This is in essence a short and rather conventional biography which breaks no new ground but is a good summary of current knowledge. |
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But the picture drawn by Volkmar Braunbehrens's 1989 biography is of a serious, steady, occasionally irascible man. |
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The library also has a wide range of titles on gardening, cookery, history, computers, biography and travel. |
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It exposes the paradox that Plath's texts cannot be read through biography and cannot be read apart from it. |
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Over the centuries, Laozi's life took on elements of the mythological hero's biography. |
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Goodrich limned some of her biography into her last known self-portrait, where she fashioned herself as an artist at work at her easel. |
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His biography, written by St Gregory of Nyssa, describes the crowning moment of divine theophany. |
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The political biography is preceded by a fine chapter on his cricketing career. |
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Although soberly written, this biography of the dictator bristles with moral indignation. |
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As in his biography of Macarthur, the Aborigines are incidental, minor problems for his hero to overcome. |
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The next chapter in Zorn's musical biography is also one of the most surprising. |
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It combines numerous illustrations with a biography, an artistic appreciation and a complete catalogue of his works. |
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The author, like so many writers of popular biography, is guilty of being fashionably irreverent toward her subject. |
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A booklet containing the biography of Mr. Nayanar, poems on Nayanar and photographic vignettes from his life, is also supplied along with it. |
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But as is revealed in a startling new biography, he fathered illegitimate children and had numerous affairs. |
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Tolstoy set out to write a personal memoir of O'Brian, but it turned into a full biography. |
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Yet we are still waiting for a compact, scholarly biography of his entire life in a single volume. |
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His biography is eminently sensible on a subject about which much high-flown transcendental nonsense has been written. |
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In the postbag was also a handwritten note and a few words of biography on Peter Seward. |
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A typical note card would provide a biography of an author or a review of a book. |
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What political biography written last or this century has included every last detail. |
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Alexandra Lapierre, award-winning French novelist and biographer, has produced a book that combines biography, fiction and scholarship. |
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Her written requirements were pared down to writing half an essay, half a biography, and half of everything they initially required. |
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For example, Hawass said, on show along with the mummy of Ramses II would be models of his Nubian temples, statues, reliefs and a biography. |
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Even European history of the period was an official or semi-official biography of the state. |
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It has been suggested that his Pitt biography is part of a grand publicity plan to jockey back into position as a future leader. |
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It's a good starter biography for younger viewers who might go on to familiarize themselves with the writings of this great author. |
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According to a new biography, he narrowly escaped being expelled and, at 17, was beaten by his housemaster for flouting the rules. |
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However hard we try to concentrate on the paintings, the sad facts of Solomon's biography insist on obtruding themselves. |
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Miss Eisner's book, while not replacing Zamoyski's biography, does not seek to do so, and provides a lively and readable supplement. |
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So, does the beautiful title of the biography evoke the man, his work or the Aranda culture that was his subject? |
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This biography is of general importance chiefly because it is, surprisingly, the first comprehensive biography of the artist. |
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In a biography, one expects to be told that so-and-so first met his best friend at such-and-such a place. |
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Because some people have come forward with an interest in writing my biography, I thought it might be no harm to have a crack at it myself. |
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There was the case of Dr James Mackay, widely touted in the early 1990s as the leading authority on Burns and author of a capacious biography. |
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Johnson's biography is an engrossing portrait of a brilliant physicist who happens to be a complex and, at times, troubled character. |
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In the New York Times I read religiously each capsule biography of a World Trade Center victim. |
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You can almost feel the bitter cold and biting Antarctic wind in this excellent biography of a polar hero. |
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Thus this biography will be of interest to any student of the mid-twentieth century South. |
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The tone of Nicholls' biography is dispassionately respectful, admiring even. |
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A biography of Elvire O'Connor, the ostensible writer of this piece, is included in the program and is a tiny work of art in its own right. |
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The volume begins with the editors' contributions, a short biography of Gegenbaur and a history of comparative anatomy at the University of Jena. |
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He presents a celebratory biography of an African-American woman removed from her culture and family. |
