Do you love to travel to exotic and exciting destinations? Is writing your passion? Imagine being paid to do both as a travel writer! Offering guaranteed job satisfaction, travel writing has many fringe benefits such as getting behind-the-scenes information and traveling to your favorite destinations. Written by experienced travel writers, this guide will show you how to get those all-important free trips and get your travel writing published. Ideal for the novice writer, and full of helpful tips for the experienced travel writer, this information-packed book includes: finding sponsors; getting your first article published; publishing on the Internet; and common mistakes of new travel writers.
You don't need to be a professional journalist to write salable articles. Find out why, and how, to approach the field with this essential guide. Learn how to make contacts; find and develop ideas through your hobbies, job, or family; find your target market; format your manuscript; recycle your articles and get more sales out of them. Interviews with the editors of prominent magazines and neswpapers are also included, revealing what the experts look for when selecting pieces to publish.
Many of the most celebrated British films of the immediate post-war period (1945-55) seem to be occupied with "getting on" with life and offering distraction for postwar audiences. It is the time of the celebrated Ealing comedies, Hue and Cry (1946) and Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949), Dickens adaptations, and the most ambitious projects of the Archers. While the war itself is rarely mentioned in these films, the war and the conditions of postwar society lie at the heart of understanding them. While various studies have focused on lesser known realist films, few consider how deeply and completely the war affected British film. Michael W. Boyce considers the preoccupation of these films with profound anxieties and uncertainties about what life was going to be like for postwar Britain, what roles men and women would play, how children would grow up, even what it meant - and what it still means today - to be British.
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