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Synonyms and Antonyms of author

synonym (synonym of author)

  • (noun.person)
    writer
    writes (books or stories or articles or the like) professionally (for pay) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    generator, source
    someone who originates or causes or initiates something (noun.person)
     

hypernym (author IS A KIND OF .... relation)

  • be the author of (verb.creation)
    compose, indite, pen, write
    produce a literary work (verb.creation)
     
  • someone who originates or causes or initiates something (noun.person)
    maker, shaper
    a person who makes things (noun.person)
     
  • writes (books or stories or articles or the like) professionally (for pay) (noun.person)
    communicator
    a person who communicates with others (noun.person)
     

hyponym (.... IS A KIND OF author relation)

  • be the author of (verb.creation)
    co-author
    be a co-author on (a book, a paper) (verb.creation)
     
  • (verb.creation)
    ghost, ghostwrite
    write for someone else (verb.creation)
     
  • someone who originates or causes or initiates something (noun.person)
    coiner
    someone who is a source of new words or new expressions (noun.person)
     
  • writes (books or stories or articles or the like) professionally (for pay) (noun.person)
    abstracter, abstractor
    one who makes abstracts or summarizes information (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    alliterator
    a speaker or writer who makes use of alliteration (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    authoress
    a woman author (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    biographer
    someone who writes an account of a person's life (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    coauthor, joint author
    a writer who collaborates with others in writing something (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    commentator, reviewer
    a writer who reports and analyzes events of the day (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    compiler
    a person who compiles information (as for reference purposes) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    contributor
    a writer whose work is published in a newspaper or magazine or as part of a book (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    cyberpunk
    a writer of science fiction set in a lawless subculture of an oppressive society dominated by computer technology (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    drafter
    a writer of a draft (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    dramatist, playwright
    someone who writes plays (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    essayist, litterateur
    a writer of literary works (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    folk writer
    a writer of folktales (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    framer
    someone who writes a new law or plan (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    gagman, gagster, gagwriter
    someone who writes comic material for public performers (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    ghost, ghostwriter
    a writer who gives the credit of authorship to someone else (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    gothic romancer
    a writer of Gothic romances (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    hack, hack writer, literary hack
    a mediocre and disdained writer (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    journalist
    a writer for newspapers and magazines (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    librettist
    author of words to be set to music in an opera or operetta (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    lyricist, lyrist
    a person who writes the words for songs (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    novelist
    one who writes novels (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    pamphleteer
    a writer of pamphlets (usually taking a partisan stand on public issues) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    paragrapher
    a writer of paragraphs (as for publication on the editorial page of a newspaper) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    poet
    a writer of poems (the term is usually reserved for writers of good poetry) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    polemic, polemicist, polemist
    a writer who argues in opposition to others (especially in theology) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    poetiser, poetizer, rhymer, rhymester, versifier
    a writer who composes rhymes; a maker of poor verses (usually used as terms of contempt for minor or inferior poets) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    scenarist
    a writer of screenplays (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    scriptwriter
    someone who writes scripts for plays or movies or broadcast dramas (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    space writer
    a writer paid by the area of the copy (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    speechwriter
    a writer who composes speeches for others to deliver (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    tragedian
    a writer (especially a playwright) who writes tragedies (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    wordmonger
    a writer who uses language carelessly or pretentiously with little regard for meaning (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    word-painter
    a writer of vivid or graphic descriptive power (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    wordsmith
    a fluent and prolific writer (noun.person)
     

instance hyponym (.... IS A KIND OF author relation (represent specific [usually real-world] instances of something))

