The July 7 New Yorker magazine carries an awe-inspiring story by Laura Hillenbrand, the author of the bestselling book about the racehorse Seabiscuit.
Anyone who is a writer and having trouble finishing a project will be inspired by this.
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The July 7 New Yorker magazine carries an awe-inspiring story by Laura Hillenbrand, the author of the bestselling book about the racehorse Seabiscuit.
Anyone who is a writer and having trouble finishing a project will be inspired by this.
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If it’s true, it’s inspirational. But did things really happen the way she said they happened? And is chronic fatigue syndrome something other than a psychosomatic condition?
See, for example, the following article:
Behavior therapy helps chronic fatigue patients
See also this article about how best-selling author David Pelzer (A Child Called It) may have made up — or at least greatly exaggerated — the childhood horror stories he recounts in his books:
Dysfunction for Dollars