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Anatole and Broyard
* 1920 – Anatole Broyard, American critic and essayist ( d. 1990 )
* Anatole Broyard
In 1980, Anatole Broyard described Tropic of Cancer as " Mr. Miller's first and best novel ," showing " a flair for finding symbolism in unobtrusive places " and having " beautiful sentence.
Anatole Paul Broyard ( July 16, 1920 – October 11, 1990 ) was an American writer, literary critic and editor for The New York Times.
Broyard was born in New Orleans into a mixed-race Louisiana Creole family, the son of Paul Anatole Broyard, a carpenter and construction worker, and his wife, Edna Miller, neither of whom finished elementary school.
As the writer and editor Brent Staples wrote in 2003, " Anatole Broyard wanted to be a writer -- and not just a ' Negro writer ' consigned to the back of the literary bus.
He expanded on this in " The Passing of Anatole Broyard ", an essay published the next year in his Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Black Man ( 1997 ).
* Anatole Broyard, " A Portrait of the Hipster ", Karakorak blog.
* " Anatole Broyard, 70, Book Critic and Editor at The Times, Is Dead ", The New York Times, Friday, October 12, 1990.
* Jim Burns, " Anatole Broyard ", Penniless Press, UK
The New York Times critic Anatole Broyard believed that John Gardner was underqualified to write Bond.
Novelist Nelson Algren argued that the novel was “ a memorable American comedy by an original storyteller .” Estimable reviews by such noted writers and literary critics as Anatole Broyard, Jerome Charyn, Guy Davenport, and Shelby Foote were followed by the Times Literary Supplement review which saw the novel as “ Faulknerian in its gentle wryness, and a freakish imaginative flair reminiscent of Flannery O ' Connor .” The influential profile writer and music journalist Stanley Booth observed that Suttree was “ probably the funniest and most unbearably sad of McCarthy ’ s books ... which seem to me unsurpassed in American literature .”
* Review by Anatole Broyard, The New York Times, 13 June 1972

Anatole and author
* Penguin Island, a 1908 French satirical novel by the Nobel Prize winning author Anatole France, narrates the fictional history of a Great Auk population that is mistakenly baptized by a nearsighted missionary.
* Anatole Shub, journalist for The Washington Post and The New York Times, author *
The station is on the Rue Anatole France, which is named after the author Anatole France, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1921.
In these works the author, through the character of Anatole, consistently places emphasis on the dignity of work.
In 1930, pulp-magazine author Anatole Feldman adapted the play as a Chicago gangland tale.
Penguin Island ( 1908 ; French: L ' Île des Pingouins ) is a satirical fictional history by Nobel Prize winning French author Anatole France.
* Anatole Shub was an author, journalist, editor, and analyst who was an expert on Russian society during the Soviet era.

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