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As one would expect from his highly efficient biography of Ted Heath, he shows a masterly command of the politics of the period. |
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The biography of William Blake warmly portrays the visionary poet's wife Katherine as the helpmate who made Blake's work possible. |
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An award-winning writer of 11 previous books of history, travel and biography, Nicholl retranslates many of da Vinci's mirrorscript writings. |
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To see how this description of the series fits with Gregory's series for arctan see the biography of Madhava. |
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One of last century's most potent literary and political figures is put under the microscope in this prize-winning biography. |
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Hill's is a thematic biography, moving emotionally as much as argumentatively. |
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It is a pity that there exists no serious biography of Archibald Wavell, an intriguing and arresting figure. |
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There is a very complete biography of Alec Guinness and the theatrical trailer for the film. |
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He wrote the bestselling biography of U2 in 1985, just before the band became rock superstars. |
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Was it possible to write the bestselling biography to match the box-office hit? |
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I'm leaning towards some kind of biography but I have no particular subject in mind. |
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But in light of his political biography there can be no doubt of his preparedness to assume a ministerial office in a Union-led government. |
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The Wonder edition includes an informative biography and a discography of his recordings. |
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At the end of this marvellously observed biography, it's the drunken rants, financial embarrassments and the sexual misadventures I remember. |
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Here, with a short artist's biography, is the concert programme listed in full. |
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It would have been easy for him to write a rousingly romantic biography which glossed over the enormous contradictions of Ryan's career. |
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For individual biography, the cataloger lists the name of the biographee as the first subject heading. |
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This rich, authoritative biography is written by an American Russophile who knew him personally. |
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A good biography is weakened by not giving the major biographical facts due prominence. |
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My brother Marvin and I once wrote a biography of the former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. |
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He wrote a worthy biography of Red Smith and edited a book of columns by Smith. |
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I think I may write a non-linear biography starting from now and going in both directions at once. |
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This might suggest the difficulty of writing the biography of someone who spent so much of his life recreating his life in fiction. |
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I can't help but feel that if you could write a biography of Pepys with only side references to the diary it'd work a lot better. |
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When I went on to write the biography of Charles, true to his character, he gave me complete freedom of access to friends and documents. |
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She once toyed with writing a biography of Margaret Thatcher, the first time she's ever been interested in writing about a living person. |
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Responding to criticism that his attacks on Elton and Madonna in his new biography are unfair, he has decided to set the record straight. |
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Drummund, who was also a biographer for Billy Graham, wrote an excellent biography on Finney which deals with this. |
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He was also responsible for publishing Dorothy Wordsworth's diaries and wrote a ground-breaking biography of her. |
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Her biography of Nietzsche is a double hagiography, comic and almost sad in its reflection of her own will to power. |
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This is what is said to have prompted Asan to write a biography of Achutha Menon, drawing on his close relationship with him. |
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In The Name is not a Pilger biography but an account of Pilger's television work with which the journalist himself co-operated. |
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If there is a slippage between fiction and biography in this text then how does this apply to the image? |
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Volume 2 of Roy Foster's magisterial biography of W. B. Yeats opens in 1915, when Yeats was in his fiftieth year and at a crossroads in his life. |
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One of the essays deals with the interesting question why biography is a genre that has been rarely well practised even in modern India. |
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Over half a century she published more than 20 novels, alongside works of poetry, criticism and biography. |
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By taking on these sympathetic forms, literary biography can supply parallel narratives to those of novels. |
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Literary theory has recently held biography to be a literary construct, rather than a factual enterprise. |
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Ireland, in short, has no monopoly on the use of memoir, fiction, biography or autobiography as a political tool. |
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Yet men dominate in this field also, even in fiction, poetry, literary biography. |
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Who has ever said such connections are not the stuff of literary biography? |
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Greenblatt instead wants to write, and most consumers of literary biography want to read, a story extraordinary and uplifting. |
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He is the sort of phenomenon literary biography in its present form can only flatten. |
