Sunday, December 29, 2013

Writing Bread

New Author Supplies store(click here)


Flour-loose collection of words 


Yeast-resting, kneading words to allow word power to rise



Oil-a fluid blend for cohesiveness



Salt-for fullness of taste


Those are four Ingredients I see in recipes for homemade bread.

The thought comes that bread in biblical times and on certain Jewish holidays today leaves out the yeast. There's a historical reason for that: yeast requires time to make bread rise. At Passover in Egypt, the people had to leave quickly.

The ingredient I can say the least about now is flour. It is essential, and wheat and rye come to mind.

Consider oil, a tangible element of blessing. I think of canola, sunflower, and olive, for example.

Salt with its dry savor enhances the flavor of the other elements.

I am so excited about baking my first bread and writing in new ways!

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Write a Simple Sentence in English

One area of privilege that I had in my small town in North Carolina was a good school system, and I enjoyed writing. My teachers helped inspire and correct me.

We need to know the language we use.

We need to know about the sentence, the building block of writing. Here's a review:


The sentence must have a subject. 
A subject is a noun or a pronoun. A noun is a person, place, or thingExample: Jack (a person), New York City (a place), or team (a thing).  

The sentence must have a verb. A verb shows or tells action or state of being. 


The sentence must have closing punctuation: period, question mark, or exclamation mark that denotes the end of the sentence. 


This is "old school," but it works. To begin, we'll look at a simple sentence ending with a period, remembering, for now, that subject + verb + period = sentence. No period or other ending mark can be put at the end of a string of words unless that string has a subject and a verb. Every sentence needs an end mark, such as a period.


Simple sentence examples: 
Jack runs. (Jack runs now, in the present moment/time.)
Jack ran. (Jack ran in the past, for example, yesterday or this morning.)

None of us is ready to move forward until we can define a noun, a verb, and a sentence from memory. If you've suspected that you need grammar help, practice writing sentences no longer than 11 words. Maybe you know someone that would check your work often.

I hope that these basics of English will make a huge difference for writers that missed the basics or are just starting to write seriously.I hope that all of us will enjoy expressing ideas and interests in words, often!

Thursday, September 5, 2013

The Washington Post sold to "outsider," Jeff Bezos of Amazon.com

Jean Purcell
@OpinariPeople
@OpineBookCafe

The scope of an author's audience is not as important as the author's commitment to launch out, elevate skills, and write new works regardless of small or large audiences. Yet, larger audiences indicate a measure of success, and that's mainly why I refer to news about Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon.com, as new owner of The Washington Post. He aims to re-make The Washington Post into an economic and news-publishing success.

Jeff Bezos has made Amazon.com successful worldwide. As its entrepreneurial founder and owner, his name caught attention due to Amazon.com's innovations and success with consumers. And the success was not driven by the creator's knowledge about everything his online company was selling. It was due to his ideas, foresight, and attention to current interests and needs of consumers. In the widening world of digital access, he saw business and sales as vital parts of the new Internet scene.

Not even Amazon.com's successes could predict that their business craftsman would want to buy The Washington Post. The move shocked Post readers and staff. The first surprise was the sale outside the Meyer-Graham family. Then, early reactions about the buyer were negative: (1) Bezos is not a news professional or even a publishing guy and (2) Bezos lives in Washington state, not Washington, DC.

Some questioned what Donald Graham, the highly respected heir to The Post, was thinking when he not only sold the paper but sold it to someone outside the news business and the powerful city from which The Post reports. After all, the Eugene Meyer and Philip Graham (Meyer's son-in-law), Katharine Meyer Graham (Meyer's daughter and Philip's wife), Donald Graham (Katharine and Philip's son), and Katharine Graham Weymouth (granddaughter of Katharine Graham) families have controlled The Washington Post for four dynamic generations. Their lives centered around The Post from within the nation's capital they have known and enriched.        

Money is the assumed and reported reason for the paper's sale. Those responsible saw no other way to take The Post successfully through increasingly rough economic waters for print news. They accepted Jeff Bezos as its billionaire buyer, for $250 million. Those who know Donald Graham tend to believe that he had reason to trust the Bezos offer and its potential for their paper. 

The Post will change ownership hands officially next month, October 2013. No management or staff changes have been announced. The new chief of "the world's most respected newspaper" still will not be skilled in either journalism or editing. Mainly, Bezos will begin to build on the admiration he expresses for the paper and his business vision for its future. The Post reports that he has an "upbeat vision"* for saving The Washington Post (see online edition), whose print edition red ink keeps flowing.
  
The Bezos business vision, philosophy, and practices are already being sketched onto The Post. The paper's crew met for two days this week with Bezos at The Post building on 15th Street, NW. Attending the last day were Ben Bradlee, former chief editor of Watergate days and now a V.P.-at-large, and  Elizabeth (Lally) Graham Weymouth, Publisher and CEO. The Post reported on the new owner's straight-forward communication with staff and executives this week, including:   
  • "'The death knell for any enterprise is to glorify the past, no matter how good it was.'" 
  • "Put readers, not advertisers, first."
  • "Don't write to impress each other."
  • "...'Don't be boring.'"
  • He sees The Post as '"a daily ritual,' ..."as a bundle, not merely a series of individual stories."
Such comments are transferable to the business of publishers and writers across genres.  

*Source: The Washington Post, print edition, Thursday, September 5, 2013, C1, C4. For more, use Online edition report link

Jean Purcell is the author of Not All Roads Lead Home, Highland Books UK and Opine Publishing USA. Pen name Jane Bullard