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Word: novelists (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Eleanor Belmont, a former actress and wife of Millionaire August, hired Houdini to be handcuffed, bound with ropes and chains and dropped overboard from the family yacht, merely to divert some friends. Toward the end of her career, she was heard correcting the upright novelist John P. Marquand for his lack of taste and reticence...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Summer Reading | 7/5/1982 | See Source »

...some ten years: fragments on subjects as diverse as Viet Nam, sex, television, Henry Miller and subway graffiti. Occasionally the old pro jabs with acute social observations and feints with malicious wit. He divides his examination of television into channels instead of chapters; he provides a graceful reappraisal of Novelist-Translator Jean Malaquais, who disliked The Naked and the Dead, but of whom Mailer acknowledges: "I had learned as much about writing from [him] as from anyone alive...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Adrenaline and Flapdoodle | 6/28/1982 | See Source »

...familiar; an adventure that will shake Moscow and Washington also leads to a personal discovery, and both results seem equally important. In his fourth novel, Carroll again reveals the commercial instincts that made his Mortal Friends (1978) a best seller. In addition, this book reveals a serious novelist behind the popular entertainer. Like Graham Greene and John le Carre, Carroll brings global strife and problems home to hearts and minds, their points of origin. -By Paul Gray

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Our Parents' Business | 6/21/1982 | See Source »

...destiny of Thomas Hardy, a quiet little man whose principal excitement consisted of a bicycle ride followed by afternoon tea, to remind his fellow Victorians of an England darker and madder than anything in literature since Lear roamed the heath. The novelist made contemporary by film (Tess) and television (The Mayor of Casterbridge) was born in 1840 in a remote Dorset village. There, farmers, shepherds and artisans lived in a kind of Elizabethan time warp. But something dour and reductive in this son of a stone mason drove him back beyond morris dances to a pagan Britain haunted by ancient...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Modern Nerves | 6/21/1982 | See Source »

Hardy himself best described the theme of a Hardy novel: primitive feelings rubbing against modern nerves. For if Hardy was the last "child of the oral tradition," as Michael Millgate proposes in this awesomely thorough biography, he was also the first modern English novelist. It is the predicament of Hardy's readers to find themselves stretched out on Freud's couch in the shadow of Stonehenge...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Modern Nerves | 6/21/1982 | See Source »

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