You would work at home, mostly typing at your computer.
If the author of a work is unknown, you would begin the reference entry with the title of the work in place of the author's name.
In APA style, when referencing Author B in Author A's work, you would cite Author B's work as a secondary source. In the reference list, you would include Author B's work as the source you consulted. In the text, you would cite Author A and indicate that you are referring to information from Author B. For example, "According to Author B (as cited in Author A, year), ...".
An author is someone who has written a piece; whether it's an article, poem, novel,etc. A single person would be the author. A joint author would be when more than one author collaborates on a particular function for the same piece. Each of the authors for the piece would be considered as a "joint author."
If doing a sources cited page, there is no need to identify that the author is deceased. You will want to write your bibliography as you normally would, including the name of the author, the work of the author, the date of the published work, and the date it was accessed.
That would be a copyright
Again, context is key: If you were to say that a certain book was the author's first mythical work, it would mean that the book in question was that author's initial fictional offering.
Usually it would be the Editor who checks the work of the author once the author has finished writing. Sometimes it can be his wife, brother or sister, friends or even the author's son or daughter without whose help he could not have finished writing the book.
It depends on the specific language of the contract between the author and the publisher.
I think web authoring software allows you to create website. It would make all work you do, be your work. You would be the author of site. That what software does for you.
You probably could, but it would be hard work and you wouldn't have much time to yourself. The chances of becoming a bestselling author is pretty low, so you would have to work pretty hard, and being a successful fashion designer is hard as well.
"The Baker Heater League" is non-fiction. However, it refers to fictional legends and stories. Why would the author use nonfactual information in a factual work? -- Someone please help. it's 1am and I'm so stressed out.
An author would think plagiarism is a grave offense because that is who they are. They write, they are known for that, the things they write make them who they are. If you take the work they produce as your own, it makes them incomplete.