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[ UK /nɒvˈɛlɐ/ ]
[ US /noʊˈvɛɫə/ ]
NOUN
  1. a short novel

How To Use novella In A Sentence

  • The traditional preference of the British reading public for conventionally sized novels or literary doorstoppers is a pity, because the novella at its best is not an awkward hybrid, but a novel in beautifully controlled miniature.
  • More specifically. briandonnelly @MaileShoul Oh there is one in the house - took the title spot from Tori Spelling's novella. delicacy Tori Spelling @ 7th Anniversary Of Belle Gray Boutique Gaea Times (by Simple Thoughts) Breaking News and incisive views 24/7
  • The only ones that approach it in awfulness are Eric Saward's novelisation of The Twin Dilemma and Topping's Telos novella Ghost Ship. Linkspam for 23-6-2009
  • Both novellas have as their focus a sphinx-like ' femme fatale ' who destroys a lover or a husband attached to her like a slave.
  • By the early seventeenth century, however, prose fiction had evolved beyond the limits of the novella.
  • It was a very inspired decision since the first 200 or so pages of The Desert Spear that deal with the Krasian culture and recount the tale of Jardir and Abban from early childhood friendship, to how their fates separated and then reunited later put both the title novella of "The Great Bazaar" and the relatively short time that Arles spends with the Krasians in clear focus. "The Great Bazaar and Other Stories" by Peter Brett (Reviewed by Liviu Suciu)
  • trecento", among whom we should opine that the influence of Orcagna in his frescoes in the Strozzi Chapel of S.M. Novella, was greater even than that of Giotto. Fra Angelico
  • Her novels, therefore, can best be described as long short stories or novellas.
  • The title novella is about Ravi, "a wild creature from the mountains" in the vein of Kipling's Mowgli. Rapt in Translation; Zombie Zoology
  • Roth, who made his debut in 1959 with a brilliant novella, Goodbye, Columbus, and hit the international headlines with Portnoy's Complaint in 1969, is nothing if not a stayer. Philip Roth: Still fascinated by himself | Observer profile
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