  • (noun.person)
    aiken, conrad aiken, conrad potter aiken
    United States writer (1889-1973) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    alger, horatio alger
    United States author of inspirational adventure stories for boys; virtue and hard work overcome poverty (1832-1899) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    algren, nelson algren
    United States writer (1909-1981) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    andersen, hans christian andersen
    a Danish author remembered for his fairy stories (1805-1875) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    anderson, sherwood anderson
    United States author whose works were frequently autobiographical (1876-1941) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    aragon, louis aragon
    French writer who generalized surrealism to literature (1897-1982) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    asch, shalom asch, sholem asch, sholom asch
    United States writer (born in Poland) who wrote in Yiddish (1880-1957) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    asimov, isaac asimov
    United States writer (born in Russia) noted for his science fiction (1920-1992) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    auchincloss, louis auchincloss, louis stanton auchincloss
    United States writer (born in 1917) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    austen, jane austen
    English novelist noted for her insightful portrayals of middle-class families (1775-1817) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    baldwin, james arthur baldwin, james baldwin
    United States author who was an outspoken critic of racism (1924-1987) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    baraka, imamu amiri baraka, leroi jones
    United States writer of poems and plays about racial conflict (born in 1934) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    barth, john barth, john simmons barth
    United States novelist (born in 1930) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    barthelme, donald barthelme
    United States author of sometimes surrealistic stories (1931-1989) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    baum, frank baum, lyman frank brown
    United States writer of children's books (1856-1919) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    beauvoir, simone de beauvoir
    French feminist and existentialist and novelist (1908-1986) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    beckett, samuel beckett
    a playwright and novelist (born in Ireland) who lived in France; wrote plays for the theater of the absurd (1906-1989) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    beerbohm, max beerbohm, sir henry maxmilian beerbohm
    English writer and caricaturist (1872-1956) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    belloc, hilaire belloc, joseph hilaire peter belloc
    English author (born in France) remembered especially for his verse for children (1870-1953) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    bellow, saul bellow, solomon bellow
    United States author (born in Canada) whose novels influenced American literature after World War II (1915-2005) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    benchley, robert benchley, robert charles benchley
    United States humorist (1889-1945) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    benet, william rose benet
    United States writer; brother of Stephen Vincent Benet (1886-1950) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    ambrose bierce, ambrose gwinett bierce, bierce
    United States writer of caustic wit (1842-1914) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    boell, heinrich boell, heinrich theodor boell
    German novelist and writer of short stories (1917-1985) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    arna wendell bontemps, bontemps
    United States writer (1902-1973) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    borges, jorge borges, jorge luis borges
    Argentinian writer remembered for his short stories (1899-1986) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    boswell, james boswell
    Scottish author noted for his biography of Samuel Johnson (1740-1795) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    boyle, kay boyle
    United States writer (1902-1992) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    bradbury, ray bradbury, ray douglas bradbury
    United States writer of science fiction (born 1920) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    bronte, charlotte bronte
    English novelist; oldest of three Bronte sisters (1816-1855) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    bronte, currer bell, emily bronte, emily jane bronte
    English novelist; one of three Bronte sisters (1818-1848) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    anne bronte, bronte
    English novelist; youngest of three Bronte sisters (1820-1849) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    artemus ward, browne, charles farrar browne
    United States writer of humorous tales of an itinerant showman (1834-1867) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    buck, pearl buck, pearl sydenstricker buck
    United States author whose novels drew on her experiences as a missionary in China (1892-1973) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    bunyan, john bunyan
    English preacher and author of an allegorical novel, Pilgrim's Progress (1628-1688) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    anthony burgess, burgess
    English writer of satirical novels (1917-1993) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    burnett, frances eliza hodgson burnett, frances hodgson burnett
    United States writer (born in England) remembered for her novels for children (1849-1924) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    burroughs, edgar rice burroughs
    United States novelist and author of the Tarzan stories (1875-1950) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    burroughs, william burroughs, william s. burroughs, william seward burroughs
    United States writer noted for his works portraying the life of drug addicts (1914-1997) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    butler, samuel butler
    English novelist who described a fictitious land he called Erewhon (1835-1902) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    cabell, james branch cabell
    United States writer of satirical novels (1879-1958) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    caldwell, erskine caldwell, erskine preston caldwell
    United States author remembered for novels about poverty and degeneration (1903-1987) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    calvino, italo calvino
    Italian writer of novels and short stories (born in Cuba) (1923-1987) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    albert camus, camus
    French writer who portrayed the human condition as isolated in an absurd world (1913-1960) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    canetti, elias canetti
    English writer born in Germany (1905-1994) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    capek, karel capek
    Czech writer who introduced the word `robot' into the English language (1890-1938) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    carroll, charles dodgson, charles lutwidge dodgson, dodgson, lewis carroll, reverend dodgson
    English author; Charles Dodgson was an Oxford don of mathematics who is remembered for the children's stories he wrote under the pen name Lewis Carrol more.. English author; Charles Dodgson was an Oxford don of mathematics who is remembered for the children's stories he wrote under the pen name Lewis Carroll (1832-1898) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    cather, willa cather, willa sibert cather
    United States writer who wrote about frontier life (1873-1947) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    cervantes, cervantes saavedra, miguel de cervantes, miguel de cervantes saavedra
    Spanish writer best remembered for `Don Quixote' which satirizes chivalry and influenced the development of the novel form (1547-1616) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    chandler, raymond chandler, raymond thornton chandler
    United States writer of detective thrillers featuring the character of Philip Marlowe (1888-1959) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    chateaubriand, francois rene chateaubriand, vicomte de chateaubriand
    French statesman and writer; considered a precursor of the romantic movement in France (1768-1848) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    cheever, john cheever
    United States writer of novels and short stories (1912-1982) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    chesterton, g. k. chesterton, gilbert keith chesterton
    conservative English writer of the Roman Catholic persuasion; in addition to volumes of criticism and polemics he wrote detective novels featuring Fat more.. conservative English writer of the Roman Catholic persuasion; in addition to volumes of criticism and polemics he wrote detective novels featuring Father Brown (1874-1936) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    chopin, kate chopin, kate o'flaherty chopin
    United States writer who described Creole life in Louisiana (1851-1904) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    agatha christie, christie, dame agatha mary clarissa christie
    prolific English writer of detective stories (1890-1976) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    churchill, sir winston leonard spenser churchill, winston churchill, winston s. churchill
    British statesman and leader during World War II; received Nobel prize for literature in 1953 (1874-1965) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    clemens, mark twain, samuel langhorne clemens
    United States writer and humorist best known for his novels about Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn (1835-1910) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    cocteau, jean cocteau
    French writer and film maker who worked in many artistic media (1889-1963) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    colette, sidonie-gabrielle claudine colette, sidonie-gabrielle colette
    French writer of novels about women (1873-1954) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    collins, wilkie collins, william wilkie collins
    English writer noted for early detective novels (1824-1889) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    a. conan doyle, arthur conan doyle, conan doyle, sir arthur conan doyle
    British author who created Sherlock Holmes (1859-1930) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    conrad, joseph conrad, teodor josef konrad korzeniowski
    English novelist (born in Poland) noted for sea stories and for his narrative technique (1857-1924) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    cooper, james fenimore cooper
    United States novelist noted for his stories of American Indians and the frontier life (1789-1851) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    crane, stephen crane
    United States writer (1871-1900) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    cummings, e. e. cummings, edward estlin cummings
    United States writer noted for his typographically eccentric poetry (1894-1962) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    clarence day, clarence shepard day jr., day
    United States writer best known for his autobiographical works (1874-1935) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    daniel defoe, defoe
    English writer remembered particularly for his novel about Robinson Crusoe (1660-1731) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    de quincey, thomas de quincey
    English writer who described the psychological effects of addiction to opium (1785-1859) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    charles dickens, charles john huffam dickens, dickens
    English writer whose novels depicted and criticized social injustice (1812-1870) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    didion, joan didion
    United States writer (born in 1934) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    baroness karen blixen, blixen, dinesen, isak dinesen, karen blixen
    Danish writer who lived in Kenya for 19 years and is remembered for her writings about Africa (1885-1962) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    doctorow, e. l. doctorow, edgard lawrence doctorow
    United States novelist (born in 1931) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    dos passos, john dos passos, john roderigo dos passos
    United States novelist remembered for his portrayal of life in the United States (1896-1970) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    dostoevski, dostoevsky, dostoyevsky, feodor dostoevski, feodor dostoevsky, feodor dostoyevsky, feodor mikhailovich dostoevski, feodor mikhailovich dostoevsky, feodor mikhailovich dostoyevsky, fyodor dostoevski, fyodor dostoevsky, fyodor dostoyevsky, fyodor mikhailovi
    Russian novelist who wrote of human suffering with humor and psychological insight (1821-1881) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    dreiser, theodore dreiser, theodore herman albert dreiser
    United States novelist (1871-1945) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    alexandre dumas, dumas
    French writer remembered for his swashbuckling historical tales (1802-1870) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    du maurier, george du maurier, george louis palmella busson du maurier
    English writer and illustrator; grandfather of Daphne du Maurier (1834-1896) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    dame daphne du maurier, daphne du maurier, du maurier
    English writer of melodramatic novels (1907-1989) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    durrell, lawrence durrell, lawrence george durrell
    English writer of Irish descent who spent much of his life in Mediterranean regions (1912-1990) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    ehrenberg, ilya ehrenberg, ilya grigorievich ehrenberg
    Russian novelist (1891-1967) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    eliot, george eliot, mary ann evans
    British writer of novels characterized by realistic analysis of provincial Victorian society (1819-1880) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    ellison, ralph ellison, ralph waldo ellison
    United States novelist who wrote about a young Black man and his struggles in American society (1914-1994) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    emerson, ralph waldo emerson
