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I Wrote A Book Episode 2

In this week's episode, we learn Sophie's true fe…

An episode of the I Wrote A Book podcast, hosted by Maddy Proud & Sophie Garbin, titled "I Wrote A Book Episode 2" was published on June 12, 2019 and runs 33 minutes.

June 12, 2019 ·33m · I Wrote A Book

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In this week's episode, we learn Sophie's true feelings about Grace Parker. Is she really too good to be true? Or is she simply a reflection of 13-year-old Maddy? You be the judge.

In this week's episode, we learn Sophie's true feelings about Grace Parker. Is she really too good to be true? Or is she simply a reflection of 13-year-old Maddy? You be the judge.
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you got a lighter? Amir M Hi,I wrote a book 1 year ago and then left it halfway! Not because it was doing bad actually I had 1M views for it but somehow I forgot how important it was and I feel it's time to talk about it and have fun writing again, please join me for the journey!Ironically the description sounds ambiguous but this is going to be more than just an Audiobook, we wanna talk so much more and get to the bottom of stuff! Hopefully some of my artist friends will join to talk about their own views and experiences.I am already excited to welcome you all aboard.Thank you. Ascension Series: Author Reading + Commentary Brandon Cervania I wrote a book and want to share it with friends and family. It's about a world that has lost itself through submitting their lives to a country that believes they can make the world better. We follow a family of four separated by the event where the unknown life afterward begins.Patreon.com/BrandonCervania If I May (Version 2) by A. A. Milne (1882 - 1956) LibriVox A. A. Milne, best known as the creator of Winnie the Pooh, was a prolific author of books, plays, essays and articles. He also spent a number of years editing for Punch Magazine. He even wrote a good detective story -- The Red House Mystery !In this collection he addresses a vast range of issues, including: the essence of melodrama; the lingering effects of World War I; knowing geography versus owning an atlas; a new kind of haunted house; the inexplicable nature of high finance; the trouble with "experts;" how the life of bees suggests the social importance of artists; the bad influence of theatre critics on good theatre.All of these short pieces are humorous. Many are informative. Taken together, they will inspire many to navigate over to Milne's five other book-length humorous collections: Happy Days, The Holiday Round, Not That It Matters, Once a Week, and The Sunny Side -- or, perhaps, to The Red House Mystery.- Summary by Kirsten Wever Sunny Side (Version 2), The by A. A. Milne (1882 - 1956) LibriVox A. A. Milne is best known for his creation of the perennially popular Winnie the Pooh, though he was and is highly acclaimed for hundreds of gently humorous essays and poems published in, among other famous venues, Punch Magazine, most of which have been collected and published as books.The Sunny Side is his last collection of articles and verses because, as he wrote in the American Introduction to the volume, “this sort of writing depends largely upon the irresponsibility and high spirits of youth for its success, and I want to stop before …the high spirits become mechanical …”He called this assortment “scrappy, because, “…Odd Verses have crept in on the unanswerable plea that, if they didn't do it now, they never would; War Sketches protested that I shouldn't have a book at all if I left them out; an Early Article, omitted from three previous volumes, paraded for the fourth time with such a pathetic 'I suppose you don't want me' in its eye that it could not de
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