Consider the narrative impact of
experiencing fictional family photo albums, sci - fi computer dossiers, fake newspaper clippings, video blogs from your characters, etc..
Not exact matches
Thus does John Updike report on Wilmot's abrupt and irreversible deconversion
experience at the outset of In the Beauty of the Lilies, a four - generation saga which is partly a
fictional version of Updike's
family history, partly an account of the decline of religious faith in America, and partly a reflection of Updike's own angry, personal struggle to find religious meaning.
Such an
experience is not uncommon in Updike's
fictional world, stemming perhaps from the author's childhood: his
family, Updike has said, was inclined «to examine everything for God's fingerprints» (quoted in «Can a Nice Novelist Finish First?
A great mini play set in 1940 that tells the story of one
family's
experiences during an air raid in a
fictional town.