    United States writer and leading exponent of transcendentalism (1803-1882) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    farrell, james thomas farrell
    United States writer remembered for his novels (1904-1979) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    edna ferber, ferber
    United States novelist; author of several popular novels (1887-1968) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    fielding, henry fielding
    English novelist and dramatist (1707-1754) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    f. scott fitzgerald, fitzgerald, francis scott key fitzgerald
    United States author whose novels characterized the Jazz Age in the United States (1896-1940) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    flaubert, gustave flaubert
    French writer of novels and short stories (1821-1880) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    fleming, ian fleming, ian lancaster fleming
    British writer famous for writing spy novels about secret agent James Bond (1908-1964) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    ford, ford hermann hueffer, ford madox ford
    English writer and editor (1873-1939) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    c. s. forester, cecil scott forester, forester
    English writer of adventure novels featuring Captain Horatio Hornblower (1899-1966) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    anatole france, france, jacques anatole francois thibault
    French writer of sophisticated novels and short stories (1844-1924) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    benjamin franklin, franklin
    printer whose success as an author led him to take up politics; he helped draw up the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution; he played a ma more.. printer whose success as an author led him to take up politics; he helped draw up the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution; he played a major role in the American Revolution and negotiated French support for the colonists; as a scientist he is remembered particularly for his research in electricity (1706-1790) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    carlos fuentes, fuentes
    Mexican novelist (born in 1928) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    emile gaboriau, gaboriau
    French writer considered by some to be a founder of the detective novel (1832-1873) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    galsworthy, john galsworthy
    English novelist (1867-1933) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    erle stanley gardner, gardner
    writer of detective novels featuring Perry Mason (1889-1970) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    elizabeth cleghorn stevenson gaskell, elizabeth gaskell, gaskell
    English writer who is remembered for her biography of Charlotte Bronte (1810-1865) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    dr. seuss, geisel, theodor seuss geisel
    United States writer of children's books (1904-1991) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    gibran, kahlil gibran
    United States writer (born in Lebanon) (1883-1931) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    andre gide, andre paul guillaume gide, gide
    French author and dramatist who is regarded as the father of modern French literature (1869-1951) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    gjellerup, karl gjellerup
    Danish novelist (1857-1919) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    gogol, nikolai vasilievich gogol
    Russian writer who introduced realism to Russian literature (1809-1852) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    golding, sir william gerald golding, william golding
    English novelist (1911-1993) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    goldsmith, oliver goldsmith
    Irish writer of novels and poetry and plays and essays (1728-1774) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    gombrowicz, witold gombrowicz
    Polish author (1904-1969) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    edmond de goncourt, edmond louis antoine huot de goncourt, goncourt
    French writer who collaborated with his brother Jules de Goncourt on many books and who in his will established the Prix Goncourt (1822-1896) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    goncourt, jules alfred huot de goncourt, jules de goncourt
    French writer who collaborated with his brother Edmond de Goncourt on many books (1830-1870) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    gordimer, nadine gordimer
    South African novelist and short-story writer whose work describes the effects of apartheid (born in 1923) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    aleksey maksimovich peshkov, aleksey maximovich peshkov, gorki, gorky, maksim gorky, maxim gorki
    Russian writer of plays and novels and short stories; noted for his depiction of social outcasts (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    grahame, kenneth grahame
    English writer (born in Scotland) of children's stories (1859-1932) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    grass, gunter grass, gunter wilhelm grass
    German writer of novels and poetry and plays (born 1927) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    graves, robert graves, robert ranke graves
    English writer known for his interest in mythology and in the classics (1895-1985) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    graham greene, greene, henry graham greene
    English novelist and Catholic (1904-1991) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    grey, zane grey
    United States writer of western adventure novels (1875-1939) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    grimm, jakob grimm, jakob ludwig karl grimm
    the older of the two Grimm brothers remembered best for their fairy stories; also author of Grimm's law describing consonant changes in Germanic langu more.. the older of the two Grimm brothers remembered best for their fairy stories; also author of Grimm's law describing consonant changes in Germanic languages (1785-1863) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    grimm, wilhelm grimm, wilhelm karl grimm
    the younger of the two Grimm brothers remembered best for their fairy stories (1786-1859) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    haggard, rider haggard, sir henry rider haggard
    British writer noted for romantic adventure novels (1856-1925) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    elizabeth haldane, elizabeth sanderson haldane, haldane
    Scottish writer and sister of Richard Haldane and John Haldane (1862-1937) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    edward everett hale, hale
    prolific United States writer (1822-1909) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    alex haley, haley
    United States writer and Afro-American who wrote a fictionalized account of tracing his family roots back to Africa (1921-1992) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    hall, marguerite radclyffe hall, radclyffe hall
    English writer whose novel about a lesbian relationship was banned in Britain for many years (1883-1943) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    dashiell hammett, hammett, samuel dashiell hammett
    United States writer of hard-boiled detective fiction (1894-1961) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    hamsun, knut hamsun, knut pedersen
    Norwegian writer of novels (1859-1952) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    hardy, thomas hardy
    English novelist and poet (1840-1928) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    frank harris, harris, james thomas harris
    Irish writer noted for his sexually explicit but unreliable autobiography (1856-1931) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    harris, joel chandler harris, joel harris
    United States author who wrote the stories about Uncle Remus (1848-1908) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    bret harte, harte
    United States writer noted for his stories about life during the California gold rush (1836-1902) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    hasek, jaroslav hasek
    Czech author of novels and short stories (1883-1923) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    hawthorne, nathaniel hawthorne
    United States writer of novels and short stories mostly on moral themes (1804-1864) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    ben hecht, hecht
    United States writer of stories and plays (1894-1946) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    heinlein, robert a. heinlein, robert anson heinlein
    United States writer of science fiction (1907-1988) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    heller, joseph heller
    United States novelist whose best known work was a black comedy inspired by his experiences in the Air Force during World War II (1923-1999) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    ernest hemingway, hemingway
    an American writer of fiction who won the Nobel prize for literature in 1954 (1899-1961) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    hermann hesse, hesse
    Swiss writer (born in Germany) whose novels and poems express his interests in eastern spiritual values (1877-1962) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    heyse, paul heyse, paul johann ludwig von heyse
    German writer (1830-1914) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    dubois heyward, edwin dubois hayward, heyward
    United States writer (1885-1940) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    higginson, thomas higginson, thomas wentworth storrow higginson
    United States writer and soldier who led the first Black regiment in the Union Army (1823-1911) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    e. t. a. hoffmann, ernst theodor amadeus hoffmann, ernst theodor wilhelm hoffmann, hoffmann
    German writer of fantastic tales (1776-1822) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    holmes, oliver wendell holmes
    United States writer of humorous essays (1809-1894) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    howells, william dean howells
    United States writer and editor (1837-1920) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    edmond hoyle, hoyle
    English writer on card games (1672-1769) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    hubbard, l. ron hubbard
    a United States writer of science fiction and founder of Scientology (1911-1986) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    hughes, james langston hughes, langston hughes
    United States writer (1902-1967) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    hunt, james henry leigh hunt, leigh hunt
    British writer who defended the Romanticism of Keats and Shelley (1784-1859) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    aldous huxley, aldous leonard huxley, huxley
    English writer; grandson of Thomas Huxley who is remembered mainly for his depiction of a scientifically controlled utopia (1894-1963) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    irving, john irving
    United States writer of darkly humorous novels (born in 1942) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    irving, washington irving
    United States writer remembered for his stories (1783-1859) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    christopher isherwood, christopher william bradshaw isherwood, isherwood
    United States writer (born in England) whose best known novels portray Berlin in the 1930's and who collaborated with W. H. Auden in writing plays in more.. United States writer (born in England) whose best known novels portray Berlin in the 1930's and who collaborated with W. H. Auden in writing plays in verse (1904-1986) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    helen hunt jackson, helen maria fiske hunt jackson, jackson
    United States writer of romantic novels about the unjust treatment of Native Americans (1830-1885) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    jacobs, jane jacobs
    United States writer and critic of urban planning (born in 1916) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    jacobs, w. w. jacobs, william wymark jacobs
    English writer of macabre short stories (1863-1943) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    henry james, james
    writer who was born in the United States but lived in England (1843-1916) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    jensen, johannes vilhelm jensen
    modernistic Danish writer (1873-1950) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    dr. johnson, johnson, samuel johnson
    English writer and lexicographer (1709-1784) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    erica jong, jong
    United States writer (born in 1942) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    james augustine aloysius joyce, james joyce, joyce
    influential Irish writer noted for his many innovations (such as stream of consciousness writing) (1882-1941) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    franz kafka, kafka
    Czech novelist who wrote in German about a nightmarish world of isolated and troubled individuals (1883-1924) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    helen adams keller, helen keller, keller
    United States lecturer and writer who was blind and deaf from the age of 19 months; Anne Sullivan taught her to read and write and speak; Helen Keller more.. United States lecturer and writer who was blind and deaf from the age of 19 months; Anne Sullivan taught her to read and write and speak; Helen Keller graduated from college and went on to champion the cause of blind and deaf people (1880-1968) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    jack kerouac, jean-louis lebris de kerouac, kerouac
    United States writer who was a leading figure of the beat generation (1922-1969) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    ken elton kesey, ken kesey, kesey
    United States writer whose best-known novel was based on his experiences as an attendant in a mental hospital (1935-2001) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    joseph rudyard kipling, kipling, rudyard kipling
    English author of novels and poetry who was born in India (1865-1936) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    arthur koestler, koestler
    British writer (born in Hungary) who wrote a novel exposing the Stalinist purges during the 1930s (1905-1983) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    jean de la fontaine, la fontaine
    French writer who collected Aesop's fables and published them (1621-1695) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    lardner, ring lardner, ringgold wilmer lardner
