LBK&M has just joined several major literary LinkedIn Groups!

LBK&M has just joined several major literary LinkedIn Groups!

LBK&M has just joined several major literary LinkedIn Groups! These are:

My LinkedIn Groups

And this is my welcoming message:

Hello from Richard Vallance Linear B, Knossos & Mycenae

We expect to see many more visitors to Linear B, Knossos & Mycenae now that we have hooked up with so many great LinkedIn literary groups.

4 responses to “LBK&M has just joined several major literary LinkedIn Groups!”

  1. ritaroberts Avatar

    WOW !! Maybe you will receive more feedback on your blog now Richard. I would think these are the people who would appreciate your work.

    1. vallance22 Avatar

      Not much luck there at all. The problem is that very few people appreciate my work, and NONE of the major Linear A researchers even bother with it, not even Andras Zeke of the Minoan Language Blog or Prof. John G. Younger. Oh well, what can I do? Such is life. Eventually, things should look up.

      Thanks!

      1. ritaroberts Avatar

        Well Richard, I am amazed ! because these are academic people who surely would appreciate your work, even if they don’t know how to read Linear B. They can see what you are trying to do. I also have visited Andras Zeke’s blog recently and left a comment. I think both of us are going to have to be content, for the time being anyway, with Koryvantes and the Archaeology and Science magazine and any other source where you can put an article to advertise your work. There seems to be more feedback from this area. Are you receiving much feedback from Academia Richard?.

        1. vallance22 Avatar

          Yes, you are absolutely right. I must be PATIENT. This is going to take some time. Feedback from academia.edu. Yes, some.

Sappho, spelled (in the dialect spoken by the poet) Psappho, (born c. 610, Lesbos, Greece — died c. 570 BCE). A lyric poet greatly admired in all ages for the beauty of her writing style.

Her language contains elements from Aeolic vernacular and poetic tradition, with traces of epic vocabulary familiar to readers of Homer. She has the ability to judge critically her own ecstasies and grief, and her emotions lose nothing of their force by being recollected in tranquillity.

Marble statue of Sappho on side profile.

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