Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"afterword" Definitions
  1. a section at the end of a book that says something about the main text, and may be written by a different author

155 Sentences With "afterword"

How to use afterword in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "afterword" and check conjugation/comparative form for "afterword". Mastering all the usages of "afterword" from sentence examples published by news publications.

I put an afterword, or a dedication, in to him.
Scholar Eric Selland's afterword summary nicely bookends Sho Sugita's informative introduction.
Ortberg did not exactly plan for this—beginning, middle, end, afterword.
They showed their appreciation and Irish spirit afterword, in appropriately rowdy fashion.
An excerpt of the afterword was published Wednesday in the Financial Times.
The report's afterword states that "Sir Stephen looked for suppression and found chaos".
They skate, and then chill afterword and do it again the next day.
"I had no idea who I was," she writes in the book's afterword.
In an eerily prescient 2010 afterword to his critique of media narratives, Hello Everybody!
McKean also provides a new introduction to the book, alongside Gaiman's own introduction and afterword.
It is still in print, and there are plans for a paperback, with a new afterword.
An afterword, credited only to McDarrah's estate, fills in the grainier details of the photographer's legacy.
As Fred Moten has remarked in his afterword to the book, the works resemble meditative Tantra art.
Other movies do exist with the premise of watching a piece of recorded material and dying afterword.
That afterword lifts the curtain a little, offering a few paragraphs about Mr. Desmond's childhood in Winslow, Ariz.
With the exception of Robinson's foreword and afterword, no single contribution is given any sort of headline treatment.
In "The Emperor of Lies," he listed mini-biographies for the historical figures and included an informative afterword.
In an afterword, Atkinson explains that the sort of covert operation she has dramatized actually did take place.
In an afterword to "Bring Up the Bodies," Mantel explains just how thin the record is on her.
Choi attended a performing arts high school like the one she writes about, she explains in an afterword.
The "Autobiography" ends with a remarkable suite of portraits of the two, and an afterword, by Ms. Kalman.
"Yeah, you, mamá," she writes in her afterword, hailing the reader the way workers addressed each other at McDonald's.
"Change winds have blown over Archangel, since we began to publish," Gibson writes in the afterword of the collected edition.
Holger saw Dirk play as a youth in Schweinfurt, and afterword he got on the court and worked with him.
So I wrote an afterword about how the really logical thing the '90s led us to was le grand orange.
The one moment — and I mentioned it in the afterword to the book that's coming out in paperback this summer.
Earlier this year, Oswalt — who writes the afterword — released I'll Be Gone in the Dark with the help of other contributors.
In his afterword, Beck urges readers to watch out for manipulation in their own lives and to set their own priorities.
But the alternating structure proves powerful, gaining momentum through what Haynes, in an afterword, calls "the sheer weight of inevitable plot."
Rand's friend, New York Times art director and author Steven Heller, penned a new afterword to the reprinted A Designer's Art.
"To this day, few people around the world know any of these young women's names," Mazza writes in the book's afterword.
Cummins has put in the research, as she describes in her afterword, and the scenes on La Bestia are vividly conjured.
The book contains an afterword by Guy Marc Hinant, Goblet's music producer boyfriend, who collaborated on a few of the chapters.
The published afterword provides the reader with additional information into the early 2000s, still before the Ringling Brothers ceased for good.
"These were the coolest pictures of Capote I'd ever seen, framed like shots from a Hitchcock movie," he says in an afterword.
As Kosofsky explains in an afterword to the book, Will was already in a relationship with Adina when he first met Jeanie.
Meyers asked Oswalt to read aloud her "Letter to an Old Man," the afterword, in which McNamara envisioned the killer being arrested.
It is thrilling because of the research done by Mr. Caro and his wife, Ina Caro (as he acknowledges in an afterword).
The afterword, which provides context for historical happenings after the book&aposs 1960 publication, is written by circus historian Fred Dahlinger, Jr.
"Regional Advantage" has become a classic study of what works and goes wrong for innovation ecosystems, but it may need a new afterword.
