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Back in 1995, Maharidge and Williamson published Journey to Nowhere, which chronicled the lives of working-class Americans.
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Her last published book, Journey to Nowhere (2008), begins with an account of the Unger family servant Edith, who had stayed in Berlin but eventually made her way to Israel, where she was miserable.
When his wife, Yoko, died in 1990, he published Sentimental Journey, a series of intimate photographs memorialising their relationship: Yoko in bed, smoking; Yoko dancing; Yoko's hand, emerging from under her hospital sheet, holding Araki's; Yoko dead in her open coffin, up to her neck in flowers; Yoko's shrine, in Araki's home; Yoko's grave.
Burgess's addiction to the sonnet form proclaims that the 1930s are his poetic point of origin, and the concerns of this sequence correspond closely to WH Auden's historical musings in his 1938 Chinese sonnets (first published in Journey to a War), which Burgess had read when he was an undergraduate.
It was my favourite moment in the whole publishing journey; when my story ceased to be the stack of dog-eared pages I'd spent so long living with, and became a proper book.
Then, our paths would occasionally cross at book events and we'd share our publishing journey, telling each other about the books we were working on.
And because people are easily rubbed the wrong way, about 90percentt of the authors I work with encounter some form of criticism on their publishing journey.
With Donald Mitchell he collaborated on Benjamin Britten, 1913-1976: Pictures from a Life (1978), and he laboured lovingly on the selection and editing of Britten's revelatory diaries, eventually published as Journeying Boy (2009).
Sharma published his autobiography, Journey with a Hundred Strings: My Life in Music (with Ina Puri), in 2002.
In 1995, when Colin L. Powell published "My American Journey," it spurred months of urging for him to run for higher office.
"Journey," published in 1932, burst like a bombshell on the Parisian literary scene, garnering huge sales and almost winning the Prix Goncourt.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com