Rachel Reviews: Lunch Tales: Teagan by Lucille Guarino
Well, I did enjoy this! Sometimes, all you need is just great storytelling and this is what Lucille Guarino delivers here.
There's no big message to this book; it's just about folks and families, living their lives and coping with everything that's being thrown at them and finding their way. But when it's done well, like it is here, then you have characters to whom you can relate, tension which leaves you rooting for a better outcome, attraction which has your heart racing and an urge, as a reader, to see the characters happy with the people with whom they belong.
Comments (10)
Self-plagiarism is sometimes discouraged. We can't/ shouldn't write very similar things.
I think it's not in the sense that the work is yours...but it is in that you're not producing something original. One of those contradictions that's hard to balance out.
I'm in trouble if it is! Good thing Dharrsheena might point it out as I won't remember. I could edit it then.
hope not- sometimes old thoughts just keep coming out in a story
That seems more like a redundancy to me. A true redundancy to me. Like, to me, that's more of a repetitious redundancy than plagiarism. But I probably stole this comment from someone else. 🤷⚡
Umm in school they count our previous work turned in to other classes as plagiarism. But I'm not sure.
I have no idea but I hope someone comes up with the answer to that!
Excellent question!!!
In the freelance writing business, it can be. Great question, though.
That is a good question