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Discover LudwigThe phrase "author emerges" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts discussing the development or appearance of an author’s identity, style, or presence in a narrative or literary analysis.
Example: "As the story unfolds, the author emerges as a distinct voice, guiding the reader through the complexities of the plot."
Alternatives: "author appears" or "author reveals themselves".
Exact(3)
Its author emerges as a grittier W.G. Sebald, a lyrical German writer with the same forlorn urge to rescue lives and cultures from oblivion.
However, there's none of that in My Word is My Bond Michael O'Maraa £18.99), in which the author emerges as the embodiment of chivalry.
The meaning of a text, far from being just what's intended by the author, emerges through the process of interpretation.
Similar(57)
Fifteen minutes into "The Anarchist, by David Mamet," the characters from Pirandello's "Six Characters in Search of an Author" emerge from the back of the house and then proceed to kill the Mamet characters.
What does it mean to be Japanese, to be a Japanese writer?" Early in 1987 they settled first in Palermo and then in Rome, where he wrote Norwegian Wood and a very different author emerged.
The few-dozen fresh-faced, mostly female voters who had turned out in frigid weather to hear Lena Dunham pitch for the Democratic frontrunner broke into applause when they saw the TV star and author emerge from the back of the coffee house, wearing a "Hillary" jumper.
WHEN Judith Hermann's languid but captivating first collection, "Summerhouse, Later," was published in her native Germany in 1998, the now 30-year-old author emerged as one of the leading figures of a wave of young writers hailing from the new Berlin.
This makes for a significant opportunity for rediscovery; it also points to the millennial silence from which some of these authors emerge.
During World War I and the years of revolution that followed, two authors emerged to challenge both the old establishment and Nyugat.
It has been revealing to hear, following the government's proposals, how many of our established authors emerged from difficult backgrounds and credit their success to the local library.
In turn, not surprisingly, a phalanx of authors emerged to decry what Mr. McEwan -- the 1998 Booker Prize winner and, most recently, author of the best-selling novel "Atonement" -- referred to during an interview at his home here as "a certain strain of British self-denigration".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com