    United States humorist and writer of satirical short stories (1885-1933) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    francois de la rochefoucauld, la rochefoucauld
    French writer of moralistic maxims (1613-1680) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    d. h. lawrence, david herbert lawrence, lawrence
    English novelist and poet and essayist whose work condemned industrial society and explored sexual relationships (1885-1930) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    lawrence, lawrence of arabia, t. e. lawrence, thomas edward lawrence
    Welsh soldier who from 1916 to 1918 organized the Arab revolt against the Turks; he later wrote an account of his adventures (1888-1935) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    david john moore cornwell, john le carre, le carre
    English writer of novels of espionage (born in 1931) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    dutch leonard, elmore john leonard, elmore leonard, leonard
    United States writer of thrillers (born in 1925) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    lermontov, mikhail yurievich lermontov
    Russian writer (1814-1841) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    doris lessing, doris may lessing, lessing
    English author of novels and short stories who grew up in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) (born in 1919) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    c. s. lewis, clive staples lewis, lewis
    English critic and novelist; author of theological works and of books for children (1898-1963) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    harry sinclair lewis, lewis, sinclair lewis
    United States novelist who satirized middle-class America in his novel Main Street (1885-1951) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    jack london, john griffith chaney, london
    United States writer of novels based on experiences in the Klondike gold rush (1876-1916) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    clarence malcolm lowry, lowry, malcolm lowry
    English novelist (1909-1957) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    john lyly, lyly
    English writer noted for his elaborate style (1554-1606) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    bulwer-lytton, edward george earle bulwer-lytton, first baron lytton, lytton
    English writer of historical romances (1803-1873) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    mailer, norman mailer
    United States writer (born in 1923) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    bernard malamud, malamud
    United States writer (1914-1986) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    malory, sir thomas malory, thomas malory
    English writer who published a translation of romances about King Arthur taken from French and other sources (died in 1471) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    andre malraux, malraux
    French novelist (1901-1976) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    mann, thomas mann
    German writer concerned about the role of the artist in bourgeois society (1875-1955) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    katherine mansfield, kathleen mansfield beauchamp, mansfield
    New Zealand writer of short stories (1888-1923) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    alessandro manzoni, manzoni
    Italian novelist and poet (1785-1873) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    john marquand, john philip marquand, marquand
    United States writer who created the Japanese detective Mr. Moto and wrote other novels as well (1893-1960) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    marsh, ngaio marsh
    New Zealand writer of detective stories (1899-1982) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    a. e. w. mason, alfred edward woodley mason, mason
    English writer (1865-1948) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    maugham, somerset maugham, w. somerset maugham, william somerset maugham
    English writer (born in France) of novels and short stories (1874-1965) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    guy de maupassant, henri rene albert guy de maupassant, maupassant
    French writer noted especially for his short stories (1850-1893) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    francois charles mauriac, francois mauriac, mauriac
    French novelist who wrote about the conflict between desire and religious belief (1885-1970) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    andre maurois, emile herzog, maurois
    French writer best known for his biographies (1885-1967) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    mary mccarthy, mary therese mccarthy, mccarthy
    United States satirical novelist and literary critic (1912-1989) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    carson mccullers, carson smith mccullers, mccullers
    United States novelist (1917-1967) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    herbert marshall mcluhan, marshall mcluhan, mcluhan
    Canadian writer noted for his analyses of the mass media (1911-1980) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    herman melville, melville
    United States writer of novels and short stories (1819-1891) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    merton, thomas merton
    United States religious and writer (1915-1968) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    james albert michener, james michener, michener
    United States writer of historical novels (1907-1997) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    henry miller, henry valentine miller, miller
    United States novelist whose novels were originally banned as pornographic (1891-1980) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    a. a. milne, alan alexander milne, milne
    English writer of stories for children (1882-1956) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    margaret mitchell, margaret munnerlyn mitchell, mitchell
    United States writer noted for her novel about the South during the American Civil War (1900-1949) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    mitford, nancy freeman mitford, nancy mitford
    English writer of comic novels (1904-1973) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    jessica lucy mitford, jessica mitford, mitford
    United States writer (born in England) who wrote on American culture (1917-1996) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    michel eyquem montaigne, michel montaigne, montaigne
    French writer regarded as the originator of the modern essay (1533-1592) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    l. m. montgomery, lucy maud montgomery, montgomery
    Canadian novelist (1874-1942) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    more, sir thomas more, thomas more
    English statesman who opposed Henry VIII's divorce from Catherine of Aragon and was imprisoned and beheaded; recalled for his concept of Utopia, the i more.. English statesman who opposed Henry VIII's divorce from Catherine of Aragon and was imprisoned and beheaded; recalled for his concept of Utopia, the ideal state (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    chloe anthony wofford, morrison, toni morrison
    United States writer whose novels describe the lives of African-Americans (born in 1931) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    h. h. munro, hector hugh munro, munro, saki
    British writer of short stories (1870-1916) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    dame jean iris murdoch, iris murdoch, murdoch
    British writer (born in Ireland) known primarily for her novels (1919-1999) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    alfred de musset, louis charles alfred de musset, musset
    French poet and writer (1810-1857) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    nabokov, vladimir nabokov, vladimir vladimirovich nabokov
    United States writer (born in Russia) (1899-1977) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    nash, ogden nash
    United States writer noted for his droll epigrams (1902-1971) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    harold nicolson, nicolson, sir harold george nicolson
    English diplomat and author (1886-1968) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    benjamin franklin norris jr., frank norris, norris
    United States writer (1870-1902) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    joyce carol oates, oates
    United States writer (born in 1938) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    edna o'brien, o'brien
    Irish writer (born in 1932) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    flannery o'connor, mary flannery o'connor, o'connor
    United States writer (1925-1964) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    liam o'flaherty, o'flaherty
    Irish writer of short stories (1896-1984) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    john henry o'hara, o'hara
    United States writer (1905-1970) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    michael ondaatje, ondaatje, philip michael ondaatje
    Canadian writer (born in Sri Lanka in 1943) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    baroness emmusca orczy, orczy
    British writer (born in Hungary) (1865-1947) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    eric arthur blair, eric blair, george orwell, orwell
    imaginative British writer concerned with social justice (1903-1950) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    page, thomas nelson page
    United States diplomat and writer about the Old South (1853-1922) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    dorothy parker, dorothy rothschild parker, parker
    United States writer noted for her sharp wit (1893-1967) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    boris leonidovich pasternak, boris pasternak, pasternak
    Russian writer whose best known novel was banned by Soviet authorities but translated and published abroad (1890-1960) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    alan paton, alan stewart paton, paton
    South African writer (1903-1988) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    percy, walker percy
    United States writer whose novels explored human alienation (1916-1990) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    gaius petronius, petronius, petronius arbiter
    Roman satirist (died in 66) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    plath, sylvia plath
    United States writer and poet (1932-1963) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    gaius plinius secundus, pliny, pliny the elder
    Roman author of an encyclopedic natural history; died while observing the eruption of Vesuvius (23-79) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    gaius plinius caecilius secundus, pliny, pliny the younger
    Roman writer and nephew of Pliny the Elder; author of books of letters that commented on affairs of the day (62-113) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    edgar allan poe, poe
    United States writer and poet (1809-1849) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    o. henry, porter, william sydney porter
    United States writer of short stories whose pen name was O. Henry (1862-1910) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    katherine anne porter, porter
    United States writer of novels and short stories (1890-1980) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    emily post, emily price post, post
    United States female author who wrote a book and a syndicated newspaper column on etiquette (1872-1960) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    ezra loomis pound, ezra pound, pound
    United States writer who lived in Europe; strongly influenced the development of modern literature (1885-1972) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    john cowper powys, powys
    British writer of novels about nature; one of three literary brothers (1872-1963) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    powys, theodore francis powys
    British writer of allegorical novels; one of three literary brothers (1875-1953) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    llewelyn powys, powys
    British writer of essays; one of three literary brothers (1884-1939) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    howard pyle, pyle
    United States writer and illustrator of children's books (1853-1911) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    pynchon, thomas pynchon
    United States writer of pessimistic novels about life in a technologically advanced society (born in 1937) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    ayn rand, rand
    United States writer (born in Russia) noted for her polemical novels and political conservativism (1905-1982) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    mordecai richler, richler
    Canadian novelist (born in 1931) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    kenneth roberts, roberts
    United States writer remembered for his historical novels about colonial America (1885-1957) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    anna eleanor roosevelt, eleanor roosevelt, roosevelt
    wife of Franklin Roosevelt and a strong advocate of human rights (1884-1962) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    philip milton roth, philip roth, roth
    United States writer whose novels portray middle-class Jewish life (born in 1933) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    jean-jacques rousseau, rousseau
    French philosopher and writer born in Switzerland; believed that the natural goodness of man was warped by society; ideas influenced the French Revolu more.. French philosopher and writer born in Switzerland; believed that the natural goodness of man was warped by society; ideas influenced the French Revolution (1712-1778) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    alfred damon runyon, damon runyon, runyon
    United States writer of humorous stylized stories about Broadway and the New York underground (1884-1946) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    ahmed salman rushdie, rushdie, salman rushdie
    British writer of novels who was born in India; one of his novels is regarded as blasphemous by Muslims and a fatwa was issued condemning him to death more.. British writer of novels who was born in India; one of his novels is regarded as blasphemous by Muslims and a fatwa was issued condemning him to death (born in 1947) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    a.e., george william russell, russell
    Irish writer whose pen name was A.E. (1867-1935) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    comte donatien alphonse francois de sade, de sade, marquis de sade, sade