" There's a similarly strident tone in the afterword, which warns about the consequences for a jaded and cynical generation "if Bernie turns lame.
In the text below, which appears in the book as an afterword, author Jonathan Ames explains what makes Sandler so special to him.
In the 1989 reissue of "My First Thirty Years," published by The Book Club of Texas, he outlined the mystery in an afterword.
According to historian Fred Dahlinger Jr.'s 2008 afterword in Henry Ringling North's memoir, Richard's son Paul continued operating the ranch in Montana.
The diversity of the population also comes across, which is something explicitly touched upon in the book's afterword, by the historian William Dalrymple.
Now Lyons has rescued this work from obscurity, nimbly arguing in her afterword that it defines a "pivotal moment" in Tanizaki's literary development.
An afterword titled "About This Project" — the first place the word "I" appears — was written only after extended urging of his editor, Amanda Cook.
Apparently the shuttle will be parked during the service, but afterword, it will take its passengers on a two-loop ride through the neighborhood.
Cope and Marsh were actual historical figures, and the afterword to this novel explains that much of the story drew extensively from real events.
" As Murray notes in an afterword, the title "Valiant Gentlemen" is a nod to Sarita Sanford Ward's memoir of her husband, "A Valiant Gentleman.
The essay was adapted from the new afterword in the paperback edition of her 2017 memoir, "What Happened," which is being released on Tuesday.
In 1995, in an afterword to a new edition of "Prozac Nation," Ms. Wurtzel sought to draw a broader lesson from her landmark book.
With a foreword by John Leguizamo and afterword by Don Cheadle, movie buffs have no excuse not to lose themselves in this oddball book.
The current President talks sympathetically about Lincoln's struggles, the death of his 11-year-old son in this building, the ghosts that haunted him afterword.
We talked afterword about the ideas presented to him in the language of a corporate culture laboring to say simple things using politically correct language.
In an afterword, he gives the address where the incident supposedly occurred and asks if anyone who knows anything about it can still come forward.
Dewilde also wrote an afterword following July's truck attack in Nice, when a jihadist ran over 86 people in a crowd enjoying Bastille Day celebrations.
McNamara was unable to finish the book before she died, leaving Oswalt — who writes the afterword — and other contributors to complete the volume for her.
" In the afterword to the book, he wrote, "I can trust a man who embraces his enemy and then trusts him to tell his story.
The other is "Rosselli's passionate friendship with the Italian writer and politician Rocco Scotellaro," as described in Roberta Antognini's afterword, … she met [Scotellaro] in 1950.
" But as Dorian Lynskey reminds us in the afterword of his book: Whether that music catches on and succeeds "depends on the rest of us.
I recommend the 1999 edition from W. W. Norton with a foreword by Schlesinger and an afterword by Richard E. Neustadt and Graham T. Allison.
"A big tripod, a Leica, a 40mm lens, Kodachrome film and two years of wandering around," the now Mississippi-based Clay writes in an afterword.
Many readers and educators will also appreciate the afterword and extensive back matter, including a moving photo album, family Who's Who and extensive glossary section.
In her afterword, Cummins relates that she did tremendous research, traveling extensively, interviewing many people, sitting with her material in utter seriousness for four years.
It was based loosely on the author's own childhood, and in an afterword she discusses some of the hardships her family and others she knew faced.
He impressed Tess Gerritsen and others with his writing; he contributed a smart afterword to a reprint of " From Doon with Death ," Ruth Rendell's first novel.
The essay, published in the Atlantic, was adapted from the soon-to-be-published afterword of Clinton's 2017 memoir about the 2016 presidential election, What Happened.
Her leaving was a gracious one, which is noted by both the critic Alastair Macaulay (who wrote the perceptive afterword) and her fellow dancer Carolyn Brown.
Dancing with Merce Cunningham is topped-off by a promising afterword by Alastair Macaulay, a leading dance critic who expects to write a book on Cunningham.
Writing in an afterword to the 10th-anniversary edition in 1984, he used a Swedish word (it was his mother's native language) to describe the phenomenon.
