d suggest giving this […]
via Review: The Sudden Appearance of Hope by Claire North — Tesscatiful
New Book Fanfare – FREE for Next Two Days – Calm Colouring: Faith, Hope & Love – by Tracy Campbell. — Annette Rochelle Aben
Re-blogged from Smorgasbord Invitation. CLICK THROUGH to the ORIGINAL POST to meet Tracy Campbell and learn about her terrific COLORING BOOK! Today is a first in the New Book Fanfare series as the featured book is a printable colour book for ages 9 – 99 , soon to be available in print. The author Tracy […]
Ghana is betting on telemedicine to help plug gaps in its rural healthcare system — Quartz
Given the common problems with access to healthcare and the disparity in the distribution of health centers, several African countries are looking to mobile technology to bridge the gap. The process, broadly referred to as ‘telemedicine’, focuses on connecting health workers in small communities usually lacking in health equipment and capacity to experts in city…
via Ghana is betting on telemedicine to help plug gaps in its rural healthcare system — Quartz
42 Compelling Words For All The Feelings You Didn’t Think You Could Explain — Thought Catalog
Dustin AdamsMamihlapinatapai n. a look shared by two people, each wishing that the other would initiate something they both desire but which neither wants to begin Cingulomania n. a strong desire to hold a person in your arms Phosphenes n. the stars and colors you see when you rub your eyes Retrouvaille n. the joy of…
via 42 Compelling Words For All The Feelings You Didn’t Think You Could Explain — Thought Catalog
Novel #writing: On finding the Right Literary Agent #QueryTip — Daily (w)rite
Novel writing isn’t for the impatient (or wise, for that matter). I’ve been writing mine since end 2011, and this year, I’ve finally found a literary agent for it, and for my writing. An insightful editor, an entertaining conversationalist and email-writer who doesn’t mince his words, and a wry tweeter of cat pictures: Ed Wilson…
via Novel #writing: On finding the Right Literary Agent #QueryTip — Daily (w)rite
Too Hot To Handle: Help Your Hair Have A Healthy Relationship With Heat — HelloBeautiful
The great heat debate. Source: Peathegee Inc / Getty It’s okay to rock a straight do or decide to change it up every once and awhile. However, for natural and relaxed ladies alike, heat damage has some serious implications. For our curly girls, it can result in a change in your curl pattern and for…
via Too Hot To Handle: Help Your Hair Have A Healthy Relationship With Heat — HelloBeautiful
The Big Idea: Anna Kashina — Whatever
Warriors live to a code — but what if in a moment of crisis, that code ties your hands? Anna Kashina confronts such a scenario in her novel, Assassin Queen. ANNA KASHINA: “Assassin Queen” is the third and concluding book in the Majat Code trilogy, which was ultimately driven by one big idea: what would happen…
Why did it take law enforcement so long to release the Stanford rapist’s mugshots? — Quartz
Brock Allen Turner is swiftly becoming a poster child for white privilege in the US criminal justice system: The 20-year-old former Stanford student received a six-month jail sentence this month for sexually assaulting an unconscious woman at a frat party in January 2015. Portrayed throughout his trial as a star swimmer, Turner’s good-boy image was…
via Why did it take law enforcement so long to release the Stanford rapist’s mugshots? — Quartz








