Posted by admin | Posted in Bestsellers | Posted on 03-06-2010
Tags: books, king, stephen, stephen king stand, stephen king stand by me, stephen king stand by me movie, stephen king stand comic, stephen king stand graphic novel, stephenking, wrightson

Gender and niche for Creative Freelance writer
A freelance creative writer has to think carefully about what kind they should write and how it can be marketed to a niche. If you do creative writing rather than tutorial or non-fiction writing, do not reject the value of a niche to display your work in. Some people say there is no niche for writers. I think you just be creative and this factor.
Remember that even if you do not want to be labeled and cataloged, its even more difficult to be an individual who can not be classified. The book covers topics too or is the only one on the shelf is the most difficult to find books in a library or bookstore, there are just too many places to look. Of course, if anyone knows the title that makes it easier and you get a few impulse buys because your book was just stumbled upon, but the best sellers are those who are clearly on what they are.
Crime novels are in the section of crime novels in the romance section. Customers who have a head like right of this section and go only there. This is one reason that the authors chose to use pseudonyms, so that their pen name may be associated with a genre. If an author chooses to write a detective story and a romance, a pseudonym is all conjecture classification. This is important because you want to be found and read. With so many new Junior booksellers and putting books on shelves and "help" their clients, the ambiguity works against you. A well defined classification and coverage gets your books where they should be, in one hand readers.
Believe it or not, the first two Harry Potter books have been difficult to sell when they are released. Wizard books are not so popular. Horror, as the spooky series, was fashionable and Goosebumps were much more thinner than the first book of Harry. Some children read science fiction and fantasy, but Harry did not totally good kind either. Anyone who has read the Harry Potter books recommends them and JK Rowling was a huge success because it gave the best story absolutely. Yet many a good story has failed because we did not know it existed. To reassure readers that they will make an enjoyable trip in your novel is clearly important and the theme of your help with this …
People will try a new author, but usually only if they have a strong feeling that its going to meet their expectations. People have a love / hate reaction to surprises. Once they know to expect a surprise, they love it, but the surprise comes from the sky makes it uncomfortable. People who read horror expect to scary surprises. Crime Writers with a thriller or edge of forensic science have already determined their readers to expect surprises horrible. A strong use of red on a blanket in the romance section is an indication that there might be scenes of explicit sex in it so that coverage Blue indicates the family of a more gentle novel based. People will accept what you write as long as their expectation that some elements are present is reached.
Gender helps sell books. A general or literary fiction title competing in a bigger market than a story love with a bodice ripping cover. Of course, the genre itself restricted copywriter to limit expectations of its readers. A novel without an end rarely is happy to Section novel because readers of these books want to believe that everything would be okay in the end.
You should not write a book Gender and compromise yourself as a writer if you have firm convictions about the integrity of your characters or the reality of a tale. A kind of book only works if you follow the main elements of its formula. Creating a close the narrative of life in the midst of such fantasies, and To operate it, is difficult.
Marketing is an important factor in the success of your book. Getting the right cover that will draw its target audience, be a good blurb on the back, spread the word about it. Niching your novel in a genre provides a creative writer an advantage that will attract new readers who are willing to try new authors. The same is especially true if you want to attract new readers online. Here, you are under the limit extreme is found by a keyword search, you own with other established authors niching is the best choice on the market that you can do.
For example, if you write a horror novel that could appeal to stephen king fans, you can target a player of Stephen King by this author name in the keyword optimized articles on your blog. Write some enthusiastic comments as a fan might find interesting. Then, near the comments on your blog, advertise your own work and give samples, in exchange for an e-mail. You then have the opportunity to contact with those avid readers who love to read a new book that thrills as chilling as a novel by stephen king. They begin by looking for Stephen King and you will find. it worth their while, this is your chance to make that person on your drive. Follow up with them and talk about your future work or driving a new blog post where you show them what you write.
