Sentences with phrase «fictional story lines»

Those fictional story lines often add or delete details.
In a 2010 interview with Ramona Koval, an Australian writer and broadcaster, Robinson discussed his views on fictional story lines of the dominant dark variety:
Unlike Superman whose creation can actually be traced back to a couple of young Jewish men in 1938 for the purpose of providing a sellable fictional story line to Detective Comics, there is no such evidence in regards to religious belief; especially since in this case being that this is about a God who does not want to be made known but who would rather have us develop our faith.

Not exact matches

Joseph Smith, who had little formal education, writes a 532 page fiction book with multiple story lines, more than three major ethnic groups that intermingle with one another, creates over 200 new names, many of which have Hebraic origin (Mosiah for instance), writes in chiasmas poetry, accurately predicts latter day pollution, international intrigue, the dispersing of the Gospel message and a host of other fictional and hysterical points was WRONG?
When you right a fictional book, it helps to keep the story line and the characters straight.
Our qualitative analysis showed that, within fictional genres, breast feeding not only provided a social issue story line but also provided humour around the themes of the «out of control» body, embarrassment, and the sexuality of breasts.
They are very much related and feed into each other as the film addresses the differences between past and present and the fine line between reality and fantasy with one fictional story even serving as a metaphor for another.
The novel's two plot lines, the story of the writer and that of the two lovers, are distinguished by bold - face type, while strikethroughs denote passages the fictional author has chosen to delete.
Writing «The Amiable Miss Edith Montague» allowed me to venture beyond the lines drawn around my series to write a story set nearly a century ago — a time of upheaval — in Jenksville, a fictional town in New York.
I recently interviewed Allan Winneker, author of four thrillers including Border Line, which recounts the story of Rusty Powell, a Border Patrol agent kidnapped and held for ransom by a fictional drug cartel in northern Mexico.
Often combining fictional narration with seemingly archival or documentary footage, the works in the exhibition employ a range of tactics to blur the line between fiction and reality, weaving fragmentary stories around elusive or even entirely absent centers.
Much in the same way World War Z chronicled humanity's war with zombies through a collection of fictional accounts from the front lines, the story unfolds from the perspective of several characters in different locations around the world as they watch the world change dramatically — and often horrifically — in front of their eyes.
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