Contact Us

Howdy!
If you’d like to contact us, please send up an email at readingotherpeople@gmail.com. We offer book reviews, editing services, and oh so much more.
Interview and Profile Requests: If you’d like to be featured on Reading Other People, Toronto’s esteemed culture site, please send us a pitch as to who you are and why we should interview you!

Hey Guest Bloggers! We are also always looking for talented writers. If you are interested in contributing to a really cool blog that has a high readership, please submit a writing sample or proposal showing us what you got and we’ll go from there. What makes you you? What’s your slant?  Different points of view are very welcome.

Read on.

Reading Other People.

2 thoughts on “Contact Us

  1. Nick:

    I recently e-mailed you a book review request for Theory of Irony. The book itself is sort of a history of irony, with frequent digressions to our own time.

    That said, I do have ideas for blog posts: As you write, unique takes on modern culture. Unique viewpoints on fashion, film, art. Feel free to read the blog or sample chapter at theoryofirony.com and let me know your thoughts.

    – Erik Von Norden

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  2. Hello,

    When you are reviewing books again, would you be interested in reviewing my book, Devil Out Of Texas ?

    https://www.amazon.com/Devil-Out-Texas-Roger-Raffee-ebook/dp/B01L6O9X8I/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1472555961&sr=1-1&keywords=devil+out+of+texas

    I just posted it for sale as an ebook in Amazon. Please let me know what I need to do or send you in order to have it reviewed. It’s 449 pages.

    Here is the brief synopsis I posted with the book:

    In the summer of 1973, a fourteen year old kid spends time with his grandfather and his friends, George Burns, Jack Benny, Georgie Jessel, and others, as they play cards at the Hillcrest Country Club near Beverly Hills, California. He later sits down to listen as his grandfather tells him the action-packed tale of his great-grandfather, the first Jewish Texas Ranger, and how his grandfather came to Hollywood to become one of the pioneers of the movie industry.
    The young man learns about how his grandfather came to be friends with the early stars of the silver screen, like Tom Mix, William S. Hart, Lionel Barrymore, and Doug Fairbanks, and his grandfather’s association with the great Mexican revolutionary leader Pancho Villa, the famous lawman Wyatt Earp, and other fascinating characters.

    Thank you,

    -Roger Raffee

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