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56 result(s) for "MacIntyre, Linden"
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The bishop's man : a novel
Father Duncan MacAskill, already troubled by years of being the bishop's \"hatchet man\", is sent to a parish church near where he grew up, only to find the memories of the past and new temptations setting him on a possibly disastrous path.
The lived narrative versus the learned narrative
In public readings, panels and other forms of chatter I’ve grown accustomed to the question: is it difficult changing gears (sometimes the analogy refers to hats) from journalist to novelist and do I often get confused and find myself bogged down by fact when writing fiction and tempted, in my ‘factual’ reporting, to make stuff up. The answer, as a rule: I have only one hat. And if I’m in the mood I might nimbly introduce another metaphor – I am an old-fashioned bicycle with but one gear for the direct transmission of creative energy through relevant machinery to cause
All the News That's Fit to Sell.(journalistic ethics)
Throughout history the very act of writing, of making a record, has augmented the apparent veracity of what is recorded. But even the most solemn-looking Egyptian hieroglyphics have been found to contain deliberate omissions and cunning embellishments of history. The art of propaganda is an old one, but one that has proved itself readily adaptable to journalism, literature, and every aspect of our newly wired world.