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WordPress.com Blogger Scores Book Deal for “You Are Not So Smart”
According to David McRaney, “You might consider that you’re a rational, judicious being who sees a universe as it unequivocally is. But you’re as deceived as a rest of us, and that’s OK, since it keeps we sane.”
David is a publisher and a creator of a WordPress.com blog You Are Not So Smart, that was recently stretched into a book, You Are Not So Smart: Why You Have Too Many Friends on Facebook, Why Your Memory Is Mostly Fiction, and 46 Other Ways You’re Deluding Yourself, published this October.
“This is an extraordinary and insubordinate time for writers,” David says. “The barriers to entrance are so low, and a platforms like WordPress.com are so good made, anyone with a voice can start cheering and be heard. Instead of essay a book and anticipating a publisher won’t chuck it into a jelly pile, writers can start a blog and build a fan base. They can infer to publishers there is a marketplace for their work and their voice.”
About a Book
“You Are Not So Smart is a jubilee of self delusion. One subject during a time, it explores how stupid and undiscerning we all are by a lens of fascinating psychological studies,” David says. “For example, we might consider that we see all going on before your eyes, though you are usually wakeful of a tiny volume of a sum information your eyes take in, and even reduction is processed by your unwavering mind and remembered.”
Ironically, a hitch of undiscerning meditative is accurately what helped David to land a book deal:
“I got into a exhilarated online evidence with dual friends over that was better, a PS3 or a Xbox 360. The evidence went on for days, and we consider we all crossed a line, scornful any other and removing legitimately indignant – and we’re friends in genuine life!
I suspicion it would make a good blog post, so we researched because we was so code constant and silly. That became my post on code faithfulness and fanboyism, that we published that post during about a same time an iPhone antecedent was stolen. With a hum around fanboyism during an all-time high, someone during Gizmodo saw my post and asked if they could republish it with links back. we agreed, and all of a remarkable my hits went by a roof. we kept essay and posting and shortly emails arrived from a edition universe seeking if we was meddlesome in branch a blog into a book. we pronounced ruin yes.”
Learn some-more about David and You Are Not So Smart by checking out our talk with a author.
Congratulations on your new book, David!
Like this:
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WordPress.com Blogger Scores Book Deal for “You Are Not So Smart”
According to David McRaney, “You might consider that you’re a rational, judicious being who sees a universe as it unequivocally is. But you’re as deceived as a rest of us, and that’s OK, since it keeps we sane.”
David is a publisher and a creator of a WordPress.com blog You Are Not So Smart, that was recently stretched into a book, You Are Not So Smart: Why You Have Too Many Friends on Facebook, Why Your Memory Is Mostly Fiction, and 46 Other Ways You’re Deluding Yourself, published this October.
“This is an extraordinary and insubordinate time for writers,” David says. “The barriers to entrance are so low, and a platforms like WordPress.com are so good made, anyone with a voice can start cheering and be heard. Instead of essay a book and anticipating a publisher won’t chuck it into a jelly pile, writers can start a blog and build a fan base. They can infer to publishers there is a marketplace for their work and their voice.”
About a Book
“You Are Not So Smart is a jubilee of self delusion. One subject during a time, it explores how stupid and undiscerning we all are by a lens of fascinating psychological studies,” David says. “For example, we might consider that we see all going on before your eyes, though you are usually wakeful of a tiny volume of a sum information your eyes take in, and even reduction is processed by your unwavering mind and remembered.”
Ironically, a hitch of undiscerning meditative is accurately what helped David to land a book deal:
“I got into a exhilarated online evidence with dual friends over that was better, a PS3 or a Xbox 360. The evidence went on for days, and we consider we all crossed a line, scornful any other and removing legitimately indignant – and we’re friends in genuine life!
I suspicion it would make a good blog post, so we researched because we was so code constant and silly. That became my post on code faithfulness and fanboyism, that we published that post during about a same time an iPhone antecedent was stolen. With a hum around fanboyism during an all-time high, someone during Gizmodo saw my post and asked if they could republish it with links back. we agreed, and all of a remarkable my hits went by a roof. we kept essay and posting and shortly emails arrived from a edition universe seeking if we was meddlesome in branch a blog into a book. we pronounced ruin yes.”
Learn some-more about David and You Are Not So Smart by checking out our talk with a author.
Congratulations on your new book, David!
