"historical novelist" meaning in English

See historical novelist in All languages combined, or Wiktionary

Noun

Forms: historical novelists [plural]
Head templates: {{en-noun}} historical novelist (plural historical novelists)
  1. One who writes historical novels.
    Sense id: en-historical_novelist-en-noun-sZJkGT33 Categories (other): English entries with incorrect language header

Inflected forms

Download JSON data for historical novelist meaning in English (2.4kB)

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          "text": "[…] the actual manners, customs, and peculiarities of some ages are illustrated and explained, and, though real personages are introduced, they are not clothed with fictions inconsistent or at variance with their real character. / In the class of those who have been most successful as historical novelists, we would rank the author of the ‘Lollards.’ It is true that his ‘Calthorpe’ was a work of mere fiction, but of fiction so nearly allied to nature, that we could confidently say, if the events did not happen, they might have happened.",
          "type": "quotation"
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        {
          "ref": "1999, Michael Petracca, The Graceful Lie: A Method for Making Fiction, Prentice Hall",
          "text": "Historical novelists usually create a language for their characters that suggests the period without reproducing it in its archaic fullness.",
          "type": "quotation"
        },
        {
          "ref": "2008, J. E. Smyth, “Classical Hollywood and the Filmic Writing of Interracial History, 1931–1939”, in Mary Beltrán, Camilla Fojas, editors, Mixed Race Hollywood, New York, N.Y., London: New York University Press, part I (Miscegenation: Mixed Race and the Imagined Nation), page 39",
          "text": "Hervey Allen, one of the most popular historical novelists of the last century, had this to say of the distinction between historiography and historical fiction: “Neither historian nor novelist can reproduce the real past,” but historical novelists can give “the reader a more vivid, adequate, and significant apprehension of past epochs than does the historian.”",
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        "One who writes historical novels."
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          "text": "[…] the actual manners, customs, and peculiarities of some ages are illustrated and explained, and, though real personages are introduced, they are not clothed with fictions inconsistent or at variance with their real character. / In the class of those who have been most successful as historical novelists, we would rank the author of the ‘Lollards.’ It is true that his ‘Calthorpe’ was a work of mere fiction, but of fiction so nearly allied to nature, that we could confidently say, if the events did not happen, they might have happened.",
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          "ref": "1999, Michael Petracca, The Graceful Lie: A Method for Making Fiction, Prentice Hall",
          "text": "Historical novelists usually create a language for their characters that suggests the period without reproducing it in its archaic fullness.",
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          "ref": "2008, J. E. Smyth, “Classical Hollywood and the Filmic Writing of Interracial History, 1931–1939”, in Mary Beltrán, Camilla Fojas, editors, Mixed Race Hollywood, New York, N.Y., London: New York University Press, part I (Miscegenation: Mixed Race and the Imagined Nation), page 39",
          "text": "Hervey Allen, one of the most popular historical novelists of the last century, had this to say of the distinction between historiography and historical fiction: “Neither historian nor novelist can reproduce the real past,” but historical novelists can give “the reader a more vivid, adequate, and significant apprehension of past epochs than does the historian.”",
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This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable English dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2024-06-23 from the enwiktionary dump dated 2024-06-20 using wiktextract (1b9bfc5 and 0136956). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.

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