In the book's afterword, Ms. Lange writes about how her first album purchase was "Highway 61 Revisited," released in 19823 by Bob Dylan, a fellow Minnesotan.
The handsome volume, which comes with a new foreword, an afterword, and annotations sourcing every illustration, is the perfect introduction or reintroduction to Steinberg's incomparable style.
" The Washington Post cites O'Connor's assertion in the afterword that "Hemings's feelings for Jefferson might well have fallen somewhere along the spectrum between love and Stockholm syndrome.
"The visual narrative I have weaved implies that these conditions have brought on a new migration of Acadians away from their homeland," he writes in an afterword.
More than three decades later, the Sierra Club folded its publishing program, and Pietsch seized his chance, reissuing "The River Why" with a new afterword by Duncan.
"When it came out, people weren't ready for it, and now people are," said Aisha Karefa-Smart, Baldwin's niece, who wrote an afterword for the new edition.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Cummins has put in the research, as she describes in her afterword, and the scenes on La Bestia are vividly conjured.
The title is taken from "The Magic Flute," and in an afterword Chee says that he meant his book to be a novelistic "reinvention" of Mozart's creation.
"The Darkening Trapeze: Last Poems" was edited by Levis's lifelong friend the poet David St. John, whose afterword directs the reader's attention to this book's unusual curatorial journey.
Schiff, one of Trump's most outspoken critics, said afterword that he trusted Mueller's judgment but called to see the underlying evidence that led to the special counsel's decision.
"The rich excitement of dusk," Roiphe writes in an afterword on her research method, which involved long, rambling conversations with the surviving ­witnesses to her cast's final months.
Walton follows each story with a brief afterword elaborating on some combination of its origins and publication history, often debating whether the work is, in fact, a story.
Snow also includes remembrances of the Disneyland from his childhood that would be perfectly at home in an afterword, but he lodges them distractingly in the second chapter.
"It pains me to admit that 'Code Name Verity' is fiction," and that the characters are "not actually real people," she wrote in an afterword to that book.
DeWitt has spoken regularly about her epic run-ins with copy editors and agents and publishers; the afterword in the new edition of "The Last Samurai" is uncharacteristically discreet.
The original edition boiled thousands of potential candidates down to 213, the bulk of them taken between 1971 and 1975, supplemented by a brilliant afterword by Leslie George Katz.
In an afterword to the English edition of "The Three-Body Problem," he recalls a visit to his grandparents in Henan that coincided with the great flood of 1975.
But when Arthur died, Skeleton Tree became the band's most urgent concern, and Lovely Creatures, "lost, for a time, its place in the narrative," Cave says in the book's afterword.
Crase is right when he opens his "Afterword" with: The appearance in print of the selected poems of Donald Britton is an affront to cynicism and a triumph over fate.
The fantastical world of "The Explosion Chronicles", in which official decrees make flowers bloom out of season and skyscrapers rise overnight, follows the principles of what Mr Yan's afterword calls "mythorealism".
My general perception as I described it in the afterword — which was written in December — was that it's going to be a much more slow and uneven process than some thought.
In the book's afterword, he relates a dream in which his translator imagined him as "a high-class woman of a certain age" in a kimono shop in the early 1900s.
Volcker, who died Sunday at 92, hit the president for attacking the Federal Reserve, according to a planned afterword to the paperback edition of his autobiography, originally released in October 2018.
"John Ringling North passed away in 1985, having achieved a wealth far beyond his more famous uncle," reported circus historian Fred Dahlinger, Jr. in the afterword of Henry Ringling North's memoir.
Along with their essays, there is an "Afterword" by Douglas Crase in which he writes movingly about the New York poetry circles that he and Britton moved in during the '80s.
Oswalt promised he would finish the book for her, and earlier this year, the star — who writes the afterword — released I'll Be Gone in the Dark with the help of other contributors.
An afterword discusses organizations that help homeless kids in India and points out that hunger, violence and a lack of access to good education affect kids in the United States as well.
In 1972, I was the editor for a translation of the book, translated by the poet Anne Halley, with annotation and an afterword by Harry Zohn, a distinguished scholar of German literature.