    French soldier and writer whose descriptions of sexual perversion gave rise to the term `sadism' (1740-1814) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    j. d. salinger, jerome david salinger, salinger
    United States writer (born 1919) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    amandine aurore lucie dupin, baroness dudevant, george sand, sand
    French writer known for works concerning women's rights and independence (1804-1876) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    carl sandburg, sandburg
    United States writer remembered for his poetry in free verse and his six volume biography of Abraham Lincoln (1878-1967) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    saroyan, william saroyan
    United States writer of plays and short stories (1908-1981) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    dorothy l. sayers, dorothy leigh sayers, dorothy sayers, sayers
    English writer of detective fiction (1893-1957) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    johann christoph friedrich von schiller, schiller
    German romantic writer (1759-1805) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    scott, sir walter scott, walter scott
    British author of historical novels and ballads (1771-1832) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    robert william service, service
    Canadian writer (born in England) who wrote about life in the Yukon Territory (1874-1958) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    g. b. shaw, george bernard shaw, shaw
    British playwright (born in Ireland); founder of the Fabian Society (1856-1950) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    mary godwin wollstonecraft shelley, mary shelley, mary wollstonecraft shelley, shelley
    English writer who created Frankenstein's monster and married Percy Bysshe Shelley (1797-1851) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    nevil shute, nevil shute norway, shute
    English writer who settled in Norway after World War II (1899-1960) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    georges joseph christian simenon, georges simenon, simenon
    French writer (born in Belgium) best known for his detective novels featuring Inspector Maigret (1903-1989) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    sinclair, upton beall sinclair, upton sinclair
    United States writer whose novels argued for social reform (1878-1968) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    isaac bashevis singer, singer
    United States writer (born in Poland) of Yiddish stories and novels (1904-1991) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    smollett, tobias george smollett, tobias smollett
    Scottish writer of adventure novels (1721-1771) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    baron snow of leicester, c. p. snow, charles percy snow, snow
    English writer of novels about moral dilemmas in academe (1905-1980) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    aleksandr i. solzhenitsyn, aleksandr solzhenitsyn, alexander isayevich solzhenitsyn, solzhenitsyn
    Soviet writer and political dissident whose novels exposed the brutality of Soviet labor camps (born in 1918) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    sontag, susan sontag
    United States writer (born in 1933) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    dame muriel spark, muriel sarah spark, muriel spark, spark
    Scottish writer of satirical novels (born in 1918) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    frank morrison spillane, mickey spillane, spillane
    United States writer of popular detective novels (born in 1918) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    baronne anne louise germaine necker de steal-holstein, madame de stael, stael
    French romantic writer (1766-1817) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    sir richrd steele, steele
    English writer (1672-1729) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    gertrude stein, stein
    experimental expatriate United States writer (1874-1946) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    john ernst steinbeck, john steinbeck, steinbeck
    United States writer noted for his novels about agricultural workers (1902-1968) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    marie henri beyle, stendhal
    French writer whose novels were the first to feature psychological analysis of the character (1783-1842) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    sir leslie stephen, stephen
    English writer (1832-1904) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    laurence sterne, sterne
    English writer (born in Ireland) (1713-1766) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    robert louis balfour stevenson, robert louis stevenson, stevenson
    Scottish author (1850-1894) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    francis richard stockton, frank stockton, stockton
    United States writer (1834-1902) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    abraham stoker, bram stoker, stoker
    Irish writer of the horror novel about Dracula (1847-1912) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    harriet beecher stowe, harriet elizabeth beecher stowe, stowe
    United States writer of a novel about slavery that advanced the abolitionists' cause (1811-1896) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    styron, william styron
    United States writer best known for his novels (born in 1925) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    eugene sue, sue
    French writer whose novels described the sordid side of city life (1804-1857) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    john addington symonds, symonds
    English writer (1840-1893) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    rabindranath tagore, sir rabindranath tagore, tagore
    Indian writer and philosopher whose poetry (based on traditional Hindu themes) pioneered the use of colloquial Bengali (1861-1941) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    ida m. tarbell, ida minerva tarbell, ida tarbell, tarbell
    United States writer remembered for her muckraking investigations into industries in the early 20th century (1857-1944) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    thackeray, william makepeace thackeray
    English writer (born in India) (1811-1863) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    henry david thoreau, thoreau
    United States writer and social critic (1817-1862) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    alexis charles henri maurice de tocqueville, alexis de tocqueville, tocqueville
    French political writer noted for his analysis of American institutions (1805-1859) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    alice b. toklas, toklas
    United States writer remembered as the secretary and companion of Gertrude Stein (1877-1967) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    j.r.r. tolkien, john ronald reuel tolkien, tolkien
    British philologist and writer of fantasies (born in South Africa) (1892-1973) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    count lev nikolayevitch tolstoy, leo tolstoy, tolstoy
    Russian author remembered for two great novels (1828-1910) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    anthony trollope, trollope
    English writer of novels (1815-1882) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    ivan sergeevich turgenev, ivan turgenev, turgenev
    Russian writer of stories and novels and plays (1818-1883) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    sigrid undset, undset
    Norwegian novelist (1882-1949) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    louis untermeyer, untermeyer
    United States writer (1885-1977) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    john hoyer updike, john updike, updike
    United States author (born 1932) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    carl clinton van doren, carl van doren, van doren
    United States writer and literary critic (1885-1950) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    jorge mario pedro vargas llosa, mario vargas llosa, vargas llosa
    Peruvian writer (born in 1936) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    jules verne, verne
    French writer who is considered the father of science fiction (1828-1905) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    eugene luther vidal, gore vidal, vidal
    United States writer (born in 1925) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    arouet, francois-marie arouet, voltaire
    French writer who was the embodiment of 18th century Enlightenment (1694-1778) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    kurt vonnegut, vonnegut
    United States writer whose novels and short stories are a mixture of realism and satire and science fiction (born in 1922) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    john barrington wain, john wain, wain
    English writer (1925-1994) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    alice malsenior walker, alice walker, walker
    United States writer (born in 1944) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    edgar wallace, richard horatio edgar wallace, wallace
    English writer noted for his crime novels (1875-1932) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    fourth earl of orford, horace walpole, horatio walpole, walpole
    English writer and historian; son of Sir Robert Walpole (1717-1797) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    izaak walton, walton
    English writer remember for his treatise on fishing (1593-1683) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    mary augusta arnold ward, mrs. humphrey ward, ward
    English writer of novels who was an active opponent of the women's suffrage movement (1851-1920) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    robert penn warren, warren
    United States writer and poet (1905-1989) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    evelyn arthur saint john waugh, evelyn waugh, waugh
    English author of satirical novels (1903-1966) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    beatrice webb, martha beatrice potter webb, webb
    English writer and a central member of the Fabian Society (1858-1943) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    h. g. wells, herbert george wells, wells
    prolific English writer best known for his science-fiction novels; he also wrote on contemporary social problems and wrote popular accounts of history more.. prolific English writer best known for his science-fiction novels; he also wrote on contemporary social problems and wrote popular accounts of history and science (1866-1946) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    eudora welty, welty
    United States writer about rural southern life (1909-2001) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    franz werfel, werfel
    United States writer (1890-1945) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    cicily isabel fairfield, dame rebecca west, rebecca west, west
    British writer (born in Ireland) (1892-1983) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    edith newbold jones wharton, edith wharton, wharton
    United States novelist (1862-1937) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    e. b. white, elwyn brooks white, white
    United States writer noted for his humorous essays (1899-1985) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    patrick victor martindale white, patrick white, white
    Australian writer (1912-1990) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    elie wiesel, eliezer wiesel, wiesel
    United States writer (born in Romania) who survived Nazi concentration camps and is dedicated to keeping alive the memory of the Holocaust (born in 19 more.. United States writer (born in Romania) who survived Nazi concentration camps and is dedicated to keeping alive the memory of the Holocaust (born in 1928) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    oscar fingal o'flahertie wills wilde, oscar wilde, wilde
    Irish writer and wit (1854-1900) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    thornton niven wilder, thornton wilder, wilder
    United States writer and dramatist (1897-1975) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    angus frank johnstone wilson, sir angus wilson, wilson
    English writer of novels and short stories (1913-1991) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    harriet wilson, wilson
    author of the first novel by an African American that was published in the United States (1808-1870) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    owen wister, wister
    United States writer (1860-1938) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    p. g. wodehouse, pelham grenville wodehouse, wodehouse
    English writer known for his humorous novels and stories (1881-1975) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    thomas clayton wolfe, thomas wolfe, wolfe
    United States writer best known for his autobiographical novels (1900-1938) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    thomas kennerly wolfe jr., thomas wolfe, tom wolfe, wolfe
    United States writer who has written extensively on American culture (born in 1931) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    mary wollstonecraft, mary wollstonecraft godwin, wollstonecraft
    English writer and early feminist who denied male supremacy and advocated equal education for women; mother of Mary Shelley (1759-1797) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    ellen price wood, mrs. henry wood, wood
    English writer of novels about murders and thefts and forgeries (1814-1887) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    adeline virginia stephen woolf, virginia woolf, woolf
    English author whose work used such techniques as stream of consciousness and the interior monologue; prominent member of the Bloomsbury Group (1882-1 more.. English author whose work used such techniques as stream of consciousness and the interior monologue; prominent member of the Bloomsbury Group (1882-1941) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    herman wouk, wouk
    United States writer (born in 1915) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    richard wright, wright
    United States writer whose work is concerned with the oppression of African Americans (1908-1960) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    s. s. van dine, willard huntington wright, wright
    United States writer of detective novels (1888-1939) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    israel zangwill, zangwill
    English writer (1864-1926) (noun.person)
     
