Dictionary
biographer
noun
The writer of a biography
Exact(8)
Later in the season, the same biographer attempts to turn Underwood's head to The Stanley Parable, an experimental installation that toys with abstract notions of free will.
This morning, Tony Blair's biographer wrote that Iraq is Britain's Watergate and that a day of testimony before the Chilcot inquiry gave the former prime minister a chance to do what Richard Nixon had finally, and reluctantly, done – and confess regret for the actions he had taken.
"His vanity, though child-like, was monstrous," wrote his biographer, Philip Ziegler, "his ambition unbridled".
No – in episode five, Underwood reveals to a potential biographer that he's really into Monument Valley.
"I don't believe Craske should be viewed either as an outsider artist, or as naive," said Prof Neil Powell, who has curated the exhibition with Craske's biographer Julia Blackburn.
David Petraeus, the retired US army general and former CIA director responsible for the development of the hugely influential "counter-insurgency" strategy used in Iraq and Afghanistan, was sentenced on Thursday to two years' probation and ordered to pay a fine of $100,000 for sharing highly classified information with his lover and biographer, Paula Broadwell.
Poignant, really, when you consider that Cowell told his biographer that Louis was "my best male friend".
According to Peter Scott's biographer Elspeth Huxley, it was this second image that convinced Scott that the Loch Ness monster was real.
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