Simon's explorations of African and Brazilian music, gospel and zydeco, could almost serve as an afterword to Jack Hamilton's JUST AROUND MIDNIGHT: Rock and Roll and the Racial Imagination (Harvard University, $29.95).
In an afterword to the forthcoming English translation, he writes: On the night of June 4 I listened in my hotel to the chaotic noise outside, and the muffled sounds of gunfire.
In the afterword to "Frog Music," she explains that nearly all her characters came from the historical record, and then shows us what she found, what she surmised, and what she invented.
City Lights has bracketed this English translation with an introduction by Mark Polizzotti, the director of the publications program at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and an afterword by poet Ron Padgett.
You write in the afterword about some less positive developments in your view in the global economy, and the global political economy in particular: the surge in populism here and in Europe, Brexit.
The women of Woman World (aka Dame District, Lady Land, etc) are, as Dhaliwal notes in an afterword, "learning to talk again because they're not being interrupted," and the results are utterly joyous.
In an afterword, Kirk Curnutt, a professor and board member of the Ernest Hemingway Society, writes that, most of all, the short story captures the importance of Paris to Hemingway and the world.
The musician and scholar George Lewis's ambitious opera, "Afterword," which tells an allegorical history of Chicago's historic and still-formidable Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians, will be staged on Friday night.
In the afterword, he insists that ordinary Muslims must not be blamed for the series of attacks that have rocked France since January 2015, that people must not fall into fear of the other.
"Her book exploded the tidy conceit in which I had been schooled: that literary criticism and social politics were things apart from one another," Rebecca Mead wrote in an afterword to the new edition.
But Mr. Wren, who reveals in an afterword that he enjoyed cocktails with Helen Hope Montgomery Scott as a social visitor to Ardrossan in the 1990s, never writes in a tone suggesting anything but reverence.
It includes a great afterword from the author on his fascination with Williams, and both the inside cover and back cover pull the curtain back on some of Updike's own self-editing, a nice touch.
Big stretches of Withers's life get a fairly cursory look, and Lauterbach basically calls it a day after King's assassination in 1968, dispatching the photographer's subsequent four decades in an introductory chapter and an afterword.
"Sometimes an idea sparks your mind and lingers, glowing in the dark in the back of your head, like a shiny thought-sparkle," de Wilde writes in an afterword for The Island of the Colorblind.
Fisher is frank about sexuality in a way that, as Jane Vandenburgh speculates in an afterword, might have kept her from seeking a market for the book, as she halfheartedly did when in need of money.
"By candidly confronting the reader about whether money and wealth 'should' make a difference in the quality of medical care, Chandler launches an incredibly bold social challenge," Ms. Trott wrote in an afterword in Strand Magazine.
The autobiographical project began, as Philip Horne explains in an afterword to the reissues, as a plan to collect William James's letters, after his death, in 1910, with commentaries provided by his one-year-younger brother.
"My interest in the library began maybe two decades ago, when I became drawn to both architecture and the panoramic photograph," Schiff states in an afterword to his monograph The Library Book, out April 1 from Aperture.
"It was in the countryside that Potter could indulge the creative and curious personality that would not fit in neatly with the image of a proper Victorian young lady," illustrator Eleanor Taylor writes in the book's afterword.
In the book's afterword, she agonizes about not being the right person to write the book ("I wished someone slightly browner than me would write it") but decides that she has a moral obligation to the story.
Both died of AIDS or, as Douglas Crase correctly writes in his "Afterword" to Britton's In the Empire of the Air: We say 'died,' but of course they were killed, by a threat they could never have foreseen.
Professionals of Hope, The Selected Writings of Subcomandante Marcos, by Subcomandante Marcos, afterword by Gabriela Jauregui (Song Cave) $39.693 This book isn't exactly an "art" book, but I included it because it almost feels like an art project.
The fatal flaw of classical Aristotelian tragedy later came to be interpreted as a moral flaw, and Losing Earth takes up this idea in a sanctimonious afterword pleading for more focus on the "moral dimension" of climate change.