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There is now a considerable body of theoretical and discursive work on biography as an artistic form. |
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It also has, for the first time, little essays on subjects such as biography, short stories, detective fiction and so on. |
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It is closer to literary Criticism, than biography but without ever being boring. |
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To that end, Harlan concludes that Up From Slavery was more a work of fiction than biography. |
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As a work of literary biography and analysis American Sympathy is compelling. |
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Some knowledge of Shapiro's biography is open to any reader in the dedication. |
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There is also a text biography and a complete discography included to complete the bonus features. |
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Less gripping are those swaths of the book that are essentially a biography of Salk, who simply wasn't a colorful character. |
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The comments I earlier made concerning the biography of the subject ladder are equally apposite to the present circumstances. |
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In his strange digressive and allusive biography of Christ he presents him as the incarnation of the overwhelming mystery of God. |
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First, Wood reviews the extant literature in order to present a short biography. |
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For each name, dates of birth and death are given, followed by a potted biography of 20-30 words. |
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It takes a bold writer to attempt a biography of one of the most recognized and cited of Restoration Englishmen. |
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His daughter Margaret is writing a book about her unusual childhood and a biography by Paul Alexander is seeping unannounced into bookstores. |
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A biography would bore her, she says, preferring to fill in the gaps left by earlier writers and to give them a fresh, contemporary perspective. |
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Her professional career spanned literary and theatrical criticism, broadcasting for the BBC, fiction, biography and an uncompleted memoir. |
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There is a complete biography for virtually every artist, and each section is preceded by an introductory essay. |
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Next to this biography, Phillips describes his own therapeutic dialogue with an anonymous patient. |
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The trailer actually undersells the film, while the storyboards and biography make for intriguing viewing. |
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The major events of Woodman's biography have clearly marked her artistic growth. |
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With an affectionate and admiring smile on his own face, he has written an unaffected biography of an unaffected great man. |
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Indeed, at times I wasn't sure if I was reading a biography or a hagiography. |
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Find out more about this multi-talented creationist by reading her biography on our site. |
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For all his undeniable artistic significance, the biography feels too close to the bone to be in good taste. |
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Despite the crises unfolding around him, he has continued a whirlwind tour to promote his biography, a 900-page doorstopper. |
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This might be recorded on their tombstone as an epitaph or in an obituary, commemoration portrait, or in some cases a biography. |
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I always thought that you had to finish your career and be in the happy twilight of retirement before releasing a compilation or biography. |
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To help him play Trevor with conviction, Ferns invented a fictional biography for the troubled man. |
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Ross McMullin's short biography works, like Watson himself, both unostentatiously and effectively to achieve results. |
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This is noted by the author's biography listed at the bottom of the article in small print. |
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He has become steadily more aware of the usefulness of that unprivileged biography. |
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While going through such varied sources, it is a great joy when one finds an autobiography or a biography or an unpublished piece of writing. |
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But one thing about now, as opposed to then, has been the rise of graphic novels, and comics biography and autobiography. |
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It makes one wonder how much of the speech is true and how much is false, based on Stalin's tendency toward revisionism of his revolutionary biography. |
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He produced the feature-length documentary, Bill Cunningham New York, and is at work on a biography of Sam Wagstaff. |
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He is producing a feature-length documentary on Bill Cunningham of the Times, and working on a biography of Sam Wagstaff. |
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Sandrart's story of Caravaggio's death is easily interpreted as an apologue rather than as biography because there is so little ground to confuse moral and factual truths. |
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Mr. Ziegler's is an elegant, sympathetic, and extremely readable biography, which really does breathe the breath of roistering life back into the vanished knight of letters. |
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Longtime press baron and Murdoch frenemy Conrad Black on what Michael Wolff got wrong in his new biography of the media titan. |
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Possibly only Professor Peter Groenewegen, the author of a magisterial biography of the English economist Alfred Marshall, could surpass him in this. |
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Larkin had his diaries destroyed, Hardy burnt all his personal papers, then got his second wife to put her name to the biography he had actually written himself. |
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A new biography of famed British author Somerset Maugham explores his complicated love life and defends his literary genius. |
