VERB
-
convert into the form or the style of a novel
The author novelized the historical event
How To Use novelize In A Sentence
- To novelize a story of incest is to participate in the societal imperative to always lie about it, to say it's not happening, or that you made it up.
- You say in your author's note to The Sweetest Dream, ‘I'm not writing volume three of my autobiography because of possible hurt to vulnerable people, which does not mean I have novelized autobiography.’
- Just as James Joyce made it impossible for all Irish writers to novelize Dublin, so definitive and magisterial was his Ulysses, so Fellini's Roma seems to have dazzled Italian filmmakers to the cinematic potential of their capital.
- Like his picaresque kin, the novelized Fray Servando's family proves to be less than desirable and could be viewed as the catalyst in his decision to leave home.
- I still remember that one of the first books I ever checked out from there was a novelized biography of Carlotta, Empress of Mexico, whose husband's doom was first heralded on Cinco de Mayo.
- The story was ‘Boston,’ Sinclair's 1920s novelized condemnation of the trial and execution of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, Italian immigrants accused of killing two men in the robbery of a Massachusetts shoe factory.
- Nineteenth-century novelized versions of the story continue to add depth to the character's psychology and use Shore's life to revisit a popular theme of the Victorian novel: the plight and pathos of the fallen woman.
- The novelized version of 2001 explains the room as being created by the aliens from Bowman's mental images.
- That's why Solzhenitsyn was so wise to novelize his history of the gulag.
- The author novelized the historical event