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autobiographical and piece
In a later semi-fictional autobiographical piece called Le Roman d ' un rallié, Coubertin describes his relationship with both his mother and his father as having been somewhat strained during his childhood and adolescence.
During the harsh winter of 1798 – 99, Wordsworth lived with Dorothy in Goslar, and, despite extreme stress and loneliness, he began work on an autobiographical piece later titled The Prelude.
This piece also mimicked the death of Dante's love in his autobiographical work, Vita Nuova.
This is Beattie's third book after his earlier autobiographical piece " In the Arena " ( 1990 ) and the thriller " The Year of the Dangerous Ones ".
" Wunderkind ", an autobiographical piece which Bates had much admired, appeared in Story magazine.
Even in his own autobiographical writings, the facts on his youth are a bit hazy, as he was quite young during this time and could only piece together some stories of his youth.
He wrote two early plays, an autobiographical piece entitled 910 Eden Street, and one about his hero, Beethoven.
In his autobiographical piece, " Ai ni Tsuite ", ( 爱について About Love, from his CD album Ai, 2003 ) Inoue expresses his longings for world peace and his love and respect for the ocean and Mother Earth.
Look Back in Anger was a strongly autobiographical piece based on Osborne's unhappy marriage to Pamela Lane and their life in cramped accommodation in Derby.
Others have described the piece as Lennon's attempt at turning " nightmare imagery " into sound, and as " an autobiographical soundscape.
* Humorous autobiographical piece.
His sermon on the occasion took as its reference an autobiographical piece by Charlotte Perkins Gilman entitled The Yellow Wallpaper.
His most famous work was Film Portrait ( 1972 ), an autobiographical piece about the artist's own life, which won numerous awards and is one of only 450 films nominated for the National Film Registry at the Library of Congress.
This phase of her relationship with Jean is the central piece of Henry's autobiographical novel Crazy Cock.

autobiographical and Orwell
More concerned with the literary nature of Orwell ’ s work, he sought explanations for Orwell's character and treated his first-person writings as autobiographical.
In 1950 he published the autobiographical Rude Assignment, in 1951 a collection of allegorical short stories about life in " the capital of a dying empire ," entitled " Rotting Hill ," and in 1952 a book of essays on writers such as George Orwell, Jean-Paul Sartre and André Malraux, entitled " The Writer and the Absolute.
For instance, writer George Orwell, an Old Etonian himself, wrote in his famous autobiographical essay ' Such, Such Were the Joys ' that:
Shooting an Elephant is a possibly autobiographical account by George Orwell in which he describes how an elephant in Burma had an attack of musth and went on to kill an Indian, leading the story's narrator to shoot it.
" Nevertheless, Orwell wrote " Both books use unprintable words, both are in some sense autobiographical, but that is all.
" Such, Such Were the Joys " is a long autobiographical essay by the English writer George Orwell.
On sending the typescript to Warburg, Orwell stated that he had written the " long autobiographical sketch " partly as a " sort of pendent " to the publication in 1938 of Enemies of Promise, an autobiographical work by Cyril Connolly, and at Connolly's request.

autobiographical and sent
Based on Pat Conroy's autobiographical novel The Water Is Wide, Voight portrayed the title character, an idealistic young schoolteacher sent to teach underprivileged black children on a remote South Carolina island.

autobiographical and editors
The rest of the novel incorporates several narratives, including Zampanò's report on the fictional film ; Truant's autobiographical interjections ; a small transcript of part of the film from Navidson's brother, Tom ; a small transcript of interviews of many people regarding The Navidson Record by Navidson's wife, Karen ; and occasional brief notes by unidentified editors, all woven together by a mass of footnotes.

autobiographical and Century
In 1969 Earl Mountbatten participated in a 12-part autobiographical television series Lord Mountbatten: A Man for the Century, also known as The Life and Times of Lord Mountbatten, produced by Associated-Rediffusion and scripted by historian John Terraine.
In 2010, Li's autobiographical book, The Critical Moment – Li Peng Diaries, was published by New Century Press.
* " Papillon " is the title of Henri Charriere's 20th Century autobiographical novel concerning a Frenchman interned on a penal colony in French Guiana, and the 1973 movie directed by Franklin J. Schaffner.
Along with his poetry, he is known for writing La Confession d ' un enfant du siècle ( The Confession of a Child of the Century, autobiographical ) from 1836.
The tale of his celebrated love affair with George Sand, which lasted from 1833 to 1835, is told from his point of view in his autobiographical novel, La Confession d ' un Enfant du Siècle ( The Confession of a Child of the Century, made into a film, Children of the Century ), and from her point of view in her Elle et lui.
* La Confession d ' un enfant du siècle ( The Confession of a Child of the Century, autobiographical ), 1836.
A comparison of the Sherston memoirs to Sassoon's later, undiluted autobiographical trilogy ( The Old Century, The Weald of Youth, and Siegfried's Journey ) shows their strict similarity, and it is generally accepted that all six books comprise a composite portrait of the author and his life as a young man.

autobiographical and Authors
His autobiographical text " Je Me Vois " appeared in the Contemporary Authors Autobiographical Series, Volume 25, published by Gale Research.
* An extended autobiographical essay commissioned by Gale Research can be found in Contemporary Authors, Autobiography Series, vol.

