Author
in sentence
857 examples of Author in a sentence
So more and more we're trying to find ways for people to actually
author
things inside of the museums themselves, to be creative even as they're looking at other people's creativity and understanding them.
So in this wall, the collections wall, you can actually see all 3,000 artworks all at the same time, and you can actually
author
your own individual walking tours of the museum, so you can share them, and someone can take a tour with the museum director or a tour with their little cousin.
This is a short story by the
author
Jennifer Egan called "Black Box."
Another great example of fiction and the short story on Twitter, Elliott Holt is an
author
who wrote a story called "Evidence."
And the
author
Teju Cole has done a lot of experimentation with putting a literary twist on events of the news.
Now there was one English
author
who anticipated this kind of future where we would trade away our autonomy and freedom for comfort.
Even more so than George Orwell, the
author
is, of course, Aldous Huxley.
She's the
author
of "Strangers on a Train" and "The Talented Mr. Ripley," books that are all about how jealousy, it muddles our minds, and once we're in the sphere, in that realm of jealousy, the membrane between what is and what could be can be pierced in an instant.
Are you reading an interview by an
author?
Like an
author
of a book, this started out as writing short sentences, or sequences of DNA code, but this soon turned into writing paragraphs and then full-on novels of DNA code, to make important biological instructions for proteins and living cells.
But it also left me in a really tricky position moving forward as an
author
trying to figure out how in the world I was ever going to write a book again that would ever please anybody, because I knew well in advance that all of those people who had adored "Eat, Pray, Love" were going to be incredibly disappointed in whatever I wrote next because it wasn't going to be "Eat, Pray, Love," and all of those people who had hated "Eat, Pray, Love" were going to be incredibly disappointed in whatever I wrote next because it would provide evidence that I still lived.
It was actually retracted from the journal Lancet, in which it was published, and that author, a physician, had his medical license taken away from him.
When my first children's book was published in 2001, I returned to my old elementary school to talk to the students about being an
author
and an illustrator, and when I was setting up my slide projector in the cafetorium, I looked across the room, and there she was: my old lunch lady.
This
author
says, "Snowy days or finding money in your pants is awesome."
He's the
author
of seven books, six of them on Mayan ceramics.
As my favorite author, Jane Austen, puts it, "An unmarried woman of seven and twenty can never hope to feel or inspire affection again."
And we started to read, and we'd read one author, then another author, and by reading such short poems, they all began to realize that what the poetic language did was to break a certain logic, and create another system.
This is a history that the
author
experienced firsthand.
Their small house in Aracataca where the
author
spent his childhood formed the main inspiration for Macondo.
One of my favorite educators, Brazilian
author
and scholar Paulo Freire, speaks quite explicitly about the need for education to be used as a tool for critical awakening and shared humanity.
And interestingly, the
author
of the lab resume experiment offered some sort of a solution.
Its
author
was a man named Hans Asperger, who ran a combination clinic and residential school in Vienna in the 1930s.
It came to the
author'
s boyfriend in a dream.
He is probably best known as the
author
of "The Black Dahlia" and "L.A. Confidential."
And last summer, I had the chance to meet with former United States Attorney General and Torture Memo author, Alberto Gonzales.
The contemporaries of William Beveridge, who was the architect of the first welfare state and the
author
of the Beveridge Report, had little faith in what they called the average sensual or emotional man.
And when I tweeted at it about my project, it suggested that I might like to try and get hold of the work of the Panamanian
author
Juan David Morgan.
Euclid is known as the
author
of a singularly influential work known as "Elements."
How can human-made squiggles on a page reflect lights into our eyes that send signals to our brains that we logically and emotionally decode as complex narratives that move us to fight, cry, sing, and think, that are strong enough not only to hold up a world that is completely invented by the author, but also to change the reader's perspective on the real world that resumes only when the final squiggle is reached?
More subtly, though, it can recover a second story behind every object, the story of how, when and by whom a text was created, and, sometimes, what the
author
was thinking at the time he wrote.
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