But reflecting on "Chickenheads" in an afterword to a new edition, she describes how she modeled her own method on hip-hop, which has long pursued something more "faulty, contradictory, messy" than a lone, exacting voice would allow.
"People want leadership not only from the living but from the dead," writes Leslie George Katz in the book's original essay (reprinted in the present edition along with a new afterword by photo historian and curator Peter Galassi).
Although this debut novel is inspired by the author's personal experiences (as noted in an afterword), you don't need to have grown up in Bogotá to be taken in by Contreras's simple but memorable prose and absorbing story line.
" A 2005 afterword by Palahniuk said the book "presented a new social model for men to share their lives," one that would give them "the structure and roles and rules of a game" but not be "too touchy-feely.
Framed by an author's preface and a factual afterword, the book is anchored in a real episode in Stevenson's life, the stay of some months in San Francisco that culminated in his marriage to the newly divorced Fanny Osbourne.
An enduring masterpiece of investigative journalism by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar, it includes a new afterword by the authors that brings this remarkable story of greed and double-dealings up to date twenty years after the famed deal.
"A Room on the Garden Side," is a World War II-era fiction that "contains all the trademark elements readers love in Hemingway," said Kirk Curnutt, a board member of the Hemingway Society, who contributed an afterword for the Strand.
Knox begins his tale in 1740 — with the publication of Pamela, a novel in which a wealthy libertine pursues his virtuous servant girl, ultimately reforms, and marries her — and ends with an afterword addressing our own post-Me Too era.
In his "Afterword" to Donald Britton's book of poems, In the Empire of the Air (2016), Crase begins with this statement: The appearance in print of the selected poems of Donald Britton is an affront to cynicism and a triumph over fate.
"The Water Princess" is based on the early life of the model Georgie Badiel, who, we learn in an afterword, grew up in Burkina Faso and has started a foundation that is partnering with Ryan's Well to bring clean water to African communities.
I'm essentially stealing this from Walter Murch's afterword to "In the Blink of an Eye," but I think that being in a movie theater puts you in a place of both collective experience and vulnerability that is impossible to achieve at home.
He notes in an afterword that the book is also an origin myth for modern dogs, and he has provided a marvelous demonstration of that most ancient of techniques that blends the factual and the fictional to arrive at a kind of deep knowledge.
And with the Democrats also having 48 votes in the Senate, I expressed a view in my afterword even before the inauguration that the big changes in fiscal policy, tax cuts, infrastructure, those things if they occurred at all would be delayed and smaller than they anticipated.
" In her first book, "Woman Hating" (whose original working title was "Last Days at Hot Slit"), Dworkin appended an afterword titled "The Great Punctuation Typography Struggle," a river of lowercase text in which she decried her publisher for filling the previous pages with "garbage: standard punctuation.
California's governor spoke to emergency response officials at the State Operations Center late Monday, then told reporters afterword he spoke to a Trump cabinet official about the request for assistance but Brown wouldn't divulge the name of the cabinet member other than to say they had been confirmed.
Composed of three serial poems, each followed by an "Afterword" of two quotations, it extends the literary techniques of her most celebrated works in a volume that critiques our social, political, and aesthetic moment—for Hejinian these concerns are always entwined, challenging us to speculate within and beyond the present.
What is known, according to the book's afterword by South Korean writer Kim Seong-dong, is that Bandi was or is a member of the Chosun Writers' League Central Committee, the DPRK's state-authorized writers' association, which is a tightly controlled network of writers tasked with creating the country's content.
In the afterword to the paperback edition of "Fire and Fury," Wolff bragged about how he "did an end run around the system, catching the journalism apparatus as well as the White House unawares," deriding the "journalism bureaucracy" for putting so much stock in such niceties as confidentiality and integrity.
Its most recent releases include titles by Glenn Beck, Donald Trump, and former Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal, as well as a biography of Chris Christie and a satirical history of the Obama era called Give Me Liberty or Give Me Obamacare, with a foreword by Dick Cheney and an afterword by Rush Limbaugh.