autobiographical and 1940
McKay also authored a collection of short stories, Gingertown ( 1932 ), and two autobiographical books, A Long Way from Home ( 1937 ) and Harlem: Negro Metropolis ( 1940 ).
According to her autobiographical collection of works, This Is On Me ( 1940 ), Katharine Brush was born Katharine Ingham in Middletown, Connecticut.
Shortly after his time in jail he published books of magical realist autobiographical short stories, which culminated in the stylistic prose of Donna Come Me ( Woman Like Me ) ( 1940 ).
His last book of verse, Tempel en kruis ( 1940 ; “ Temple and Cross ”), an autobiographical account of the poet ’ s development, reaffirms humanistic ideals.
The title of the film is that of the first volume of Churchill's largely autobiographical six-volume history of the war, which covered the period from 1919 to 10 May 1940, the day he became Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.

autobiographical and wrote
In the biography, Paul Allen wrote, regarding a suggestion in Cosmopolitan that his plays were becoming autobiographical: " If we take that to mean that his plays tell his own life story, he still hasn't started.
She wrote at least three autobiographical books about adapting to blindness.
He also turned to prose and wrote several autobiographical stories, notably The Childhood of Luvers and Safe Conduct.
Since then McLean has stated that the lyrics are also somewhat autobiographical and present an abstract story of his life from the mid-1950s until the time he wrote the song in the late 1960s.
While in prison, he wrote at least four book-length manuscripts including a lyrical autobiographical novel, How It All Began, philosophical treatise Philosophical Arabesques, a collection of poems, and Socialism and Its Culture – all of which were found in Stalin's archive and published in the 1990s ).
Milligan wrote and edited many books, including Puckoon and his seven-volume autobiographical account of his time serving during the Second World War, beginning with Adolf Hitler: My part in his downfall.
He wrote the story of the discovery in 1853 in his autobiographical book Gum-Elastica.
In 1965 she wrote two works: an autobiographical short story called " A Young Girl's Primer, or How to Attain the Leisure Class ", and a play titled Up Your Ass about a young prostitute.
In spite of widespread speculation that Roberts only agreed to join the court's majority in upholding New Deal legislation, such as the Social Security Act, during the spring of 1937 because of the court packing plan, Hughes wrote in his autobiographical notes that Roosevelt's court reform proposal " had not the slightest effect on our court's decision " in the Parrish case and that the delayed announcement of the decision created the false impression that the Court had retreated under fire.
In 1927, humorist Frederic Van de Water wrote The Family Flivvers to Frisco, an autobiographical account of him and his wife, a young couple from New York City, piling their belongings and their six-year-old son ( dubbed the “ Supercargo ”) into their Model T Ford and camping their way to San Francisco on the Lincoln Highway, traveling over through twelve states in thirty-seven days.
During this phase, Brian also wrote — with his father Murry assisting under the pseudonym of Reggie Dunbar — the autobiographical song, " Break Away ", which would become a UK hit single.
Such an environment is the natural breeding ground for cholera ", he wrote in his autobiographical novel Me ( Jag, Stockholm, 1931, p. 21 ).
Ari Fleischer, the White House Press Secretary at the time, later wrote in an autobiographical account of that address, " In a speech hailed by the press and by Democrats, President announced what became known as the ' Bush Doctrine '".
Kovalevskaya wrote several non-mathematical works as well, including a memoir, A Russian Childhood, plays ( in collaboration with Duchess Anne Charlotte Edgren-Leffler ) and a partly autobiographical novel, Nihilist Girl ( 1890 ).
He also wrote two autobiographical volumes, Blasting and Bombardiering ( 1937 ) and Rude Assignment: A Narrative of my Career Up-to-Date ( 1950 ).
Among popular novelists Daphne Du Maurier wrote Rebecca, a mystery novel, in 1938 and W. Somerset Maugham ( 1874-1965 ) Of Human Bondage ( 1915 ), a strongly autobiographical novel, is generally agreed to be his masterpiece.
Kotzebue wrote about this period in his life in the autobiographical Das merkwürdigste Jahr meines Lebens ( The strangest Year of my Life ).
Trygve Bratteli wrote a number of autobiographical and political books.
Lane wrote an immensely popular book detailing the history of American needlework ( with a strong libertarian undercurrent ) for Woman's Day and edited and published On The Way Home, providing an autobiographical setting around her mother's original 1894 diary of their six week journey from South Dakota to Missouri.
He was primarily known for the autobiographical monologues that he wrote and performed for the theater in the 1980s and 1990s.
Icelandic writer Halldór Laxness, who won the Nobel prize for literature in 1955, wrote most of his first novel, Vefarinn mikli frá Kasmír (" The Great Weaver from Kashmir "), in Taormina which he then praised highly in his book of autobiographical essays, Skáldatími (" The Time of the Poet ", 1963 ).
In light of the death in 2000 of his daughter Paula Yates, his son Christopher Green, now a Canadian resident, wrote the autobiographical perspective Hughie and Paula: The Tangled Lives of Hughie Green and Paula Yates.
Most of the books Ellis wrote after inventing REBT had a strong autobiographical element.
She wrote a largely autobiographical novel entitled Agnes Grey.

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