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A double biography of Rommel and Montgomery, foes in North Africa in World War II, splendidly brings both military men to life. |
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Equal parts biography, sociology text, and mash note, it is the most complete account yet of his influence on pop music and a fervent memoir of fandom. |
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This is the biography of a great Canadian scientist, whose discoveries were all the more extraordinary because he was largely self-educated in science. |
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The biography also includes the memoirs of people she taught dance to in the 1960s, but does not mention anything about the circumstances of her death. |
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Her book is a mesh of biography and a wider history of the geisha. |
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Unfortunately, J. Michael Lennon tries something in the same vein in the last quarter of his sprawling biography. |
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At Slate, tanner Colby does the experiment with Woodward's biography of John Belushi. |
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Schmid first learned the art of mezzotinting in the Czech Republic, she notes in her biography, and developed this skill in Slovakia, where she was a Fulbright fellow. |
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The intellectual biography of the curator has to be on shaky ground. |
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After it was published in January, some said it read more like a love letter to the general than a biography. |
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There's already more than one shamelessly indiscreet biography. |
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Other special features include a brief biography of profiler Pat Brown, as well as cast bios that seem directly lifted from the Season One release. |
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If we want to read biography, however, we will decide which one to read on the basis of the specific biographee not on the basis of the genre itself. |
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It is not easy to write a biography about a person who is known to be reticent and the problem gets compounded when the attempt is not authorised. |
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Lee said it wasn't his decision to sack Bell and if anything is written otherwise in the biography, which is due out in the autumn, he will take legal action. |
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The result is a biography written wholly in the spirit of its subject. |
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Much of the debate swung around definitions of biography and memoir. |
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The biography contains several misspellings and occasional factual errors. |
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In moving towards biography you must have felt that journalism was insufficiently rewarded to provide a living and also that its bittiness was in itself too limiting? |
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A new biography captures the unflinching life of war photographer Tim Hetherington. |
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A new biography by A. Scott Berg makes the case for Woodrow Wilson as an unrecognized great American president. |
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Though he is often celebrated as the American father of Protestant liberalism, Horace Bushnell's biography and writing defy the categories of theological typology. |
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Ironically, it is only possible to write a cultural biography of this horse, insofar as it is possible, because of his multiply commodified status. |
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She's probably already boning up on the biography of Nelson Mandela. |
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A shocking new biography reveals a brutal truth behind the fiction of v.s. Naipaul. |
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The packaging features comprehensive sleeve notes and biography from US music writer Rich Kienzle and exclusive photographs from throughout Cash's career. |
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But none of this comes close to making up for what is a standard made-for-television biography eviscerated by massive, inexcusable bowdlerization. |
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Going even further, there are two 1930s movie newsreels that were filmed with the actual Grey Owl, a text biography, and a screen of web links to Grey Owl sites. |
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From a season spent embedded with the New York Jets to a biography of a self-mythologizing Pinkerton detective. |
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No biography of Jack Nicholson could long skirt the issue of his prodigious appetites. |
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Thompson's nearly 50 published pieces include essays, book and film reviews, short stories, a novelization, and a young-adult biography of the writer Charles Chesnutt. |
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But only a political biography could illuminate the personal, human dimension of Khrushchev's decision to follow the risky path of de-Stalinization. |
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A straight biography would have been a more obvious project to undertake. |
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The author of this new, third biography of the poet notes that Cummings signed his name in capitals in his personal correspondence, dealings with publishers and his diaries. |
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A jumbled curiosity of a film, Charlie isn't sure whether it wants to be a hard-boiled gangster thriller, a thoughtful biography, or a legal drama. |
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Vasari's biography confirms that Leonardo began to draw the cartoon in the Sala del Papa of the monumental Dominican building complex of Santa Maria Novella. |
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Composing a Borgesian alternative biography for those forfeited years would make for the perfect parlour game if parlours, like Scottish writers of genius, still survived. |
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And if you're a longtime fan, the biography helps explain the inner workings of the band and offers factoids you can use to, ahem, impress your friends. |
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Most of his cabinet colleagues spoke to him before he left to offer sympathy, including many whom he criticised in remarks made public in the ill-starred biography. |
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Well, even if you happen to be fixated on one life in particular, be it Einstein or Frank Sinatra, you can find a coffee-table book with a pictorial biography of your hero. |
