These wordsmiths include poets, novelists, literary critics, newspaper and magazine journalists, and many professors. |
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Britain seems unable to escape the ghosts of Victorian engineers and Victorian novelists who so gloomily overshadow our own productions. |
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That's a method you normally associate with novelists and prose writers rather than comics. |
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Cavell's writing displays the rhetorical features that we've seen in novelists and prose writers alike as they perform their thoughts. |
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Members include a variety or writers and would vary from scribblers to novelists, poets, and writers of short stories and writers for children. |
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When Marcus founded Irish Writing in 1946, he courted writers of short stories and poetry, rather than novelists, to fill its pages. |
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She was a worthy progenitress of a long line of most charming women novelists. |
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Many novelists and philosophers have considered what it would be like to be able to see into the future. |
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Picturing the unknown, they acted like novelists or poets, inviting readers to imagine hidden worlds. |
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But perhaps I wish we had the talent that we have in fiction in playwriting, because I think our novelists are quite extraordinary. |
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But two others are second-time novelists, although even the most pie-eyed punter would hardly call either a favourite. |
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Wilde's unprecedented response was to attempt to curb novelists introducing fictional characters who spoke like him. |
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Male novelists are often accused of writing unconvincing female characters, but this novel has to create a strong protagonist in Tara Mullray. |
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Eighteenth century playwrights and novelists often made their hero a criminal, a highwayman or confidence trickster. |
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This high-sounding rhetoric is all well and good as theory, but it goes only so far in the real world, as other passing novelists point out. |
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Not only do the painters look this way, so do the heroines of the books by the female novelists. |
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Chick-lit novelists have stuck with this style, and their books continue to sell. |
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We meet so many kinds of people under one roof, from students to enterprising octogenarians, plumbers to novelists. |
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By any measure, Ian McEwan is one of the most accomplished novelists of his generation. |
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This is a tragedy which will supply themes for novelists and poets for centuries. |
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Yes, one of the greatest American novelists of all time was, indeed, a journalist. |
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Many would argue that he's the most challenging of contemporary American novelists. |
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I always had my nose in a book, and I think that's true of a lot of novelists. |
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Imagine a bookshelf with a pair of bookends, representing women novelists who have grown up in the British Commonwealth and written bestsellers. |
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She may write self-consciously from time to time, as do most debut novelists, but more often her prose has an individual, slangily poetic zip. |
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Compared with the blockbusting novelists of our age, this was a meagre output. |
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The great triumvirate of white South African novelists share obvious preoccupations in the new South Africa. |
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Some people think a meritocracy would reward literary novelists more than those who write formula romances. |
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Although he based his films on Kannada novels, the novelists complained that their stories had been altered. |
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Ph.D. programs in literature are not designed to produce poets and novelists, but Yale seems to matriculate a considerable share. |
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Singletons might use it as a dating agency, novelists as material for a book, market researchers as the easiest way to corner unsuspecting prey. |
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The allusions flew thick and fast, with novels and novelists summed up with devastating precision and insight. |
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The older school of novelists were not, however, sure that they altogether liked the new orderliness about such things. |
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The radio play became an art form in its own right and attracted novelists and poets as well as dramatists. |
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As a novelist myself, I often experience those edgy emotions with respect to fellow novelists. |
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Many poets, novelists, historians, essayists, and writers flooded the market with their literary works. |
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Poets, essayists, dramatists, novelists, and artists of the 1920s became increasingly concerned with depicting the lives of African Americans. |
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These novelists celebrated not just the pleasures of the table but also the joy of the hunt, the quartering and smoking of great sides of game. |
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Susan Sontag is one of America's best known and respected essayists and novelists. |
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The Jones's wanted their daughter to be well-read in the European tradition of Shakespeare, Milton, and other major novelists and poets. |
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Journalists, novelists, poets, playwrights, historians, and film-makers have all reconstructed the affair and put it to various uses. |
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There is more than a tinge of sexism to the disparaging treatment of romantic novelists. |
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He was also anxious and imperious in equal measure, and driven to an endless activity of rewriting that has no parallel I can think of among novelists. |
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Powell ranks with Patrick Smith in the hierarchy of Florida historical novelists and that is lofty territory, indeed. |
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Kundera was reacting against the efforts of 20th-century totalitarian regimes to refashion novelists as propagandists. |
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Watching novelists insult one another is one of the primary pleasures of his biography. |
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While novelists rely solely on the revenue from book sales, songwriters, in theory, can still be quids in even without a solitary record being sold. |
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He is one of the biggest-selling literary novelists in the world, and practically a deity in Japan. |
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Creative leeway has always been granted to those novelists and letter writers who are able to pull off a controversial use of rhetoric with talent and grace. |
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There have been quite a few popular post-apocalyptic or dystopian novels in recent years by prominent literary novelists. |
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They wrote about subjects that they knew intimately, or that troubled or fascinated them, which is what all novelists do. |
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Maybe just the act of posting a novel in a forum where bored Babus can read it and slam it will be enough to awaken the sleeping literary lion in aspiring novelists. |
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What gratified her was that critics and other novelists embraced her book with no idea as to who actually wrote it. |
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The proverbial material of established older novelists and poets such as the Lowland Scots of Robert Burns and Sir Walter Scott has attracted some attention. |
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It is as if theoreticians have told novelists that they have no choice but to fail, and novelists, despite their long history of success, have believed them. |
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But lin can also produce the feelings of existential wonder that all good novelists provoke. |
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His detective novels contain none of the twists that strain credulity so often relied upon by thriller novelists. |
