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The Sentence is a 2021 novel by American author Louise Erdrich. [ 1 ] Set in Minneapolis, Minnesota, the story concerns Tookie, an Indigenous woman who is haunted by Flora, a former customer at the bookstore where Tookie works.
The Sentence Is Death [1] is a 2019 mystery novel by British author Anthony Horowitz and the second novel in the Hawthorne and Horowitz series. The story focuses on solving the murder of a teetotaling solicitor who was murdered with an expensive bottle of wine.
The Sentences (Latin: Sententiae in quatuor IV libris distinctae; Sententiarum. English: Sentences Divided into Four Books; Sentences) is a compendium of Christian theology written by Peter Lombard around 1150. It was the most important religious textbook of the Middle Ages.
The novel includes stories of a World War I veteran of the German Army and is set in a small North Dakota town. [49] The novel was a finalist for the National Book Award. Erdrich's interwoven series of novels have drawn comparisons with William Faulkner's Yoknapatawpha novels. Like Faulkner's, Erdrich's successive novels created multiple ...
Kenneth Turan writing for the Los Angeles Times called the movie, "a personal and horrifying look at the effect of mandatory minimum prison sentences" [3] Dennis Harvey from Variety magazine said that the documentary was "earnest but flawed", stating: "The subject is inherently engrossing, but a better documentary could (and probably will) be ...
Sentences: The Life of MF Grimm, a 2007 autobiographical graphic novel by MF Grimm; The Sentence, a 2018 American documentary film by Rudy Valdez "The Sentence" (The Outer Limits), an episode of the TV series The Outer Limits; The Sentence, a 2016 novel and performance piece by Alistair Fruish; The Sentence (2021 novel), a novel by Louise Erdrich
This Book Is the Longest Sentence Ever Written and Then Published (2020), by humor writer Dave Cowen, consists of one sentence that runs for 111,111 words, and is a stream of consciousness memoir [9] [10] [11]
Garfield was inspired to write this novel sequel because he was so disappointed in the 1974 film adaption, he described it as "incendiary". He felt upset that the film's audience was encouraged by the violence and vigilantism, despite the story being against both topics in his book, in which Charles Bronson agrees with. Garfield thought that ...