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her and much
His plans and dreams had revolved around her so much and for so long that now he felt as if he had nothing.
So simple, in fact, that it might even work -- although Pamela, now, in her new frame of mind, was careful not to pretend too much assurance.
You must forgive me if I seem to dwell too much on her physical aspects but I am an artist, accustomed to studying the physical body.
True, she was my Aunt, married to an Uncle related to me only by marriage, but why she had married a man twice her age, and more, perhaps, I did not know or much care.
His advice, his voice saying his poems, the fact that he had not so much as touched her -- on the contrary, he had put his head back and she had stroked his hair -- this was all new.
Keith was on his feet because he didn't care at all about life any more: Penny on her feet, proudly, because she cared too much.
and the author, who seemed the embodiment of France's rising spirit of resistance to her conquerors, was much complimented for his daring military action.
Some of the children of the family could not pronounce this name and called her Paula, a soubriquet Carl liked so much she has been Paula ever since.
Katherine Douglas King '' The invitation was accepted and other letters followed, in which she spoke of her concern for his health and her delight in seeing him so much at home among the crippled children she served.
Marlene ( surname: Adamo ), 25, a Brazilian divorcee who learned the dance from Arabic friends in Paris, now lives on Manhattan's West Side, is about the best belly dancer working the Casbah, loves it so much that she dances on her day off.
He had not even thought about her much except once or twice at night in bed when his slowly ranging thoughts would abruptly, almost accidentally, encounter her.
She was a child too much a part of her environment, too eager to grow and learn and experience.
As he declaimed the sonorous measures, it was as much as Claire could do to restrain herself from bursting out with her dramatic tidings.
Bobby Joe had been sitting close to her, touching her actually, and holding her hand from time to time, but it seemed at once that Howard sat much closer.
This filly is a much better individual than either of her full-sisters, Valentine Day and Cerise -- more scale and much better underpinning.
The last-named is one of the favorites in the stable, and the boys like her very much.
Nevertheless, Prokofieff was much influenced by Paris during the Twenties: the Paris which was the artistic center of the Western World -- the social Paris to which Russian aristocracy migrated -- the chic Paris which attracted the tourist dollars of rich America -- the avant-garde Paris of Diaghileff, Stravinsky, Koussevitzky, Cocteau, Picasso -- the laissez-faire Paris of Dadaism and ultramodern art -- the Paris sympathique which took young composers to her bosom with such quick and easy enthusiasms.
The female parasite spends much time in her efforts to find a nest of her host.
Rangoni and Amonasro have the same purpose -- forcing the girl to charm the man she loves into serving her country's cause -- and their tactics are much the same.

her and reprinted
Many of her books became classics and are continually reprinted.
The local historian Florence Gladstone, in her much reprinted work " Notting Hill in Bygone Days " defines Notting Hill as the whole of that part of Kensington which is north of the road known as Notting Hill Gate.
A Man Called Horse by Dorothy M. Johnson was originally published as a short story in Collier's magazine, January 7, 1950, and was reprinted in 1968 as a short story in her book Indian Country.
" A couple of years later she filed a lawsuit against New York magazine when it reprinted the rumours as fact just as she was about to release her album Mistaken Identity in 1991.
Susan Sontag wrote an essay in 1973 entitled " Freak Show " that was critical of Arbus's work ; it was reprinted in her 1977 book On Photography as " America, Seen Through Photographs, Darkly.
Several of her short stories have been reprinted in The Best American Short Stories.
This book was withdrawn from circulation by the author but was later reprinted after her death by her longtime friend Isabelle de Steiger.
A statement of her attitude to life, reprinted from " In The North ".
Next to numerous translated poems and some prose texts of other writers published in journals, she translated into Slovene language a book of poetry of Italian poet Michele Obit ( Leta na oknu, ZTT EST, Trieste, 2001, ISBN 88-7174-054-8 ), a selection of poetry of Argentinian poet Roberto Juarroz for a book Vertikalna poezija ( Vertical Poetry-with her introduction, ŠZ, Ljubljana, 2006, ISBN 961-242-035-1 ), a book of Gao Xingjian ( Ribiška palica za starega očeta / Buying a Fishing Rod for My Grandfather, 1986 – 1990, from French together with Drago Braco Rotar ) ( Didakta, Radovljica, 2001, ISBN 961-6363-62-X ), a book of poetry written by Lithuanian poet Neringa Abrutyte ( Izpoved, CSK, Aleph, Ljubljana, 2004, ISBN 961-6036-50-5 ) and a book of fairy-tails for kids by Lucy Coats ( 100 grških mitov za otroke / Atticus the Storyteller, 2004 ; MK, Ljubljana, 2004, reprinted in 2009, ISBN 978-86-11-16964-4.
* Release 3. 0, her bimonthly column for the New York Times, distributed via its syndicate and reprinted in Release 1. 0 ( now defunct ).
( The book would be reprinted years after her and Scott's deaths, when interest in the Fitzgeralds was rekindled.
Grey Owl's first three books, The Men of the Last Frontier, Pilgrims of the Wild and Sajo and her Beaver People, have been collected and reprinted as Grey Owl: Three Complete and Unabridged Canadian Classics ( 2001: ISBN 1-55209-590-8 ).
Forty of her stories were published in The Saturday Evening Post ; one titled " Story of a Homely Woman " was reprinted in 1937 in the Post's best short stories compilation.
The series of responses that followed Beecher ’ s essay were written with the moral support of her future husband Weld, and were published in both The Emancipator and The Liberator before being reprinted as a whole in book form.
Even before her first novel was published, her literary reputation was already high, largely on the strength of her story " A Night Among the Horses ," which was published in The Little Review and reprinted in her 1923 collection A Book.
But since the copyright had never been registered, she was unable to prevent it from being republished, and it became one of her most reprinted works.
Her works, with those of Marie-Madeleine de La Fayette, were edited by Etienne and Jay ( Paris, 1825 ); her novels were reprinted, with introductory matter by Lescure, in 1885 ; and her correspondence in the Lettres de Mmes.
* A short notice of her by Dean Church of St Paul's was published in The Guardian, and was reprinted in her husband's privately printed collection of poems.