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In fact, according to a recent biography of Jackson, Churchill actually fagged for two England captains, having earlier served Archie MacLaren as well. |
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This highly condensed biography allows little room for analysis. |
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Consociates are mutually involved in one another's biography. |
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There are biography and filmography profiles for Nicholas Lyndhurst and Clive Francis, and a short history of the MI5 counter-intelligence service. |
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Brenda Maddox, who had written a biography of Thatcher to accompany the programme, credits Dennis Thatcher with liberating his wife from her repressive background. |
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Regarding his biography and psychology, four years ago Kelly converted to the Baha'i religion, a pacifist faith that strongly condemns suicide. |
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It is a work of biography and criticism with the drama and sweep of a historical novel. |
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Adolf Eichmann is not an obvious candidate for a full-length biography, and before his capture in 1960 and trial the following year no one would have thought of writing one. |
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Turning in a 500 word biography, written painstakingly in the past tense, I sighed as my class was assigned another essay, this time in the future tense, due the next day. |
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Linda Lear is author of the definitive biography of Rachel Carson. |
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Lying somewhere between an academic treatise, a biography of an eco-activist, and a guidebook for Green campaigners, it is a truly remarkable book. |
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Such information is catalogued in his website's biography, a curious document that, through its endearing use of Eeyoreish negatives, gives you a flavour of the man. |
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The one major error I have detected in Perkins' biography is the confident assertion that she would not have tried to expurgate every unflattering reference. |
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There are no music examples, but, as in Professor Todd's biography, a number of plates that illustrate Mendelssohn's talent as a draughtsman and water-colourist. |
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On the debit side, a number of discrepancies detract from an otherwise riveting biography. |
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In some ways, this biography should be applauded for its total absence of the prurient interest so common to most of its peers. |
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On the downside, this dependency on biography and history means that sometimes the tales do not stand in their own right. |
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Sylvia Plath and the Theatre of Mourning continues this tense push-pull struggle with biography throughout its pages. |
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It is neither a full-scale biography nor a comprehensive history of the Korean War. |
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The artist was drawn to Ludwig's life after seeing a biography on the eccentric king's behaviour. |
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This massive biography describes the rise to power of the last great English churchman to preside over the King's government. |
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With regard to literary genre, Mark's gospel is a biography, similar to other lives of famous people written in the ancient Greco-Roman world. |
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Both deeper and wider than a biography, the book documents and vivifies events that still affect us today. |
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Neil McKenna's 2003 biography, The Secret Life of Oscar Wilde, offers an exploration of Wilde's sexuality. |
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William Roper's biography of More was one of the first biographies in Modern English. |
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Tilley is the author of a biography of the Australian performer Leigh Bowery titled Leigh Bowery, The Life and Times of an Icon. |
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An early biography of Sidney was written by his friend and schoolfellow, Fulke Greville. |
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He is also the subject of perhaps the most famous biography in English literature, namely The Life of Samuel Johnson by James Boswell. |
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His early works include the biography Life of Mr Richard Savage, the poems London and The Vanity of Human Wishes, and the play Irene. |
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When it came to biography, Johnson disagreed with Plutarch's use of biography to praise and to teach morality. |
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Johnson's thoughts on biography and on poetry coalesced in his understanding of what would make a good critic. |
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These early writings coloured all subsequent biography and have become embedded in a body of Keats legend. |
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Inspired by the 1997 Keats biography penned by Andrew Motion, it stars Ben Whishaw as Keats and Abbie Cornish as Fanny. |
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Sir Timothy threatened to stop the allowance if any biography of the poet were published. |
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Also in 1845, Percy Bysshe Shelley's cousin Thomas Medwin approached her claiming to have written a damaging biography of Percy Shelley. |
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Soon after Percy Shelley's death, Mary Shelley determined to write his biography. |
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Anthony Powell mentions in his review of that biography contains that in his view Belloc was thoroughly antisemitic, at all but a personal level. |
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The situation was compounded as successive generations of the family expunged and sanitized the already opaque details of Austen's biography. |
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In 1991, Michael Shelden, an American professor of literature, published a biography. |
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Hermione Lee's 1996 biography Virginia Woolf provides a thorough and authoritative examination of Woolf's life and work. |
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Wilson's biography was not the first to address the question of Lewis's relationship with Moore. |
