Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
One way or another, it suddenly seemed that self-publishing was the key to infinite auctorial riches.
There are many auctorial voices that may be assumed, but we don't need to get too deeply into that.
It was published in 1937 after about fifteen years of work and contains over 500 songs, nearly half of them auctorial.
This recourse to mass consumption identity has always struck me as highly suspect and just short of auctorial bankruptcy.
Jack Vance has already succeeded in this traditional auctorial goal, but I hope he'll be with us for a while longer, and able to convey some more.
In one letter Mailer wrote, “I obviously enjoyed your page of tasty prose and would try to return auctorial tender but my mouth tastes like tablets.”
What is invariable is the role assumed by femininity, in the splendor of all its types, that of a catalyst in sketching and feeding the auctorial cocoon.
Again, the prose creaks, which may be some kind of auctorial joke at Savitch's expense: the self-avowed sharp journalist described in rambling prose -- but I doubt it.
Her subsequent novels are far too numerous to mention here although her hundredth novel, Montana Sky bears specifying if only to indicate just how prolific the lady's auctorial course has proved.
In 1986, Hawkins as Tinasky again claimed that jack green "...did pretty well in the auctorial line with novels published commercially under the names of William Gaddis and Thomas Pynchon."
We, Two or Three in Every Ten Thousand is a collection of narrative sequences, ingeniously connected to a tyrannical super-theme: an attempt to negotiate the auctorial rapport between the internal and external realms.
(...) The auctorial option seems to go towards the availabilities of the feminine agent, present in all its shades: the maternal impact, the protective-sisterly, the amorously-ungrateful, capricious, delicate, spiritual (or not) feminine figures.
The occasion for telling of such an auctorial epiphany was the 20th-anniversary party at the Morgan Library on Monday night for the Library of America series, the nonprofit venture that has republished 136 literary classics.
A bit further along in his auctorial life he turned to biography, that of famed hero Admiral Sir Sandy Woodward, on whose shoulders rested the burden of British victory in the Falklands War.
Maybe there's a touch of auctorial wish-fulfilment when the first corpse proves to be a former income tax inspector, whose death is regarded as a tiresome footnote to the important business of running a particularly elaborate and bizarre midsummer party.
Thucydides, who had been trained in rhetoric, became the model for subsequent prose-writers as an author who seeks to appear firmly in control of his material, whereas Herodotus with his frequent digressions appeared to minimize (or possibly disguise) his auctorial control.
In Camouflage, the war that receives Haldeman's auctorial disgust is World War II, and two particular periods are spotlighted: the Bataan Death March and the atrocities at the Auschwitz concentration camps, where the chameleon enjoys working with Mengele.
There are thousands of auctorial readings in the five boroughs every year: nearly two dozen just about every night solely in the city's literary superstores, including the 18 Barnes & Noble emporiums, the two Borders Books and Music stores, and the Tower Records Bookstore.
For the first two seasons, they were the only writers, and after taking joint credit for the pilot episode and the episode that opened the fall 2009 season, they began rotating taking a single auctorial credit, based in large part on the person "who's taken the lead in story breaking or who wrote a draft".