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Word: cuttlefish (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...livelier manner by Nelson Algren and Saul Bellow. Farrell gradually dropped out of sight, his books published but ignored by critics and readers who had moved on to other themes, higher styles. The old pro stayed on his outworn turf producing characters who still dumbly battled circumstance, like cuttlefish trying to redirect the tide. Olive and Mary Anne is the fixture as before. Its five tales are confined to the standard Farrell inventory: lives with insufficient love, the sorrows of gin, childhood wounds carried for a lifetime. Yet the stories cannot be easily dismissed or forgotten. Farrell's approach...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Clock Stopper | 2/13/1978 | See Source »

...screen adaptation for James Joyce's Ulysses. The absurdity of the undertaking provides a perfect example of the irreconcilable differences between the two media. Ulysses, published in 1922, was hailed as a classic by Edmund Wilson, an "epic prose poem;" and denigrated by others as belonging to the "cuttlefish school of writers," concealing its shortcomings behind an ejection of inky fluid. The novel, a 763-page description of a single day (June 16, 1904) in Dublin, breaks all of the rules of traditional narrative prose. Viewpoints shift suddenly from one character to the next; punctuation is abandoned; there...

Author: By Lawton F. Grant, | Title: Celluloid Monarch Notes | 3/28/1974 | See Source »

...last week in San Francisco: 11,350 pounds of tinned and packaged delicacies imported by Wo Kee & Co.-the first commercial shipment from the mainland allowed in the U.S. for 21 years. Sample goodies: fried longtailed anchovies, lotus paste, red date soup, bitter melon, spiced grapefruit skin, sauce of cuttlefish, dried dace (a fish), and a candy called white rabbit rolls...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: EAST-WEST TRADE: Cuttlefish, Anyone? | 7/5/1971 | See Source »

...Congratulations to Melvin Maddocks for his Essay on "The Limitations of Language" [March 8]. After 30 years of reading technical articles on biology, I am convinced that obscure prose shows that the writer is not sure of what he is trying to say. He is like the proverbial cuttlefish that is supposed to evade its enemies by disappearing in a cloud...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Mar. 29, 1971 | 3/29/1971 | See Source »

...time he was 15) and myopic, Huxley grew up through Eton and Oxford to live in a thin, rarefied world of his own. His notion of conversation, Osbert Sitwell grumbled, was to relay data on the "incestuous mating of melons" or the "curious amorous habits of cuttlefish." In words that Clark applies to all the Huxleys, young Aldous seemed less a human being than "something more nearly approaching a controlled experiment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Evolution of a Cynic | 7/19/1968 | See Source »

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