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Ashleigh Young

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Ashleigh Young

Goodreads Author


Born
New Zealand
Website

Twitter

Genre

Member Since
March 2015


Average rating: 3.99 · 1,038 ratings · 146 reviews · 19 distinct worksSimilar authors
Can You Tolerate This?

3.97 avg rating — 793 ratings — published 2016 — 12 editions
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How I Get Ready

3.68 avg rating — 72 ratings — published 2019 — 4 editions
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Magnificent Moon

4.33 avg rating — 43 ratings — published 2012
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Trade-based Money Launderin...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings
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Skyrider: Investigations 6:...

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A Voice For Children

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Kiss Me I'm Scottish

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All Our Sins

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A Ferret Named Boo

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Skyrider Investigations 6: ...

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Slim Volume by James        Brown
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Quotes by Ashleigh Young  (?)
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“I'd been warned against it, but I found myself writing about my family. I believed that simply describing these people, especially at those times when they were most mysterious to me, would show their faces to me more clearly and bring me closer to them.”
ashleigh young

“Was there any story I could tell that was truly certain? Write your way toward an understanding, a tutor had told me in a creative writing class during my third year of university. But what if you went backward and wrote yourself away from the understanding? Was it better than never to have started at all? If you were uncertain, should you make the understanding up - construct a meaningful-sounding statement so that your reader wouldn't feel that you'd strung them along, wasted their time?”
Ashleigh Young, Can You Tolerate This?

Topics Mentioning This Author

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“Bookish folk aren’t what they used to be. Introverted, reserved, studious. There was a time when bookish folk would steer clear of trendy bars, dinner occasions and gatherings. Any social or public encounters would be avoided at all costs because these activities were very un-bookish. Bookish people preferred to stay in, or to sit alone in a quiet pub, reading a good book, or getting some writing done. Writers, in fact, perhaps epitomised these bookish traits most strongly. At least, they used to.
These days, bookish people, such as writers, are commonly found on stage, headlining festivals, or being interviewed on TV. Author events and performances have proliferated, becoming established parts of a writer’s role. It’s not that authors have suddenly become more extroverted – it’s more a case that their job description has changed.
Of course, not all writers are bookish. Not in the traditional sense of the word anyway. Some are well suited for public life, particularly those from certain academic backgrounds where public speaking is encouraged and confidence in social situations is shaped and formed. These writers may even be termed ‘gregarious’, and are thus happy being offered up for speaking engagements, stage discussions and signings. Good for them. But the others – the timid, shy and mousy authors – they’re being thrust into the limelight too. That’s my lot. The social wipeouts. Unprepared and ill-equipped to face our reader audience. What’s most concerning is that no one is offering us any guidance or tips. We’re expected to hit the ground running, confident and ready, loaded with banter, quips and answers. It’s a disaster waiting to happen.”
Paul Ewen

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