Find in this ring websites, personal, academic and commercial, pertaining to authors, living and otherwise. Some will be the authors' own sites; some, obviously, will be sites about those authors, maintained by someone else. (For example, none of the people pictured -- from top left, James Baldwin, Louisa May Alcott, Edgar Allan Poe, Elie Wiesel, Bernard Malamud and Charles Dickens -- has his or her own website... except for Wiesel, whose namesake foundation has a web presence.)
This is the home for Publish America authors where they can network with writers like themselves, promote their work, and post pics, blog, post videos, etc.
On a spiritual quest to the magnificent deserts and canyons of the American West, peace and unexpected vision come to one traveller during his search for beauty and insight. A reflective journey into the Colorado Plateau in words and photographs.
An award-winning monthly e-zine featuring the finest in Beatles-related fan fiction on the Web. Contains an extensive archive of complete stories, plus the "Write Thinking" section, full of articles on the art and craft of writing with the fanfic author in mind. Updated monthly!
Author Maud Muller's website. Provides the visitor with information about her political thriller, The Founding Five. Also includes a page of humorous Limericks from the Left, several short stories and a description of her new works: Confessions of a Liberal Lover and A Monstrous Game.
Lady G's writings -- essays, articles, poetry, short fiction, novel excerpts and fanfiction --on the GENESSA website as well as one or two by her on Lionheart's site, and his writings on his own site. Also find links to Lady G's Associated Content profile where her AC-published writings can be found, as well as a list of offsite essays and articles. Find essays on various topics by clicking on main product categories in the index (you'll be surprised at what you find there; it's not just for shopping!)
Charles Williams was an author, poet, playwright and theologian. He was a member of the Oxford literary group called the Inklings, whose members included C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien and Owen Barfield. He lived in London, where he worked in a publishing house.
If you're seeing this site in one of my rings, consider it an unofficial manager's page); otherwise it's my page about which rings I manage AND about WebRing in general, including WebRing membership and management. If THIS ring isn't on the page, it's due to be merged; check join instructions to see where.