The Forward: Eli Sharabi’s ‘Hostage’ memoir named Jewish book of the year
The Forward: Michael Twitty’s ‘Koshersoul,’ a memoir of food and identity, named Jewish book of the year
Journal Gazette and Times Courier: Past-Forward Memoir Writers share new book at Charleston library
Independent Online: Just in: Rachel Kolisi to release memoir to accompany her inspiring ‘Falling Forward’ documentary
Rachel Kolisi is set to release a memoir in conjunction with her highly anticipated documentary, ‘Falling Forward’. The memoir is co-authored with Zibu Sithole and published by Pan Macmillan South ...
Just in: Rachel Kolisi to release memoir to accompany her inspiring ‘Falling Forward’ documentary
Forward thinking is about trying to figure out the goals of tomorow, then trying to find the methods of tomorrow to achieve them. Forward thinking is the instrument of change, whereas forward looking is not. In fact, forward looking often presupposes an absence of change, or an "all else benig equal" mentality.
I heard the phrase fast-forwarding when someone recalls their career path and then shifts to later far-reaching events or incidents that happened to them. Should you replace "fast-forwarding" with "later on," "after that," or "a few/many/couple of years later"? What is the opposite of...
I know that after preposition you should use Whom and not who. How about whoever and Whomever? Please forward this email to whoever is working on the project. Or Please forward this email to whomever is working on the project.
Please forward this email to