The 5 Harshest Lessons I’ve Learned Ghostwriting

I’ve worked as a freelancer for over a decade in various capacities. I hustled before it was really a thing. It wasn’t so much a desire as it was a necessity. While I’ve done many different freelance jobs, none of them have delivered so many harsh lessons as rapidly as the world of ghostwriting.

Almost every job has its skeletons in the closet, but ghostwriting feels like a boneyard by comparison.… Read the rest

Piloting a New Platform

A new platform isn’t just a way to be heard, it’s a way to represent a new voice for yourself. I don’t just write for money, I write because I love to do so. That being said, I still need money to live.

Each platform and distribution method is going to have a different audience and a different niche. Everything from the user base to the management is going to impact the profitability and success of the platform for you and in general.… Read the rest

A Review for Tuttle’s “Mini Thai Dictionary”

I talked a little about Tuttle Publishing in my Instant Thai review. They have a long history of producing quality materials about and related to Asia and Asian culture, including foreign language materials. While a long history doesn’t necessarily guarantee quality, their Mini Thai Dictionary is great at pretty much everything it claims to be. It’s small, it’s efficient, it works bidirectionally, and it’s cheap.… Read the rest

A Review of Tuttle’s “Instant Thai”

Tuttle Publishing needs no introduction if you’re interested in most Asian languages. They produce works in almost every well-known Asian language as well as content such as martial arts, history, art, etc. Stuart Robson and Prateep Changchit’s Instant Thai occupies a niche most language books don’t. It’s a phrasebook based on you acquiring some actual linguistic knowledge of Thai.

You aren’t getting a traditional phrasebook or a textbook; you’re getting something that will let you actually learn enough Thai to get by.… Read the rest

Do Learn in Your Sleep Methods Really Work?

Like every overachiever in high school, I had always wondered if there was some way to use sleep for something productive. You spend a third of your life asleep, is there some way to get an edge from it? The idea of learning in your sleep via dreams is ancient, but how much of the real world actually bleeds over?

Pretty much everyone has a memory of “learning” something in their sleep and recalling it later.… Read the rest