Remember that as your blog is online, it is still there working for you 24 / 7 to draw new readers. Take the time to optimize the positions of keyword searches and make sure that when people find you, you reward with your best writing. Your traffic can start small, but these two things and it will prosper. When you reach out to blog communities and can have something special to show people when they follow a link to your site, your readers will continue to increase.
One day, who knows, a new author will Targeting your name to get new readers.
About the Author
Learn how to market yourself as a Freelance Creative Writer by using normal internet marketing techniques for niche blogging.
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Stephen King’s The Stand [VHS] $14.50 After a government-spawned “superflu” wipes out more than 90 percent of the earth’s population, the devastated survivors must decide whether to support or resist the advances of a mysterious stranger from way down South (heh-heh) who wishes to claim this new world order for himself. Although the six-hour length makes it nigh-impossible to digest in one sitting, this well-paced adaptation of Stephe… |
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Stephen King’s The Stand (Boxed Set) [VHS] $12.74 After a government-spawned “superflu” wipes out more than 90 percent of the earth’s population, the devastated survivors must decide whether to support or resist the advances of a mysterious stranger from way down South (heh-heh) who wishes to claim this new world order for himself. Although the six-hour length makes it nigh-impossible to digest in one sitting, this well-paced adaptation of Stephe… |
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Stand By Me [VHS] $2.75 A sleeper hit when released in 1986, Stand by Me is based on Stephen King’s novella “The Body” (from the book Different Seasons); but it’s more about the joys and pains of boyhood friendship than a morbid fascination with corpses. It’s about four boys ages 12 and 13 (Wil Wheaton, River Phoenix, Corey Feldman, Jerry O’Connell) who take an overnight hike through the woods near their Oregon town to f… |
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Stephen King’s The Stand: Original Television Soundtrack $11.98 … |
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English Anthems (British Composers) $16.98 King’s College Choir, Cambridge performs a wonderful selection of English Anthems. Included among the thirteen selections are “And I Saw a New Heaven,” “Faire is the Heaven,” “Set Me As a Seal Upon Thine Heart,”and “”I Love the Lord.”… |
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Historic Organs of Philadelphia $32.35 … |
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Stephen King’s It $3.96 Is there anything scarier than clowns? Of course not. And who knows scary better than Stephen King? You see where we’re going. It puts a malevolent clown (given demented life by a powdered, red-nosed Tim Curry) front and center, as King’s fat novel gets the TV-movie treatment. Even at three hours plus, the action is condensed, but an engaging Stand by Me vibe prevails for much of the running time…. |
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Stand By Me (Special edition) $5.69 Low-key sleeper hit, directed by Rob Reiner and based on a Stephen King story. Four young boys in 1959 Oregon set out on a camping trip in order to see a dead body one of them accidentally found. Along the way they take some hesitant steps on the road to maturity. River Phoenix, Corey Feldman, Jerry O’Connell, and Wil Wheaton star; Richard Dreyfuss is the narrator. 89 min. Widescreen (Enhanced); S… |
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Stephen King Gift Set (The Langoliers / The Stand / Golden Years) $26.99 In “Stephen King’s the Langoliers,” 10 passengers on a nighttime transcontinental flight awaken to discover that the rest of the plane’s passengers and crew have disappeared and no one on the ground answers their distress calls. Dean Stockwell, David Morse, Patricia Wettig, and Bronson Pinchot star. Then, “the end of the world is just the beginning” in the stunning TV mini-series “The Stand.” A bi… |
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The Stand $8.99 In 1978, science fiction writer Spider Robinson wrote a scathing review of The Stand in which he exhorted his readers to grab strangers in bookstores and beg them not to buy it. The Stand is like that. You either love it or hate it, but you can’t ignore it. Stephen King’s most popular book, according to polls of his fans, is an end-of-the-world scenario: a rapidly mutating flu virus is ac… |