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Biographers were ever the under-belly of the literary world, patronised because they weren't epic poets or triple-decker novelists, and demonised as gossips and sneaks. |
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American novelists have done their bit to swell the chorus of lamentation. |
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Ford Madox Ford raged against English novelists from Henry Fielding to George Meredith. |
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Countless other crime novelists have adopted the same technique. |
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The past is another country, and as foreigners who visit it, the quality we novelists and historians most need is tact when we parley and fossick. |
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The plot may have been plundered on countless occasions by playwrights, film-makers and novelists, but nevertheless its emotional impact still packs a powerful punch. |
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He looks through the eyes of Roman historians, diarists like Samuel Pepys, and novelists like Charles Dickens, Charlotte Bronte and Virginia Woolf. |
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From 1940 into the 21st century, American playwrights, poets and novelists have continued to be internationally prominent. |
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Those writers were an important influence the many Moroccan novelists, poets and playwrights that were still to come. |
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Among current novelists, Martin Amis lacks intellectual force but is well supplied with nastiness, which occasionally resembles humor. |
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He was well versed in French history and literature, and French novelists were his artistic models. |
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His work would be a major influence on later novelists such as Thackeray and Dickens. |
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Furthermore, the major political and military confrontations of the 20th and 21st centuries have also influenced novelists. |
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Another change in the 19th century was that novelists began to read their works in theaters, halls, and bookshops. |
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Mainstream novelists such Doris Lessing and Margaret Atwood also wrote works in this genre. |
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Shakespeare influenced novelists such as Thomas Hardy, William Faulkner, and Charles Dickens. |
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These new romantic novelists, at the same time, claimed to explore the entire realm of fictionality. |
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Francesca Segal and Sam Byers are appealing young British novelists. |
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Major novelists like Sir Walter Scott and Charles Dickens also wrote some short stories. |
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The new emphasis on speech also caused producers to hire many novelists, journalists, and playwrights with experience writing good dialogue. |
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But the comments of most of these novelists are the record of their continual surprisings by the varieties of moral and aesthetic truths. |
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Pratchett sponsored a biennial award for unpublished science fiction novelists, the Terry Pratchett First Novel Award. |
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Masterfully translated, spellbindingly told, it is resounding confirmation that orhan Pamuk is one of the great novelists of his generation. |
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Blackmore, was one of the most famous English novelists of the second half of the nineteenth century. |
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Major Canadian novelists include Carol Shields, Lawrence Hill, Margaret Atwood and Alice Munro. |
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Many novelists and moviemakers consider summations the most dramatic and dynamic part of the case. |
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Leading Welsh novelists of the twentieth century include Richard Llewellyn and Kate Roberts. |
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Famous contemporary Austrian playwrights and novelists include Elfriede Jelinek and Peter Handke. |
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Cusk has been picked as one of the best young British novelists and her style is excellent to read. |
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Complementing its status as a land of artists, Austria has always been a country of great poets, writers, and novelists. |
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By the 1880s, the age of the great novelists was over, and short fiction and poetry became the dominant genres. |
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Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoyevsky have been described by literary critics as the greatest novelists of all time. |
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New for its 2015 edition, SDL will host a number of comic book writers and graphic novelists, including Lamia Ziade and Thierry Belfroid. |
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They include The Quick, a Gothic thriller by Lauren Owen, and Suffragette by award-winning graphic novelists Bryan and Mary Talbot. |
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Renowned graphic novelists Orijit Sen and Amruta Patil did so and we are pleased to present their work in this magazine. |
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Also such novelists as Walter Scott from Scotland and Mary Shelley, and the essayists William Hazlitt and Charles Lamb. |
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Famous contemporary playwrights and novelists are Nobel prize winner Elfriede Jelinek, Peter Handke and Daniel Kehlmann. |
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Complementing its status as a land of artists and scientists, Austria has always been a country of poets, writers, and novelists. |
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It uses locations around Portsmouth for the stories, and includes writing by crime novelists William Sutton, Diana Bretherick, and others. |
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The era saw a rise of poets and novelists who wrote in Finnish, notably Aleksis Kivi and Eino Leino. |
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In the 1990s, two novelists were explicitly influenced by Hamlet. |
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Priestley contended that Walpole had fulfilled his early potential, unlike Compton Mackenzie, Gilbert Cannan and other promising young novelists of his generation. |
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The joys and sorrows, the loves and the lornnesses of young heiresses have furnished themes to novel-writers ever since heiresses or novelists have existed. |
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A younger generation of novelists that emerged in the 1960s and 1970s included Shena Mackay, Alan Spence, Allan Massie and the work of William McIlvanney. |
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In the strictness with which he holds this view he belongs in the company of the novelists I have cited, except that he is unkinder and less charitable than they are. |
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Crime became a major subject of 20th and 21st century genre novelists and Crime fiction reflects the realities of modern industrialized societies. |
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The recent crop of writers includes the novelists Tom Lanoye and Herman Brusselmans, and poets such as the married couple Herman de Coninck and Kristien Hemmerechts. |
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In the early 20th century, the city became a home for novelists and poets. |
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Ali is one of seven first novelists to make it on to this year's longlist. |
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Few novelists can compete with her ability to create idiolects. |
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They include The Quick, a Gothic thriller written by Durham author Lauren Owen and Suffragette by award-winning graphic novelists Bryan and Mary Talbot. |
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While far from comprehensive, the volume discusses in some detail the work of more than twenty-five poets, novelists, and memoirists from North America, Europe, and Japan. |
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A couple of years ago, Literature Wales' bursaries panel took the radical and brilliant decision to allow graphic novelists to apply for a bursary. |
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Carter, already welnown for his English Civil War series of books, belongs more to the dirty realism style of historical novelists than the romantic school. |
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Reminiscent of the way that some Latin American novelists wrote during the decades of the Boom, Inga Abele takes the reader on something of a magical mystery tour. |
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Where, that is, are its devout documentarians, its passionate novelists? |
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