  • (noun.person)
    stefan zweig, zweig
    Austrian writer (1881-1942) (noun.person)
     

derivation (.... is derived from author)

  • be the author of (verb.creation)
    author, writer
    writes (books or stories or articles or the like) professionally (for pay) (noun.person)
     
  • someone who originates or causes or initiates something (noun.person)
    authorship, paternity
    the act of initiating a new idea or theory or writing (noun.act)
     
  • (verb.creation)
    bring forth, generate
    bring into existence (verb.creation)
     
  • (adj.pert)
    auctorial, authorial
    of or by or typical of an author (adj.pert)
     
  • writes (books or stories or articles or the like) professionally (for pay) (noun.person)
    authorship, composition, penning, writing
    the act of creating written works (noun.act)
     
  • (verb.creation)
    compose, indite, pen, write
    produce a literary work (verb.creation)
     
  • (verb.creation)
    author
    be the author of (verb.creation)
     
  • (verb.creation)
    publish, write
    have (one's written work) issued for publication (verb.creation)
     

domain category (author is domain category of ....)

  • be the author of (verb.creation)
    authorship, composition, penning, writing
    the act of creating written works (noun.act)
     
synonym hypernym hyponym instance hyponym derivation domain category writer generator source maker shaper communicator compose indite pen coiner abstracter alliterator authoress biographer aiken conrad aiken alger horatio alger algren nelson algren authorship paternity bring forth generate auctorial authorial authorship composition penning writing
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Related Words

