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    Synonyms and Definitions

    Use "novelist" in a sentence

    novelist example sentences

    novelist


    1. , Collection of short stories by British science fiction novelist Brian Aldiss, that I read in the 1960"s


    2. Entertaining novelist of the mid twentieth century, his best work being


    3. American novelist and social commentator who wrote that Oregon was only an idea


    4. A pop philosopher who had no effect on the philosophy field, and an awful novelist who had no admirers in literary circles, Rand's appeal was to very sheltered well off individuals with a fantasy image of themselves as persecuted


    5. English novelist and critic Aldous Huxley, brother of biologist Thomas Huxley, makes the point that it is not possible to live without a metaphysics, without ideas and concepts beyond the merely physical


    6. This follows the pattern of progressive liberalism as analyzed by novelist Alan Drury


    7. K Wolfe, whose son Tom was later the celebrated journalist and novelist in the white suit, gave me some lessons about writing


    8. Naturally she became a novelist


    9. Russian émigré who became a novelist and amateur philosopher in 20th century America claimed that


    10. By using dramatic structure, a novelist blends their need to express themselves with an entertaining story that carries the reader along

    11. I wanted to be a novelist as a child, before I discovered the movies


    12. This bolt from the blue shook Rau to the core, and he came to doubt his abilities as a novelist


    13. ’ Only after handling a couple or more themes would a novelist come to know about the true capacity of his creative mind


    14. Besides, of what worth is a novelist if he fails to make each of his work unique in itself


    15. novelist (whose doctrine of nonresistance would later


    16. is over, you could pursue one as a novelist


    17. It seems that he really was born to be a novelist


    18. in some ways a more difficult path to trod than the soul of a novelist,


    19. poor slob of a novelist fumbling his way through an interview on the


    20. Interview with novelist Kurt Vonnegut, "In These Times," by its editor, Joel Bleifuss, Feb

    21. Enjoy! If we go by my notes, and original drafts, I can prove that I had this g-device protype in writing before the star trek novelist brought out their prototype that can turn gas giants into stars, “wildfire” and I can even show that I had written garcia with his mental companions before the new Battlestar Galactica aired, which I love by the way, but here’s the deal, I’m really getting annoyed seeing my ideas in my notebooks and journals ending up in movies because I’m not managing to get my work out there


    22. But as a novelist, I see a bigger role for you on the rural stage for I feel there is a need for novels that enable the villagers to contemplate about their human condition


    23. And like the novelist John Steinbeck pointed out through certain of the characters in his award-


    24. The letters were too rounded, it looked like the name of a child rather than the autograph of a novelist


    25. "You need to when you're an erotic novelist," she replied


    26. And that"s why I laughed when you told me you were a second-rate novelist


    27. I am a second-rate novelist myself


    28. I lived in the same world in which a novelist resides while writing his story


    29. Roger Aldrich was a prolific best selling novelist, and this sprawling fortress atop the hill was one of Hollywood’s landmarks, its layout a maze


    30. In the course of the interview, Roger learned she was also an aspiring novelist

    31. Brown tells readers that the priory is a real organisation founded in 1099 and that secret documents found in Paris’s Bibliotheque Nationale reveal that its members have included Leonardo, scientist Isaac Newton, novelist Victor Hugo and the painter, Botticelli


    32. story I thought, thinking like a novelist, especially considering that it was factual


    33. The great Russian novelist Turgenev said he would give all his fame and all his genius if there were only one woman who cared whether he came home late to dinner


    34. The great novelist George Meredith, who hated priggishness in all its forms, said in a letter: "I have written always with the perception that there is no life but of the spirit; that the concrete is really the shadowy; yet that the way to spiritual life lies in the complete unfolding of the creature, not in the nipping of his passions


    35. Flanders was told none of this, though Jacob felt, it is safe to say, that nothing in the world was of greater importance; and as for Cruttendon and Jinny, he thought them the most remarkable people he had ever met--being of course unable to foresee how it fell out in the course of time that Cruttendon took to painting orchards; had therefore to live in Kent; and must, one would think, see through apple blossom by this time, since his wife, for whose sake he did it, eloped with a novelist; but no; Cruttendon still paints orchards, savagely, in solitude


    36. The great novelist vibrated between two decanters with the regularity of a pendulum; the famous divine flirted openly with one of the Madame de Staels of the age, who looked daggers at another Corinne, who was amiably satirizing her, after outmaneuvering her in efforts to absorb the profound philosopher, who imbibed tea Johnsonianly and appeared to slumber, the loquacity of the lady rendering speech impossible


    37. Tiwayi “TY” Mushambi is a motivational speaker, novelist, author, life coach and social-entrepreneur


    38. I noted that Graham Greene, the celebrated novelist, wrote of “those interior courts where our true decisions are made


    39. John le Carré, the great spy novelist, had another take


    40. I tried to shrug the sensations off, said, “A great novelist of North Carolina, Thomas Wolfe, wrote that you can’t go home again

    41. JAMES PATTERSON has created more enduring fictional characters than any other novelist writing today


    42. ) 'Apparently the age of romance was not dead, and there was common ground upon which the wildest imaginings of the novelist could meet the actual scientific investigations of the searcher for truth


    43. In fact, he said, commitment to the point of obsession wasn’t merely an obligation but a necessity, the sine qua non without which the novelist might as well bite on a shotgun barrel and exit this life as Hemingway had done


    44. Years later, I denied permission for a crime novelist to make a quotation from this song in one of his less appealing stories


    45. The first was the Irish novelist Edna O’Brien, who had a theatrical manner that matched her grand and sometimes scarlet literary reputation


    46. Clearly, his chief weakness as a novelist heretofore had been his inability to keep pace with the complexity of real life


    47. The only advice I ever got from my college adviser, a novelist of minor renown named James Boylan (who later had a sex change operation, changed his name to Jenny, wrote a bestselling book, and appeared on Oprah) was to never go anywhere without something to read


    48. What she did in the next years of her life nobody knows, thus the novelist is free to imagine


    49. Ernest Cline is a novelist, screenwriter, father, and full-time geek


    50. James Patterson has created more enduring fictional characters than any other novelist writing today
















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    Synonyms for "novelist"

    novelist author poet producer

    "novelist" definitions

    one who writes novels