Like this:
Leave a Reply
WordPress.com Blogger Scores Book Deal for “You Are Not So Smart”
According to David McRaney, “You might consider that you’re a rational, judicious being who sees a universe as it unequivocally is. But you’re as deceived as a rest of us, and that’s OK, since it keeps we sane.”
David is a publisher and a creator of a WordPress.com blog You Are Not So Smart, that was recently stretched into a book, You Are Not So Smart: Why You Have Too Many Friends on Facebook, Why Your Memory Is Mostly Fiction, and 46 Other Ways You’re Deluding Yourself, published this October.
“This is an extraordinary and insubordinate time for writers,” David says. “The barriers to entrance are so low, and a platforms like WordPress.com are so good made, anyone with a voice can start cheering and be heard. Instead of essay a book and anticipating a publisher won’t chuck it into a jelly pile, writers can start a blog and build a fan base. They can infer to publishers there is a marketplace for their work and their voice.”
About a Book
“You Are Not So Smart is a jubilee of self delusion. One subject during a time, it explores how stupid and undiscerning we all are by a lens of fascinating psychological studies,” David says. “For example, we might consider that we see all going on before your eyes, though you are usually wakeful of a tiny volume of a sum information your eyes take in, and even reduction is processed by your unwavering mind and remembered.”
Ironically, a hitch of undiscerning meditative is accurately what helped David to land a book deal:
“I got into a exhilarated online evidence with dual friends over that was better, a PS3 or a Xbox 360. The evidence went on for days, and we consider we all crossed a line, scornful any other and removing legitimately indignant – and we’re friends in genuine life!
I suspicion it would make a good blog post, so we researched because we was so code constant and silly. That became my post on code faithfulness and fanboyism, that we published that post during about a same time an iPhone antecedent was stolen. With a hum around fanboyism during an all-time high, someone during Gizmodo saw my post and asked if they could republish it with links back. we agreed, and all of a remarkable my hits went by a roof. we kept essay and posting and shortly emails arrived from a edition universe seeking if we was meddlesome in branch a blog into a book. we pronounced ruin yes.”
Learn some-more about David and You Are Not So Smart by checking out our talk with a author.
Congratulations on your new book, David!
Like this:
Leave a Reply
WordPress.com Blogger Scores Book Deal for “You Are Not So Smart”
According to David McRaney, “You might consider that you’re a rational, judicious being who sees a universe as it unequivocally is. But you’re as deceived as a rest of us, and that’s OK, since it keeps we sane.”
David is a publisher and a creator of a WordPress.com blog You Are Not So Smart, that was recently stretched into a book, You Are Not So Smart: Why You Have Too Many Friends on Facebook, Why Your Memory Is Mostly Fiction, and 46 Other Ways You’re Deluding Yourself, published this October.
“This is an extraordinary and insubordinate time for writers,” David says. “The barriers to entrance are so low, and a platforms like WordPress.com are so good made, anyone with a voice can start cheering and be heard. Instead of essay a book and anticipating a publisher won’t chuck it into a jelly pile, writers can start a blog and build a fan base. They can infer to publishers there is a marketplace for their work and their voice.”
About a Book
“You Are Not So Smart is a jubilee of self delusion. One subject during a time, it explores how stupid and undiscerning we all are by a lens of fascinating psychological studies,” David says. “For example, we might consider that we see all going on before your eyes, though you are usually wakeful of a tiny volume of a sum information your eyes take in, and even reduction is processed by your unwavering mind and remembered.”
Ironically, a hitch of undiscerning meditative is accurately what helped David to land a book deal:
“I got into a exhilarated online evidence with dual friends over that was better, a PS3 or a Xbox 360. The evidence went on for days, and we consider we all crossed a line, scornful any other and removing legitimately indignant – and we’re friends in genuine life!
I suspicion it would make a good blog post, so we researched because we was so code constant and silly. That became my post on code faithfulness and fanboyism, that we published that post during about a same time an iPhone antecedent was stolen. With a hum around fanboyism during an all-time high, someone during Gizmodo saw my post and asked if they could republish it with links back. we agreed, and all of a remarkable my hits went by a roof. we kept essay and posting and shortly emails arrived from a edition universe seeking if we was meddlesome in branch a blog into a book. we pronounced ruin yes.”
Learn some-more about David and You Are Not So Smart by checking out our talk with a author.
Congratulations on your new book, David!






