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Word: lustful (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...proud and preening god. Nearly a century ago, Walt Whitman trumpeted: "I dote on myself, there is that lot of me and all so luscious." The Self as deity pursued power (Faust) and pleasure (Don Juan). It achieved satiety, the rake's progress "from pain to ennui, from lust to disgust," which Fitch finds symbolically typified time and again in Aldous Huxley's heroes. At the end of Point Counter Point, the lovers, Burlap and Beatrice, "pretended to be two little children and had their bath together. And what a romp they had! The bathroom was drenched with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Craven Idol | 3/31/1961 | See Source »

Leader of the group was a German named Toni Hiebeler, 32. editor of an obscure Alpinist magazine in Munich called the Mountain Companion. Hiebeler was driven to conquer der Eiger by the Alpinist's special lust for revenge: his best friend had crashed to his death on the north wall...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Taming der Eiger | 3/24/1961 | See Source »

This book is written in blurbese, the language of record jackets, movie previews of coming attractions, and fictionalized biographies. Blurbese is prose with a glandular condition, but it often pays better than literature, as Author Irving Stone found out with such bestsellers as Lust for Life (Vincent Van Gogh), The President's Lady (Rachel Jackson) and Love Is Eternal (Mary Todd Lincoln). In the present fictionalized life of Michelangelo Buonarroti, Author Stone has transcended himself; The Agony and the Ecstasy raises blurbese to blurbissimo...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Sculptorama | 3/24/1961 | See Source »

...life technique to convey a slice of lifelessness. Small, dun-colored, repetitious detail is ladled out till the audience is saturated in it. There is a certain mild humor in the repetitions, whether of the family's deadness or the offstage boy friend's didactic, doctrinaire lust for life. The humor turns grim when he rejects the girl, herself now lost between two worlds, too low for a hawk and too high for a buzzard. An honest but limited method, Wesker's leads to truthful but limited effects, and to believable characters; and in a theater season...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: New Plays off-Broadway | 3/17/1961 | See Source »

...Alan Paton's Too Late the Phalarope, for example, the hero marries a Negro servant girl and is self-destroyed by this transgression. "Not murder, not lust, but the mingling of the blood is seen as his greatest prostration," she commented...

Author: By Mary ELLEN Gale, | Title: Gordimer Claims Racial Tension Permeates South African Novels | 3/9/1961 | See Source »

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