Sentences with phrase «other piece of fiction»

Oh, and read again that other piece of fiction from Mr. Crabtree.
I don't believe the Quran to be any more accurate then any other piece of fiction.

Not exact matches

In an unsurprising surprise, SpaceX CEO Elon Musk made good on his Friday promise and debuted the first official footage of Falcon Heavy's inaugural flight, pieced together by none other than the co-creators of the science fiction show Westworld.
There aren't many other pieces of political fiction in which you would find Trollope's description of the word MP «as highest and most legitimate pride of an Englishman».
In any other fictional film if you have bad characters, underdeveloped elements, and sloppy narrative you simply get a bad piece of fiction.
And as a person who's normally enthralled solely by history and science fiction, this Crash reminiscent film is due credit, because it's not only an eye - opening depiction of modern «ailments,» but an admirably acted film that puts other think - pieces to shame.
The literature of Frank Miller is a prime example that comics aren't just for kids, and just because they are graphic novels, they are as important to our culture as any other piece of American fiction writing.
5) «Looper» In the cleverest volte - face of the year, Rian Johnson made everyone think they were going in for a smart, original piece of science - fiction reminiscent of «The Terminator» and «Twelve Monkeys,» among other things.
The other was an online flash fiction workshop where you were allowed to share a short piece of your own work for comments (only) after you'd critiqued five other short pieces by group members.
This free sampler contains the first 6 chapters of Credence Foundation (A Science Fiction Novel) A detective tasked with solving the seemingly impossible murder of an influential scientist finds a clue that leads him to Credence, a corporation of the future that uses mass beliefs to change reality and send spaceships on the other side of the universe.Suspecting that the murderer had himself flushed in and out of the crime scene using Credence's technology, Detective Trumaine readies his trap.In a frantic chase through his mind, long - forgotten memories from a tragic past, as well as virtual environments, he will finally put together the missing pieces of the most unbelievable plan ever to affect mankind.It's a novel of about 74,000 words...
If you're writing a piece of fiction, you'll have a lot more leeway in the design, but if you're a non-fiction author with a textbook or manual, you'll want to stick pretty close to the conventions other books in your genre utilize.
Some of its set pieces feel more tongue in cheek than the other games (see the ghost ship in No - man's Wharf), but if that means we get to fall hundreds of feed through a tear in time and space onto a throne room suspended in a chaos realm before taking on an ancient king and his cronies with a litany of soldier friends at our back — it's straight up Paradise Lost fan - fiction — then I don't mind some cheese on occasion.
This latest issue of Esopus, featuring a brand - new format and design (and encased in a slipcover), features artists» projects by Sharon Core, Joyce Pensato and John Sparagana; 100 still frames from David Lynch's Blue Velvet (introduced by Gregory Crewdson); materials from MoMA's archives related to late artist Scott Burton's early performance pieces; never - before - seen photographs from 1949 by Magnum photographer Burt Glinn; commentary on artworks from the New Orleans Museum of Art by two of its guards; fiction by Chelli Riddiough; and an audio compilation of new songs inspired by the customer - service experiences of Jens Lekman, Richard Swift, Basia Bulat and others.
Indeed, as curator Simon Morrisey explains in the following conversation, the exhibition was, in many ways, a collaborative exercise in extrapolation and reframing: ideas are drawn out of artists» works and discussed with other artists; information and data woven between art pieces to change the way in which we would expect them to be interpreted; insights are taken from history or speculative fiction and imposed over works to achieve the same end; and eventually, artworks are installed together to create a composite tableau.
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