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Each interview begins with a short biography of the interviewee, including their major publications. |
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Listings include a biography of each inductee and an explanation of his or her achievements in the accounting field. |
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And no, there's no truth El Tigre's biography will be called Great Expectorations. |
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In the biography of cancer, retinoblastoma is a lead character. |
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The festival is taking in tartan noir, erotica, horror, biography and poetry with some music and film thrown in too. |
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Thanks largely to the research of John Harley, knowledge of Byrd's biography has expanded in recent years. |
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In Eisenhower Jean Edward Smith has produced what may well be the best one-volume biography on this figure. |
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According to articles, reports and a biography, Turpin couldn't deal with the obscurity resulting from the loss of his crown. |
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American seaman Haskell Wexler later won two Academy Awards, the latter for a biography of his shipmate Woody Guthrie. |
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As her biography shouts, Ewa Mataya Laurance is one of the most visible superstars in the history of pocket billiards. |
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Roberts ends this detailed biography with appendixes on Coxeter groups and diagrams as well as Fibonacci numbers and phyllotaxis. |
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Peavy and Smith have collaborated on 10 books on women's history and biography. |
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There has only been one biography, written by Paul Allen, and this primarily covers his career in the theatre. |
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He also wrote his first book there, a biography of Giacomo Meyerbeer, an opera composer. |
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Cleo McNelly Kearns notes in her biography that Eliot was deeply influenced by Indic traditions, notably the Upanishads. |
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In 1984, he wrote his first book, a biography of the band Duran Duran, as well as Ghastly Beyond Belief, a book of quotations, with Kim Newman. |
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Alan Llwyd's 2011 biography of Roberts used diaries and letters to shed fresh light on her private life and her relationship with Morris. |
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But who needs one more perfectly excellent Mozart biography? |
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A newspaper review of a Conrad biography suggested that the book could have been subtitled Thirty Years of Debt, Gout, Depression and Angst. |
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Aymer Vallance was commissioned to produce the first biography of Morris, published in 1897, after Morris' death, as per the latter's wishes. |
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In 1973 Burton agreed to play Josip Broz Tito in a film biography, since he admired the Yugoslav leader. |
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In his biography of his father, Francis Deng deals frankly and in detail with Deng Majok's prodigious uxoriousness. |
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The cultural biography of urnfields and the long-term history of a mythical landscape. |
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In Updike, literary critic Adam Begley offers the first full-length biography on a larger-than-life American writer. |
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An experiment in biography, rather less successful than Symons' Corvine, on a par perhaps with Ackroyd's Dickensian direct address strategems. |
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In his biography, Ploughman of the Moon, Service recalled that his second effort, The Ballads of a Cheechako, also caused the House some anxiety. |
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Foran is the author most recently of the biography of Mordecai Richler, another iconic Montrealer. |
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The 1988 biography by Melvyn Bragg provides a detailed description of the many health issues that plagued Burton throughout his life. |
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He was stunned by the backlash from some of the sleazier revelations in Tom Bower's recent tell-all biography, Sweet Revenge. |
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Science historian Daniel Lewis set out to write a biography of Robert Ridgway, the Smithsonian's first curator of birds. |
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In The Puppetmaster, the life of Li Tien-lu the Taiwanese puppeteer is the subject of Hou's hybrid fictional biography and documentary film. |
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This year's Costa book award shortlists in five categories, novel, first novel, poetry, biography and children's book, have been announced. |
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In the biography of Helen Keller, for example, one chapter has definition boxes for Emanuel Swendenborg and the Braillewriter. |
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Another stereotyped feature of the criminal biography was the portrayal of the biographee in the role of criminal-as-sinner. |
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But Jim Steinmeyer's efficient though vexing new biography makes it clear why we all live today in Charles Fort's benightedly bizarre world. |
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The locus classicus for this modern-sounding concept occurs in a contemporary biography by Wipo, a member of the royal chapel. |
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Heinlein, In Dialogue With His Century, William Patterson has given us a scholarly doorstop biography that's smoothly readable. |
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Happenstance opened the book for me to the biography of Margaret Leeson, listed only as Brothel-keeper. |
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Her recent book provides us with a new paradigm for modern biography. |
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The biography includes conjectures about the writer's earliest ambitions. |
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Alfred commissioned Bishop Asser to write his biography, which inevitably emphasised Alfred's positive aspects. |
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Gruffudd ap Cynan's biography was first written in Latin and intended for a wider audience outside Wales. |
