Previous "Page Proof" Columns
Page Proof
What are the odds that you can pull together your previously published work
into a collection?
Page Proof
What do you do when you're jilted by the person who best appreciated your
work? For starters, don't take it personally.
Page Proof
The fearlessness and linguistic facility of a trio of provocative writers
should serve as a role model for academics.
Page Proof
Don't know your French flaps from your headbands? Here's a guide to the arcane terminology of the book world.
Page Proof
Is it better to revise your first draft, or junk it and start over?
Page Proof
To those of you with other people's manuscripts sitting on your desk, get to
them soon or give them back.
Page Proof
As academics, we often don't look like we're working because many of the people around us don't understand what it looks like to do intellectual work.
Page Proof
Books on narrow topics aren't going to get published unless academic authors can explain why their work matters.
Page Proof
Often the kindest thing you can tell a Ph.D. is to put the dissertation in a desk drawer, and move on.
Page Proof
It's easy to lose yourself in the research and never get around to actually putting words down on paper.
Page Proof
Why does it seem like the only time undergraduates encounter 'literary nonfiction' is in composition courses?
Page Proof
If it's a joy to express your thoughts on the page, bully for you; but for this writer, it's hard work.
Page Proof
A former editor in scholarly publishing helps decode manuscript-rejection letters.
Page Proof
Too many books by academics are nothing more than data dumps.
Page Proof
Though it can be bruising, having the fluff knocked out of your writing is not a bad thing.
Page Proof
Reasonableness is one of the first things to go when we toil to put our hearts and minds on the printed page.
Page Proof
In a new monthly column, Rachel Toor explores the writing and publishing process in academe.
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