" In his afterword to the Oxford Mark Twain edition, the critic Albert Stone provides a tantalizing, and somewhat pause-giving, asterisk: Before Howells read the manuscript, Twain wrote and asked him to collaborate with him on a stage version: "I have my eye upon two young girls who can play 'Tom' and 'Huck.
The second, the daringly loose-limbed, "all night between my breasts," originated at another address in Berkeley: Alter adopted it from "The Song of Songs," a 1995 book by Chana and Ariel Bloch, a poet and philologist translation team, for which he wrote the afterword and which he footnotes in his own translation.
Vollmann writes in an afterword of his aspiration to give hope to "anyone who suffers the shame and isolation associated with nonconforming sexual identity," and says that with this novel, he's tried to portray the "beautiful female strength" exhibited by the "trannies, lesbians, showgirls" who provided so much of his source material.
We learn in the afterword that the silver-haired hero was Fisher's lover and then husband, Dillwyn Parrish, familiar to Fisher readers as the worldly Chexbres, and that Fisher was watching him suffer the pain of the fevered pas­sages, caused by a fatal degenerative disease that resulted in the amputation of his leg just after the summer of 1938.
This is how Crase puts it in his "Afterword:" We had heard of a mysterious illness among gay men in May 20113, only two months after Italy [Britton's first and only book of poems published in his lifetime] appeared, but the first friend Donald or I knew to actually die was Larry Stanton, the painter, in 1984.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads In an afterword to Lolita, Vladimir Nabokov remembers that the novel, was somehow prompted by a newspaper story about an ape in the Jardin des Plantes who, after months of coaxing by a scientist, produced the first drawing ever charcoaled by an animal: this sketch showed the bars of the poor creature's cage.
Jay anticipates the suspicion in an afterword: He does this, and he does that, and he shows these, and he plays that, and those, and he made these, and invented this, and wrote that, and he wrote that ten times smaller, but he didn't have these, and he didn't have that, and he had fourteen of those. . . .
As detailed in Nadel's afterword, Whitney was born in 270, illustrated and invented assorted superheroes (including the Flash and his own, absurd Herbie Popnecker) in his 280s, and served in the Army during World War II. He found later happiness in his 1958 marriage, presumably inspiring the delirious, daftly satisfying romance comics of the early 1960s.
In Kasper's superb afterword to Nougé's Transfigured Publicity in Ideas Have No Smell, he relates that the visual poems that make up the booklet were first performed at a concert-spectacle in 1926, during which they "were performed, accompanied by a panel displaying hand-lettered versions of the poems" (included as a fold-out poster in the UDP edition).
Undertaken as a labor of love, with the approval of the White family (White's granddaughter, Martha, contributes an afterword), "Some Writer!" may leave kids reading this book, I'm afraid, with too fixed a sense of White as an upcountry tale-spinner, a wholesome patch from an American quilt, and too little of the sophistication and quiet audacity of his mind.
I wrote in my afterword that I thought the boom in the markets after Trump's election was probably overstated, for one basic reason, which is that despite the fact that the government is now controlled by a single party — House, Senate, and White House — as we've already seen with the health bills, there's actually quite a bit of political disagreement even within the Republican Party.
In my afterword, I stress the, not paradox exactly, but the distinction between what appears to be a pretty strong cyclical recovery from the crisis and the great recession — including, [in the April jobs report] we see 4.4 percent unemployment, 16 million jobs since 2009, low inflation, markets are up, confidence is up — so a lot of positive indicators in terms of the cyclical recovery.
Although he left the Federal Reserve in 2014 ( "It's a lot more relaxing to be in the civilian world," he said), he recently had to a write an afterword for the paperback version of his book "The Courage to Act," which is expected to come out in two weeks and chronicled his time at the Fed and captured his thinking during the financial crisis.
Although he left the Federal Reserve in 2014 ("It's a lot more relaxing to be in the civilian world," he said), he recently had to a write an afterword for the paperback version of his book "The Courage to Act," which is expected to come out in two weeks and chronicled his time at the Fed and captured his thinking during the financial crisis.

No results under this filter, show 155 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.