. writer . generator, source . compose, indite, pen, write . maker, shaper . communicator . co-author . ghost, ghostwrite . coiner . abstracter, abstractor . alliterator . authoress . biographer . coauthor, joint author . commentator, reviewer . compiler . contributor . cyberpunk . drafter . dramatist, playwright . essayist, litterateur . folk writer . framer . gagman, gagster, gagwriter . ghost, ghostwriter . gothic romancer . hack, hack writer, literary hack . journalist . librettist . lyricist, lyrist . novelist . pamphleteer . paragrapher . poet . polemic, polemicist, polemist . poetiser, poetizer, rhymer, rhymester, versifier . scenarist . scriptwriter . space writer . speechwriter . tragedian . wordmonger . word-painter . wordsmith . aiken, conrad aiken, conrad potter aiken . alger, horatio alger . algren, nelson algren . andersen, hans christian andersen . anderson, sherwood anderson . aragon, louis aragon . asch, shalom asch, sholem asch, sholom asch . asimov, isaac asimov . auchincloss, louis auchincloss, louis stanton auchincloss . austen, jane austen . baldwin, james arthur baldwin, james baldwin . baraka, imamu amiri baraka, leroi jones . barth, john barth, john simmons barth . barthelme, donald barthelme . baum, frank baum, lyman frank brown . beauvoir, simone de beauvoir . beckett, samuel beckett . beerbohm, max beerbohm, sir henry maxmilian beerbohm . belloc, hilaire belloc, joseph hilaire peter belloc . bellow, saul bellow, solomon bellow . benchley, robert benchley, robert charles benchley . benet, william rose benet . ambrose bierce, ambrose gwinett bierce, bierce . boell, heinrich boell, heinrich theodor boell . arna wendell bontemps, bontemps . borges, jorge borges, jorge luis borges . boswell, james boswell . boyle, kay boyle . bradbury, ray bradbury, ray douglas bradbury . bronte, charlotte bronte . bronte, currer bell, emily bronte, emily jane bronte . anne bronte, bronte . artemus ward, browne, charles farrar browne . buck, pearl buck, pearl sydenstricker buck . bunyan, john bunyan . anthony burgess, burgess . burnett, frances eliza hodgson burnett, frances hodgson burnett . burroughs, edgar rice burroughs . burroughs, william burroughs, william s. burroughs, william seward burroughs . butler, samuel butler . cabell, james branch cabell . caldwell, erskine caldwell, erskine preston caldwell . calvino, italo calvino . albert camus, camus . canetti, elias canetti . capek, karel capek . carroll, charles dodgson, charles lutwidge dodgson, dodgson, lewis carroll, reverend dodgson . cather, willa cather, willa sibert cather . cervantes, cervantes saavedra, miguel de cervantes, miguel de cervantes saavedra . chandler, raymond chandler, raymond thornton chandler . chateaubriand, francois rene chateaubriand, vicomte de chateaubriand . cheever, john cheever . chesterton, g. k. chesterton, gilbert keith chesterton . chopin, kate chopin, kate o'flaherty chopin . agatha christie, christie, dame agatha mary clarissa christie . churchill, sir winston leonard spenser churchill, winston churchill, winston s. churchill . clemens, mark twain, samuel langhorne clemens . cocteau, jean cocteau . colette, sidonie-gabrielle claudine colette, sidonie-gabrielle colette . collins, wilkie collins, william wilkie collins . a. conan doyle, arthur conan doyle, conan doyle, sir arthur conan doyle . conrad, joseph conrad, teodor josef konrad korzeniowski . cooper, james fenimore cooper . crane, stephen crane . cummings, e. e. cummings, edward estlin cummings . clarence day, clarence shepard day jr., day . daniel defoe, defoe . de quincey, thomas de quincey . charles dickens, charles john huffam dickens, dickens . didion, joan didion . baroness karen blixen, blixen, dinesen, isak dinesen, karen blixen . doctorow, e. l. doctorow, edgard lawrence doctorow . dos passos, john dos passos, john roderigo dos passos . dostoevski, dostoevsky, dostoyevsky, feodor dostoevski, feodor dostoevsky, feodor dostoyevsky, feodor mikhailovich dostoevski, feodor mikhailovich dostoevsky, feodor mikhailovich dostoyevsky, fyodor dostoevski, fyodor dostoevsky, fyodor dostoyevsky, fyodor mikhailovi . dreiser, theodore dreiser, theodore herman albert dreiser . alexandre dumas, dumas . du maurier, george du maurier, george louis palmella busson du maurier . dame daphne du maurier, daphne du maurier, du maurier . durrell, lawrence durrell, lawrence george durrell . ehrenberg, ilya ehrenberg, ilya grigorievich ehrenberg . eliot, george eliot, mary ann evans . ellison, ralph ellison, ralph waldo ellison . emerson, ralph waldo emerson . farrell, james thomas farrell . edna ferber, ferber . fielding, henry fielding . f. scott fitzgerald, fitzgerald, francis scott key fitzgerald . flaubert, gustave flaubert . fleming, ian fleming, ian lancaster fleming . ford, ford hermann hueffer, ford madox ford . c. s. forester, cecil scott forester, forester . anatole france, france, jacques anatole francois thibault . benjamin franklin, franklin . carlos fuentes, fuentes . emile gaboriau, gaboriau . galsworthy, john galsworthy . erle stanley gardner, gardner . elizabeth cleghorn stevenson gaskell, elizabeth gaskell, gaskell . dr. seuss, geisel, theodor seuss geisel . gibran, kahlil gibran . andre gide, andre paul guillaume gide, gide . gjellerup, karl gjellerup . gogol, nikolai vasilievich gogol . golding, sir william gerald golding, william golding . goldsmith, oliver goldsmith . gombrowicz, witold gombrowicz . edmond de goncourt, edmond louis antoine huot de goncourt, goncourt . goncourt, jules alfred huot de goncourt, jules de goncourt . gordimer, nadine gordimer . aleksey maksimovich peshkov, aleksey maximovich peshkov, gorki, gorky, maksim gorky, maxim gorki . grahame, kenneth grahame . grass, gunter grass, gunter wilhelm grass . graves, robert graves, robert ranke graves . graham greene, greene, henry graham greene . grey, zane grey . grimm, jakob grimm, jakob ludwig karl grimm . grimm, wilhelm grimm, wilhelm karl grimm . haggard, rider haggard, sir henry rider haggard . elizabeth haldane, elizabeth sanderson haldane, haldane . edward everett hale, hale . alex haley, haley . hall, marguerite radclyffe hall, radclyffe hall . dashiell hammett, hammett, samuel dashiell hammett . hamsun, knut hamsun, knut pedersen . hardy, thomas hardy . frank harris, harris, james thomas harris . harris, joel chandler harris, joel harris . bret harte, harte . hasek, jaroslav hasek . hawthorne, nathaniel hawthorne . ben hecht, hecht . heinlein, robert a. heinlein, robert anson heinlein . heller, joseph heller . ernest hemingway, hemingway . hermann hesse, hesse . heyse, paul heyse, paul johann ludwig von heyse . dubois heyward, edwin dubois hayward, heyward . higginson, thomas higginson, thomas wentworth storrow higginson . e. t. a. hoffmann, ernst theodor amadeus hoffmann, ernst theodor wilhelm hoffmann, hoffmann . holmes, oliver wendell holmes . howells, william dean howells . edmond hoyle, hoyle . hubbard, l. ron hubbard . hughes, james langston hughes, langston hughes . hunt, james henry leigh hunt, leigh hunt . aldous huxley, aldous leonard huxley, huxley . irving, john irving . irving, washington irving . christopher isherwood, christopher william bradshaw isherwood, isherwood . helen hunt jackson, helen maria fiske hunt jackson, jackson . jacobs, jane jacobs . jacobs, w. w. jacobs, william wymark jacobs . henry james, james . jensen, johannes vilhelm jensen . dr. johnson, johnson, samuel johnson . erica jong, jong . james augustine aloysius joyce, james joyce, joyce . franz kafka, kafka . helen adams keller, helen keller, keller . jack kerouac, jean-louis lebris de kerouac, kerouac . ken elton kesey, ken kesey, kesey . joseph rudyard kipling, kipling, rudyard kipling . arthur koestler, koestler . jean de la fontaine, la fontaine . lardner, ring lardner, ringgold