her and essay
The novelist Raymond Chandler criticised her in his essay, " The Simple Art of Murder ", and the American literary critic Edmund Wilson was dismissive of Christie and the detective fiction genre generally in his New Yorker essay, " Who Cares Who Killed Roger Ackroyd?
She was the subject of Simone de Beauvoir's 1959 essay, The Lolita Syndrome, which described Bardot as a " locomotive of women's history " and built upon existentialist themes to declare her the first and most liberated woman of post-war France.
The term " consequentialism " was coined by G. E. M. Anscombe in her essay " Modern Moral Philosophy " in 1958, to describe what she saw as the central error of certain moral theories, such as those propounded by Mill and Sidgwick.
F. H. Pairault in her essay on Diana qualifies Dumézil's theory as " impossible to verify ".
Anscombe in her essay " Modern Moral Philosophy " in 1958, to describe what she saw as the central error of certain moral theories, such as those propounded by Mill and Sidgwick.
Along with her work as a writer of prose fiction, Russ was also a playwright, essayist, and author of nonfiction works, generally literary criticism and feminist theory, including the essay collection Magic Mommas, Trembling Sisters, Puritans & Perverts ; How to Suppress Women's Writing ; and the book-length study of modern feminism, What Are We Fighting For ?.
American writer Sylvia Wright coined the term in her essay " The Death of Lady Mondegreen ," published in Harper's Magazine in November 1954.
Her outspoken defense of capitalism in works like Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal ( 1967 ), and her characterization of her position as a defence of the ' virtue of selfishness ' in her essay collection of the same title published in 1964, also brought notoriety, but kept her out of the intellectual mainstream.
Virginia Woolf used it, citing Thackeray, in her 1929 essay A Room of One's Own.
Le Guin argues that these criteria may be successfully applied to works of science fiction and so answers in the affirmative her rhetorical question posed at the beginning of her essay: " Can a science fiction writer write a novel?
One of the pioneers of elasticity theory, she won the grand prize from the Paris Academy of Sciences for her essay on the subject.
Germain published her prize-winning essay at her own expense in 1821, mostly because she wanted to present her work in opposition to that of Poisson.
In the essay she pointed out some of the errors in her method.
In 1826 she submitted a revised version of her 1821 essay to the Academy.
Carol P. Christ used the term in 1987, and further defined thealogy in her 2002 essay, " Feminist theology as post-traditional thealogy ," as " the reflection on the meaning of the Goddess " ( p79 ).
In her 1989 essay " On Mirrors, Mists and Murmurs: Toward an Asian American Thealogy ," Rita Nakashima Brock defined thealogy as " the work of women reflecting on their experiences of and beliefs about divine reality " ( p236 ).

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