Outing


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The Oölogist


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Skyline: The Opal Chance


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Skyline, born under the legendary Blue Moon, is a bald eagle who cannot fly. Inspired by the greatest Storyteller among the eagles, Skyline develops a strong desire to travel to the Sea with his brother. In the course of their long, difficult journey, Skyline and his brother are captured by a bloodthirsty tribe of golden eagles. While searching for a means of escape, the brothers stumble upon a prophecy that foretells the rebuilding of the Kingdom of Eagles, which had been destroyed many lifetimes ago. Armed with the knowledge of a mysterious "Threesome" destined to rebuild the Kingdom, Skyline searches for the one thing that can save the eagles. But a more sinister force also hunts the Threesome, and before he knows what is happening, Skyline is thrown into a battle that will change the fate of all five animal Kingdoms forever. Before Skyline and the other eagles can claim victory, Skyline must overcome his disability and embrace his destiny.




Young Oologist


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Developmental Editing


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Editing is a tricky business. It requires analytical flair and creative panache, the patience of a saint and the vision of a writer. Transforming a manuscript into a book that edifies, inspires, and sells? That’s the job of the developmental editor, whose desk is the first stop for many manuscripts on the road to bookdom—a route ably mapped out in the pages of Developmental Editing. Author Scott Norton has worked with a diverse range of authors, editors, and publishers, and his handbook provides an approach to developmental editing that is logical, collaborative, humorous, and realistic. He starts with the core tasks of shaping the proposal, finding the hook, and building the narrative or argument, and then turns to the hard work of executing the plan and establishing a style. Developmental Editing includes detailed case studies featuring a variety of nonfiction books—election-year polemic, popular science, memoir, travel guide—and authors ranging from first-timer to veteran, journalist to scholar. Handy sidebars offer advice on how to become a developmental editor, create effective illustration programs, and adapt sophisticated fiction techniques (such as point of view, suspense, plotting, character, and setting) to nonfiction writing. Norton’s book also provides freelance copyeditors with a way to earn higher fees while introducing more creativity into their work lives. It gives acquisitions, marketing, and production staff a vocabulary for diagnosing a manuscript’s flaws and techniques for transforming it into a bestseller. And perhaps most importantly, Developmental Editing equips authors with the concrete tools they need to reach their audiences.







The Agricultural Journal


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Wildlife Review


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Outing Magazine


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A Strange Story; In Two Volumes


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Reproduction of the original.