Writer James Welch posts
Forbes The target customer is not your typical MBA candidate.
112 months ago
The New Yorker Morphine and heroin pop up frequently in Gillian Welch’s songwriting, and, like other motifs, feel as much symbolic as literal.
114 months ago
The New Yorker Gillian Welch's narrators are often at the end of their roads, going invisible, asking to have their legacies dismantled.
114 months ago
TheRoot.com Fans of the writer try to discover the true James Baldwin but just scratch the surface.
Chasing James Baldwin in Paris
theroot.com
More than 200 activists and scholars from around the world look at, and still search for, their favorite subject, the writer-activist James Baldwin, and find that they’ve only just begun. A taste of the growing field of “Baldwin studies.”
118 months ago
Entertainment Weekly This is so incredibly touching.
118 months ago
Daily Mail Celebrity It ain't easy to pull off crushed velvet...but Florence Welch does.
126 months ago
HelloGiggles This isn't the weirdest thing James Franco has done, but it definitely makes the list.
126 months ago
The New Yorker James Salter was a man’s man first and a writer’s writer later.
Postscript: James Salter, 1925-2015
nyr.kr
In spite of his concern over his earlier critical and commercial neglect, Salter managed to leave behind a very sturdy body of work.
129 months ago
Forbes While Welch is best known as former CEO of General Electric, one of the largest and most innovative companies in the world.
Jack Welch -- Be The 'Chief Meaning Officer'
www.forbes.com
This was the advice given by the legendary Jack Welch to 4,300 aspiring startup founders and CEO's last week at TiECON, the largest entrepreneurship conference in Silicon Valley. Welch was speaking with his co-author and wife, Suzy Welch, to promote
Read more ... their new book, "The Real Life MBA," the proceeds of [...]
130 months ago
The Huffington Post James never met an ellipsis she didn't like.
Fifty Shades Of Grammar Mistakes
www.huffingtonpost.com
So is James really the worst writer ever? Not exactly. We found similar errors in the work of everyone from Nicholas Sparks to Edith Wharton. When it comes to grammar goofs, no writer is immune.
133 months ago
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