wilmer lardner . francois de la rochefoucauld, la rochefoucauld . d. h. lawrence, david herbert lawrence, lawrence . lawrence, lawrence of arabia, t. e. lawrence, thomas edward lawrence . david john moore cornwell, john le carre, le carre . dutch leonard, elmore john leonard, elmore leonard, leonard . lermontov, mikhail yurievich lermontov . doris lessing, doris may lessing, lessing . c. s. lewis, clive staples lewis, lewis . harry sinclair lewis, lewis, sinclair lewis . jack london, john griffith chaney, london . clarence malcolm lowry, lowry, malcolm lowry . john lyly, lyly . bulwer-lytton, edward george earle bulwer-lytton, first baron lytton, lytton . mailer, norman mailer . bernard malamud, malamud . malory, sir thomas malory, thomas malory . andre malraux, malraux . mann, thomas mann . katherine mansfield, kathleen mansfield beauchamp, mansfield . alessandro manzoni, manzoni . john marquand, john philip marquand, marquand . marsh, ngaio marsh . a. e. w. mason, alfred edward woodley mason, mason . maugham, somerset maugham, w. somerset maugham, william somerset maugham . guy de maupassant, henri rene albert guy de maupassant, maupassant . francois charles mauriac, francois mauriac, mauriac . andre maurois, emile herzog, maurois . mary mccarthy, mary therese mccarthy, mccarthy . carson mccullers, carson smith mccullers, mccullers . herbert marshall mcluhan, marshall mcluhan, mcluhan . herman melville, melville . merton, thomas merton . james albert michener, james michener, michener . henry miller, henry valentine miller, miller . a. a. milne, alan alexander milne, milne . margaret mitchell, margaret munnerlyn mitchell, mitchell . mitford, nancy freeman mitford, nancy mitford . jessica lucy mitford, jessica mitford, mitford . michel eyquem montaigne, michel montaigne, montaigne . l. m. montgomery, lucy maud montgomery, montgomery . more, sir thomas more, thomas more . chloe anthony wofford, morrison, toni morrison . h. h. munro, hector hugh munro, munro, saki . dame jean iris murdoch, iris murdoch, murdoch . alfred de musset, louis charles alfred de musset, musset . nabokov, vladimir nabokov, vladimir vladimirovich nabokov . nash, ogden nash . harold nicolson, nicolson, sir harold george nicolson . benjamin franklin norris jr., frank norris, norris . joyce carol oates, oates . edna o'brien, o'brien . flannery o'connor, mary flannery o'connor, o'connor . liam o'flaherty, o'flaherty . john henry o'hara, o'hara . michael ondaatje, ondaatje, philip michael ondaatje . baroness emmusca orczy, orczy . eric arthur blair, eric blair, george orwell, orwell . page, thomas nelson page . dorothy parker, dorothy rothschild parker, parker . boris leonidovich pasternak, boris pasternak, pasternak . alan paton, alan stewart paton, paton . percy, walker percy . gaius petronius, petronius, petronius arbiter . plath, sylvia plath . gaius plinius secundus, pliny, pliny the elder . gaius plinius caecilius secundus, pliny, pliny the younger . edgar allan poe, poe . o. henry, porter, william sydney porter . katherine anne porter, porter . emily post, emily price post, post . ezra loomis pound, ezra pound, pound . john cowper powys, powys . powys, theodore francis powys . llewelyn powys, powys . howard pyle, pyle . pynchon, thomas pynchon . ayn rand, rand . mordecai richler, richler . kenneth roberts, roberts . anna eleanor roosevelt, eleanor roosevelt, roosevelt . philip milton roth, philip roth, roth . jean-jacques rousseau, rousseau . alfred damon runyon, damon runyon, runyon . ahmed salman rushdie, rushdie, salman rushdie . a.e., george william russell, russell . comte donatien alphonse francois de sade, de sade, marquis de sade, sade . j. d. salinger, jerome david salinger, salinger . amandine aurore lucie dupin, baroness dudevant, george sand, sand . carl sandburg, sandburg . saroyan, william saroyan . dorothy l. sayers, dorothy leigh sayers, dorothy sayers, sayers . johann christoph friedrich von schiller, schiller . scott, sir walter scott, walter scott . robert william service, service . g. b. shaw, george bernard shaw, shaw . mary godwin wollstonecraft shelley, mary shelley, mary wollstonecraft shelley, shelley . nevil shute, nevil shute norway, shute . georges joseph christian simenon, georges simenon, simenon . sinclair, upton beall sinclair, upton sinclair . isaac bashevis singer, singer . smollett, tobias george smollett, tobias smollett . baron snow of leicester, c. p. snow, charles percy snow, snow . aleksandr i. solzhenitsyn, aleksandr solzhenitsyn, alexander isayevich solzhenitsyn, solzhenitsyn . sontag, susan sontag . dame muriel spark, muriel sarah spark, muriel spark, spark . frank morrison spillane, mickey spillane, spillane . baronne anne louise germaine necker de steal-holstein, madame de stael, stael . sir richrd steele, steele . gertrude stein, stein . john ernst steinbeck, john steinbeck, steinbeck . marie henri beyle, stendhal . sir leslie stephen, stephen . laurence sterne, sterne . robert louis balfour stevenson, robert louis stevenson, stevenson . francis richard stockton, frank stockton, stockton . abraham stoker, bram stoker, stoker . harriet beecher stowe, harriet elizabeth beecher stowe, stowe . styron, william styron . eugene sue, sue . john addington symonds, symonds . rabindranath tagore, sir rabindranath tagore, tagore . ida m. tarbell, ida minerva tarbell, ida tarbell, tarbell . thackeray, william makepeace thackeray . henry david thoreau, thoreau . alexis charles henri maurice de tocqueville, alexis de tocqueville, tocqueville . alice b. toklas, toklas . j.r.r. tolkien, john ronald reuel tolkien, tolkien . count lev nikolayevitch tolstoy, leo tolstoy, tolstoy . anthony trollope, trollope . ivan sergeevich turgenev, ivan turgenev, turgenev . sigrid undset, undset . louis untermeyer, untermeyer . john hoyer updike, john updike, updike . carl clinton van doren, carl van doren, van doren . jorge mario pedro vargas llosa, mario vargas llosa, vargas llosa . jules verne, verne . eugene luther vidal, gore vidal, vidal . arouet, francois-marie arouet, voltaire . kurt vonnegut, vonnegut . john barrington wain, john wain, wain . alice malsenior walker, alice walker, walker . edgar wallace, richard horatio edgar wallace, wallace . fourth earl of orford, horace walpole, horatio walpole, walpole . izaak walton, walton . mary augusta arnold ward, mrs. humphrey ward, ward . robert penn warren, warren . evelyn arthur saint john waugh, evelyn waugh, waugh . beatrice webb, martha beatrice potter webb, webb . h. g. wells, herbert george wells, wells . eudora welty, welty . franz werfel, werfel . cicily isabel fairfield, dame rebecca west, rebecca west, west . edith newbold jones wharton, edith wharton, wharton . e. b. white, elwyn brooks white, white . patrick victor martindale white, patrick white, white . elie wiesel, eliezer wiesel, wiesel . oscar fingal o'flahertie wills wilde, oscar wilde, wilde . thornton niven wilder, thornton wilder, wilder . angus frank johnstone wilson, sir angus wilson, wilson . harriet wilson, wilson . owen wister, wister . p. g. wodehouse, pelham grenville wodehouse, wodehouse . thomas clayton wolfe, thomas wolfe, wolfe . thomas kennerly wolfe jr., thomas wolfe, tom wolfe, wolfe . mary wollstonecraft, mary wollstonecraft godwin, wollstonecraft . ellen price wood, mrs. henry wood, wood . adeline virginia stephen woolf, virginia woolf, woolf . herman wouk, wouk . richard wright, wright . s. s. van dine, willard huntington wright, wright . israel zangwill, zangwill . stefan zweig, zweig . author, writer . authorship, paternity . bring forth, generate . auctorial, authorial . authorship, composition, penning, writing . compose, indite, pen, write . author . publish, write . authorship, composition, penning, writing


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