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TITLE: Writer's Digest Magazine
["America's Leading Writer's Magazine" -- See FULL contents below!]
ISSUE DATE: March, 1976; Vol. 56, No. 3
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
[Use 'Control F' to search this page. MORE MAGAZINES' exclusive detailed content description is GUARANTEED accurate for THIS magazine. Editions are not always the same, even with the same title, cover and issue date. ] This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17

COVER: Extra! Extra! Read all about it! Writing for Newspapers. Cover: Dektas/Diesel with special thanks to The Cincinnati Post.

The Writer as Editor. Compiling an Anthology, by Lloyd Zimpel. Why should you have to grind out all the words for your next book? Spend a couple of nights in the basement of the library, corner a trusty Xerox machine, buy a gallon of rubber cement -- and voila! An anthology! Well, it isn't that simple, says anthologist Lloyd Zimpel, but here are a few guidelines that will ease your task. Here too is Jared Carter's Sir, Have a Care With Your Anthology (page 16), a hardheaded guide to the mechanics of anthologizing. Tip: no nonsense -- and no staples -- allowed.

The Writer's Digest Interview: Roger Kahn, by Willard Bailey. Roger Kahn is more than a sportswriter's sportswriter; he is a writer's writer. He is the little bearded guy who recalled, with wry and vivid grace, The Boys of Summer -- and their winter of discontent -- as well as How the Weather Was. And he does it his way. "If you're going to be an author," says Kahn, "if you're going to put up with the loneliness and the vagaries of trying to be a creative artist in a country that is not that congenial to creative artists ... one of the greatest rewards is this internal thing, doing what I want to do and have a need to do.".

Freelancing for Newspapers, by Nell Kraft. Freelancers often set their sights on lofty magazines in Boston and the Big Apple, overlooking a swarm of markets in their own backyards -- or on their doorsteps, as the case may be: local newspapers. Your Daily Planet may pay modestly, but it has a constant appetite for bright-eyed features, as Kraft testifies -- not to mention Sunday magazine stories (You Ought to Be in Picture, by William Sheridan, page 26), stringers' stories (Your Smalltown Paper Needs You, by Mary Ann Belyea, page 28) and columns (How to Write a Personals Column, by Catherine Ganske, page 30). Extra! Extra! Write all about it!.

Barking Made Easy, by Helen Arvonen. When you're concocting a title, it's all too easy to bark up the wrong tree. Your title may be dated, vague or dog-eared. Then again, with a little help from Helen Arvonen, it can be as sparkling and alluring as a chilled glass of wine. For instance, who could resist a piece called ... Barking Made Easy?.

Elsewhere:.
The Writing Life.
Contests & Awards.
Pictures.
Cartooning.
Market Update.
Poetry.
Nonfiction.
Letters.
The Markets.


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