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Like Heller, he wrote a memoir about "his childhood and family life in Coney Island and had interwoven segments of his war and life experiences afterward into almost all his novels".
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"The distinction between foreign and domestic policy has blurred as our societies have interwoven.
Few directors have interwoven their persona and inner turmoil so powerfully as Bergman.
The big difference is that adapter Ben Power and director Marianne Elliott have interwoven them to create a standalone work played over a single, three-hour evening.
But Fast, who's never one to keep things simple, has interwoven the sex with stories of illegal immigration and dinosaur egg theft.
Eisner, the J. G. Schurman professor of chemical ecology (a discipline he helped found) at Cornell University, has interwoven the story of his career with the results of his investigations to create a fascinating and highly unusual book.
"God of Vengeance" once incited an obscenity trial, transcripts of which Ms. Taichman has interwoven with the text of the play, in search of a "connective tissue" between the two.
Around a grab bag of subjects — learning German, the Peanuts cartoonist Charles Schulz, bird-watching — the author has interwoven episodes from a youth and early manhood that will seem familiar to readers of his fiction and particularly of "The Corrections": the stultifyingly conventional adolescence in a St . Louissuburb, the earnest, aspirational mother; the stern, anhedonic father.
Since it is fiction, she has interwoven fact with fantasy to produce a love story which essentially appeals to a mainly western audience – with its exotic undertones of the "kohl-darkened eyes" of Arabian women behind purdah yearning for love and freedom.
"Ronnie and Nancy" comes from a somewhat unlikely source: Bob Colacello, a celebrity chronicler for Vanity Fair and former sidekick to Andy Warhol, who befriended Nancy Reagan in 1981 and has interwoven their lives in a joint biography that shows how she and her husband worked together during his long climb toward the presidency.
And he has interwoven that narrative with a hair-raising, minute-by-minute account of an accident at a Titan II missile silo in Arkansas, in 1980, which he renders in the manner of a techno-thriller: Plumb watched the nine-pound socket slip through the narrow gap between the platform and the missile, fall about seventy feet, hit the thrust mount, and then ricochet off the Titan II.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com