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Examples
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The SF-learned may also recall William Golding's The Inheritors and two Poul Anderson stories dealing with Cro-Magnons; the literati may be aware of Björn Kurtén's Dance of the Tiger.
Athena Andreadis, Ph.D.: The House with Many Doors (or, at the Caucasus, Hang a Right!) Ph.D. Athena Andreadis 2011
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The SF-learned may also recall William Golding's The Inheritors and two Poul Anderson stories dealing with Cro-Magnons; the literati may be aware of Björn Kurtén's Dance of the Tiger.
Athena Andreadis, Ph.D.: The House with Many Doors (or, at the Caucasus, Hang a Right!) Ph.D. Athena Andreadis 2011
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The SF-learned may also recall William Golding's The Inheritors and two Poul Anderson stories dealing with Cro-Magnons; the literati may be aware of Björn Kurtén's Dance of the Tiger.
Athena Andreadis, Ph.D.: The House with Many Doors (or, at the Caucasus, Hang a Right!) Ph.D. Athena Andreadis 2011
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The SF-learned may also recall William Golding's The Inheritors and two Poul Anderson stories dealing with Cro-Magnons; the literati may be aware of Björn Kurtén's Dance of the Tiger.
Athena Andreadis, Ph.D.: The House with Many Doors (or, at the Caucasus, Hang a Right!) Ph.D. Athena Andreadis 2011
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What is fascinating about "William Golding" is the portrait that emerges of a man of almost absurdly dramatic contrasts.
NYT > Global Home By WILLIAM BOYD 2010
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Jack Merridew from 'Lord of the Flies' by William Golding 1954 Marooned on a desert island, which has been—ever since Defoe—the metaphorical laboratory of choice for explorations of human nature
The Hazards of Fairyland Frank Cottrell Boyce 2011
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Some time in the mid-1960s, James Lovelock, a scientist of international distinction, and his friend William Golding, destined to win the Nobel prize for literature, were taking a walk near the Wiltshire village of Bowerchalke, to which they had both retreated to escape the conventions of gainful employment.
James Lovelock wins Observer lifetime achievement at ethical awards 2011
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War of the Buttons Long before William Golding published "Lord of the Flies" in 1954, a French schoolteacher penned a novel exploring the bellicose instincts of schoolboys.
The Formidable Nouveautés of Fall Lennox Morrison 2011
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Often, he notes, lobsters are associated with absurdity or insanity: In William Golding's "Pincher Martin," the hallucinating island castaway mistakes his own fleshy hands for lobsters.
Reconsidering the Lobster By Jasper White 2011
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Some time in the mid-1960s, James Lovelock, a scientist of international distinction, and his friend William Golding, destined to win the Nobel prize for literature, were taking a walk near the Wiltshire village of Bowerchalke, to which they had both retreated to escape the conventions of gainful employment.
James Lovelock wins Observer lifetime achievement at ethical awards 2011
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