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Stephen King $45 Stephen King: America's Storyteller explores the particular American-ness of Stephen KingÕs work. It is the first major examination to follow this defining theme through KingÕs 40-year career, from his earliest writings to his most recent novels and films made from them. Stephen King begins by tracing Stephen KingÕs rise from his formative years to his status as a one of the most popular writers in publishing history. It then takes a close look at the major works from his canon, including the shining, The Stand, It, Dolores Claiborne, and The Dark Tower. In these works and others, author Tony Magistrale focuses on KingÕs deep rooted sense of the American experience, exemplified by his clear-eyed presentation of our historical and cultural foibles and scars; his gallery of unlikely friendships that cross race, age, and class boundaries; and his transcendent portrayals of uniquely American survival instincts, fellowship, and acts of heroism from the least likely of sources. |
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Stephen King on the Big Screen $20 From 1976 to the present day, there have been over 45 films adapted from the spine-tingling works of Stephen King. In Stephen King on the Big Screen, Mark Browning addresses the question of why some of the film adaptations of the world’s best-selling author are much more successful than others.By focussing on the theoretical aspect of genre, Browning brings an original approach to familiar films and suggests new ways of viewing them. Although often associated with the macabre, King’s stories form the basis for dozens of narratives, which are clearly not horror from Stand By Me to Hearts in Atlantis. How are The Green Mile and The Shawshank Redemption successful as prison movies? How do Cujo and The Shining work as family dramas? Are Dreamcatcher and Christine merely updated 1950s B-movies? The book is the first written by a film specialist to consider every stephen king film given a theatrical release, including work by Stanley Kubrick, David Cronenberg and George A. Romero and the first to consider in detail films like Creepshow, Sleepwalkers and 1408. The style, whilst critically rigorous, is designed to be accessible to discerning readers of King and fans of films based on his work. |
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Stephen King on the Small Screen $20 In this follow up to Stephen King on the Big Screen (2009) Mark Browning turns his critical eye upon the much-neglected subject of the best-selling author’s work in television, examining what it is about King’s fiction that makes it particularly suitable for the small screen.By focusing on this body of work, from ratings successes The Stand and The Night Flier to lesser- known TV films Storm of the Century (1999), Rose Red (2002), Kingdom Hospital (2003) and the 2004 remake of Salem’s Lot, Browning is able to articulate how these adaptations work and, in turn, suggest new ways of viewing them. The book is the first written by a film specialist to consider King’s television work in its own right, and rejects previous attempts to make the films and books fit rigid thematic categories. Browning examines what makes a written or visual text successful at evoking fear on a case-by-case basis, in a highly readable and engaging way. He also considers the relationship between the big and small screen. Why, for instance, are some TV versions more effective than movie adaptations and vice versa? In the process, Stephen King on the Big Screen is able to shed new light on what it is that makes King’s novels so successful and reveal the elements of style and approach that have helped make King one of the world’s best-selling authors. |
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The Stand $8.99 This is the way the world ends: with a nanosecond of computer error in a Defense Department laboratory and a million casual contacts that form the links in a chain letter of death. And here is the bleak new world of the day after: a world stripped of its institutions and emptied of 99 percent of its people. A world in which a handful of panicky survivors choose sides — or are chosen. A world in which good rides on the frail shoulders of the 108-year-old Mother Abigail — and the worst nightmares of evil are embodied in a man with a lethal smile and unspeakable powers: Randall Flagg, the dark man. In 1978 Stephen King published The Stand , the novel that is now considered to be one of his finest works. But as it was first published, The Stand was incomplete, since more than 150,000 words had been cut from the original manuscript. Now Stephen King’s apocalyptic vision of a world blasted by plague and embroiled in an elemental struggle between good and evil has been restored to its entirety. The Stand : The Complete And Uncut Edition includes more than five hundred pages of material previously deleted, along with new material that King added as he reworked the manuscript for a new generation. It gives us new characters and endows familiar ones with new depths. It has a new beginning and a new ending. What emerges is a gripping work with the scope and moral comlexity of a true epic. For hundreds of thousands of fans who read The Stand in its original version and wanted more, this new edition is Stephen King’s gift. And those who are reading The Stand for the first time will discover a triumphant and eerily plausible work of the imagination that takes on the issues that will determine our survival. From the hardcover edition. |

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