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Word: fictionizing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...finally started. Like all battles, it had an other-worldly quality. The cruise missiles and precision-guided bombs that thudded into Afghanistan, the B-2 Stealth bombers, half-circling the globe from Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri to Central Asia, all seem more at home in a science-fiction novel than on the evening news...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Down And Dirty | 10/22/2001 | See Source »

Joan Didion, known largely for her fiction but also for her logical, meticulous and truthful essay writing, wants us to know exactly how little control we have over the process. In her elegant and incisive depiction of the usurpation of the political system, Political Fictions, Didion contends that politics has become little more than a fine-tuned performance, a rehearsed moment designed with the ultimate goal of increasing the power of the inner circle and pushing the “outsiders” further away...

Author: By J. hale Russell, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Joan Didion Takes on the Political Establishment | 10/19/2001 | See Source »

Political Fictions emerged from a collection of essays initially published when the New York Review of Books sent Didion to cover the 1988 presidential campaign. Starting there and moving on to the presidencies of George Bush, Sr. and Ronald Reagan, the massacres in El Mozote, El Salvador, the 1992 elections, the role of political journalists and George W. Bush’s “compassionate conservatism,” the book is a veritable indictment of a system that Didion sees as a narrative, a kind of “fiction”—and because...

Author: By J. hale Russell, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Joan Didion Takes on the Political Establishment | 10/19/2001 | See Source »

...What similarities and differences do you see between writing fiction and nonfiction, and how do the two connect...

Author: By J. hale Russell, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Joan Didion Takes on the Political Establishment | 10/19/2001 | See Source »

...After so long grief, such nativity!” from Shakespeare’s The Comedy of Errors—is a fitting testament to both Fox’s past and her present. Borrowed Finery comes at a time when Fox’s adult fiction is enjoying a rather remarkable resurgence, spurred in large part by the newly prominent author Jonathan Franzen, who discovered Fox’s 1970 novel Desperate Characters in the library at Yaddo, the writers’ colony in upstate New York. Franzen pushed for its reissue, calling it “obviously superior...

Author: By Stacy A. Porter, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Memories of Impermanence | 10/19/2001 | See Source »

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