Similar words: novel, novelty, novella, philatelist, run over, turnover, november, turn over. Meaning: ['nɑvəlɪst /'nɒ-] n. one who writes novels.
Random good picture Not show
151) Though written in the early period of his career, Miguel Street exhibits Naipaul's brilliant short story writing skills and shares similarities with the great Russian novelist Anton Chekhov.
152) Their last point is something I discussed with the novelist and literary agent.
153) She is a novelist, short story writer , essayist, poet and author of children's books.
154) The diaries of the George Orwell, author of Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four, were published last year, exactly 70 years to the day since the novelist wrote it.
155) ALAIN DE BOTTON is a British essayist, novelist and, if one uses the term somewhat expansively, philosopher.
156) Dumas was a famous French novelist, whose works is widely read in China.
157) Professor Li Yu , a distinguished novelist and specialist in classical art history, is this year's Writer-in-Residence in the HKBU International Writers Workshop (IWW) programme.
158) He only pursues writing-only careers like novelist, journalist or copyrighter, when instead, he could have looked into being a minister, public relations assistant, editor or government lobbyist.
159) Gustave Flaubert is an important novelist in the later 19 th century.
160) I'm reading a novel The Mill on the Floss, written by the famous novelist, George Eliot.
161) Yet, in real life, circumstances do sometimes conspire to bring about coincidences which anyone but a nineteenth century novelist would find ...
162) Sophie's choice is one of the milestones in the history of the western novel. The authorship William Styron was publicly acknowledged as the novelist of the great achievement and brave innovation.
163) A few days ago I was in London having drinks with a novelist and a literary agent.
164) Thomas Wolfe, the American novelist, had his first novel Look Homeward, Angel rejected 39 times before it was finally published and launched his career and created his fame.
165) On the other hand, the antagonism to spirit, together with the compromise between the novelist and film, makes the relationship between literature , commerciality and film become more complicated.
166) Stendhal, French novelist, author of The Red And The Black, was born at Grenoble.
167) According to certain chronicler, this great novelist is going to write no more long novel.
168) In Invisible Man, the American black novelist Ralph Ellison displays the protagonists journey to seek his own ethnic culture and to establish his identity.
169) Conrad is an outstanding English novelist of the twentieth century.
170) We met nearly 20 years ago through Lady Caroline Blackwood, the dark-witted novelist to whom he was married briefly during the 1950s.
171) The novelist and critic John Gardner called Mr. Calvino ''possibly Italy's most brilliant living writer.''
172) Emily Bronte , English novelist, author of Wuthering Heights, was born at Thornton in Yorkshire.
173) The Australian novelist Miles Franklins autobiographic novel My Brilliant Career, successfully presents the image of Sybylla, a bush girl rebelling against marriage.
174) Action is consolatory. It is the enemy of thought and the friend of flattering illusions---Joseph Conrad, Polish British novelist.
175) The philosophizing novelist built an entire worldview on the sense that absurdity is an unsurpassable given of human experience.
175) Sentencedict.com try its best to gather and create good sentences.
176) The greatest novelist of the 19th Century, Sir Walter Scott, was given the title of "king of blockheads" and was made to wear a dunce cap for a whole month.
177) Mohan Rakesh is an outstanding novelist and playwright in the contemporary Hindi world.
178) At one stride Dickens had become the most popular living novelist.
179) American philosopher John Dewey was an advocate, and novelist Aldous Huxley was so impressed with Alexander that he made him a character in his 1936 novel "Eyeless in Gaza."
180) They are, in novelist V.S. Naipaul's expression, "half-made societies, " trapped between a no-longer-usable past and a not-yet-accessible future.
More similar words: novel, novelty, novella, philatelist, run over, turnover, november, turn over, hovel, grovel, shovel, sniveling, elision, obelisk, livelihood, list, parallelism, listen, blister, oculist, glisten, listen to, enlisted, populist, royalist, pugilist, listener, idealist, fatalist, ballistic.