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However, Hibbert notes in his biography that the letter can be found among the Duke's papers, with nothing written on it. |
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Rolt, in his biography of the Stephensons, describes the event in some detail. |
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His biography was first written by Cardinal Boso in his extension to the Liber Pontificalis. |
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Written by their daughter-in-law, this joint biography defly interlaces the personal and political to tell a human story behind the national struggle. |
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David Harris Willson's 1956 biography continued much of this hostility. |
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Evading Sir Timothy's ban on a biography, Mary Shelley often included in these editions her own annotations and reflections on her husband's life and work. |
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It's about a young man who tries to distill the true biography of his dying father by looking for the kernels of truth in the many tall tales he has told. |
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Hardy is a key character, played by Jeremy Irons, in the 2015 movie The Man Who Knew Infinity, based on the biography of Ramanujan with the same title. |
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Rolt in his biography of Stephenson suggests that a faction on the Board continued to ask Stephenson for second opinions, and Rennie took umbrage at this. |
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Writing his biography, Funny Peculiar, also had an influence. |
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Very few knew the details of his early life until six years after his death, when John Forster published a biography on which Dickens had collaborated. |
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The first version appeared in about 715 followed by a later revision in the 730s, the first biography written by a contemporary to appear in England. |
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The Color of Law spares no detail in its intimate portrayal of a real-life hero of the courtroom, and is a worthy addition to college and public library biography shelves. |
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In the Eighteenth Century Shakespeare's image was in the ascendant, beginning with Nicholas Rowe's biography in 1709, the primary source of the Stratfordian story. |
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Hamid's own biography reflects these trifurcated notions of origin and questions the ease with which the native, the immigrant, or the cosmopolitan is defined. |
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The History is a Renaissance biography, remarkable more for its literary skill and adherence to classical precepts than for its historical accuracy. |
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As related in the book The Life and Times of Private Eye, Moss was the subject of a less than respectful cartoon biography in the magazine Private Eye. |
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One biography of Orwell accused him of having had an authoritarian streak. |
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The most obvious flaw of this biography is its relentless tendentiousness. |
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The term hagiography may be used to refer to the biography of a saint or highly developed spiritual being in any of the world's spiritual traditions. |
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In the chapter of Pisa three years later Bonaventure's Legenda maior was approved as the only biography of Francis and all previous biographies were ordered to be destroyed. |
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Rick Dodgson had filled the gap by offering the first academic biography of the best-selling author and inspirational figure amongst psychedelic enthusiasts. |
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The Victorian age witnessed a continuation of Milton's influence, George Eliot and Thomas Hardy being particularly inspired by Milton's poetry and biography. |
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Though at least one biography of Virginia Woolf appeared in her lifetime, the first authoritative study of her life was published in 1972 by her nephew Quentin Bell. |
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And I would gladly swap the BBC's mean-spirited drama for the far more even-handed approach in Barbara Stoney's excellent biography of Enid Blyton. |
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A new musical biography by Wirral songwriter Dean Johnson, called Ice Picks And Violets, aims to shed some light on what might have happened in their last moments. |
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But the Sunday Mirror can reveal Arrival Films has bought the rights for a six-figure sum from Lenny's widow Val and the ghostwriter of his biography, Pete Gerrard. |
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The stage play Being Sellers premiered in Australia in 1998, three years after the release of the biography by Roger Lewis, The Life and Death of Peter Sellers. |
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Huxley was commissioned by Walt Disney in 1945 to write a script based on Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and the biography of the story's author, Lewis Carroll. |
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Like his wonderful book on Cannonball Adderley, Walk Tall, this new biography of flutist Herbie Mann treats us to an album-by-album chronicle of the musician's life. |
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Crawford published a biography of Elizabeth and Margaret's childhood years entitled The Little Princesses in 1950, much to the dismay of the royal family. |
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The first full biography was published in 1848 by Richard Monckton Milnes. |
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Capua, author of many Hollywood film star biographies and correspondent for an Italian film magazine, provides a biography of American film legend Janet Leigh. |
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Several costumes and banners featured images of pigs following claims in a new biography that Mr Cameron took part in a bizarre initiation ceremony at Oxford. |
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The proposals were first published in 1970 in a biography of de Valera. |
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Barrow, in his biography on Robert the Bruce, accused Edward of ruthlessly exploiting the leaderless state of Scotland to obtain a feudal superiority over the kingdom. |
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FitzGibbon's 1965 biography ignores Thomas's heavy drinking and skims over his death, giving just two pages in his detailed book to Thomas's demise. |
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