Doctorow


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Doc•to•row

(ˈdɒk təˌroʊ)
n.
E(dgar) L(aurence), born 1931, U.S. novelist and editor.
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
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Noun1.Doctorow - United States novelist (born in 1931)
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References in periodicals archive ?
Synopsis: "Radicalized" is a timely collection consisting of four SF novellas by Cory Doctorow that are connected by social, technological, and economic visions of today and what America could be in the near, near future.
From 2002, he began writing fiction and translating novels by E.L Doctorow, Paul Auster, P.D.
Hurtgen, a writer of science fiction, science fiction criticism, and screenplays who teaches high school English, examines the embodiment and transmission of knowledge through archives in science fiction by Ray Bradbury, Margaret Atwood, William Gibson, Bruce Sterling, Neal Stephenson, Cory Doctorow, and Ernest Cline.
Doctorow, David Ebershoff, Frank Rich, and Elizabeth Strout, as well as Let Me Tell You, a volume of previously uncollected work by Shirley Jackson.
When user Cory Doctorow texted a babysitter, he sent a text that read "Hey!
Doctorow's 1975 historical novel, is facing the possibility of censorship.
Doctorow's "Billy Bathgate" and in crime novels as a threat by mobsters bent on torturing their victims as they stood, alive, while the heavy substance dried.
INFORMATION DOESN'T WANT TO BE FREE: Laws for the Internet Age by Cory Doctorow. San Francisco, CA: McSweeney's, 2014.