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  2. 10 Sites That Will Pay You to Read Books - AOL

    www.aol.com/10-sites-pay-read-books-195745363.html

    There are many ways to get paid to read books, from recording audiobooks to writing reviews. These 10 sites will reward your love of reading with cash.

  3. Get Paid To Read Books Aloud: 9 Best Sites That Pay - AOL

    www.aol.com/paid-read-books-aloud-9-185637920.html

    You can choose to get paid at a fixed hourly rate or share 50% of the royalties from the sale of the book. Audition for the books you want to narrate and accept the offer to get started. 2.

  4. Get Paid to Write: Top 18 Sites That Pay (up to $1 per Word)

    www.aol.com/paid-write-top-18-sites-170032449.html

    A quarterly literary magazine, The Threepenny Review publishes nonfiction essays, memoirs and reviews, fiction stories and poetry in print. Depending on the type of piece, you can expect between ...

  5. Publishers Weekly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Publishers_Weekly

    The book review section of Publishers Weekly was added in the early 1940s and grew in importance during the 20th century and through the present day. [when?] It currently offers prepublication reviews of 9,000 new trade books each year, in a comprehensive range of genres and including audiobooks and ebooks, with a digitized archive of 200,000 ...

  6. The StoryGraph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_StoryGraph

    By scrolling over the "stats" tab on their profile page, readers get an evaluation of their online library broken down by mood, pace, length, genre, rating, etc. This function can be upgraded, for a monthly fee, to provide more advanced statistics. Unlike Goodreads, The StoryGraph offers the option to give books half or quarter star ratings. [4]

  7. The New York Review of Books - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_New_York_Review_of_Books

    The New York Review was founded by Robert B. Silvers and Barbara Epstein, together with publisher A. Whitney Ellsworth [5] and writer Elizabeth Hardwick.They were backed and encouraged by Epstein's husband, Jason Epstein, a vice president at Random House and editor of Vintage Books, and Hardwick's husband, poet Robert Lowell.