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The New Yorker, June 12 , 2000P. 109 Briefly Noted review of "The Binding Chair" (Random House; $24.95) by Kathryn Harrison ...May Cohen born Chao-tsing in China in the eighteen-seventies, is the almost entirely repellent protagonist of this busy novel... View Article By John Cassidy By Phil Klay By Troy Patterson By Amy Davidson Sorkin.
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The protagonist of this story has no name.
Helen, the protagonist of this novel, is of the woman-child type — resisting adult life.
Obsession, ambition, and shame drive the protagonist of this absorbing novel.
Aḥmad Sirhindī (died 1624) was the major protagonist of this movement in India.
It uses the secondary character from that story as the protagonist of this one.
Rashid, a German-Indian Muslim and aspiring shopkeeper, is the malleable protagonist of this alarming novel.
Detective Superintendent Peter Diamond, the abrasive but bluntly honest protagonist of this series, isn't so sure.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com