pamphleteer (a writer of pamphlets (usually taking a partisan stand on public issues))
paragrapher (a writer of paragraphs (as for publication on the editorial page of a newspaper))
poet (a writer of poems (the term is usually reserved for writers of good poetry))
polemic; polemicist; polemist (a writer who argues in opposition to others (especially in theology))
poetiser; poetizer; rhymer; rhymester; versifier (a writer who composes rhymes; a maker of poor verses (usually used as terms of contempt for minor or inferior poets))
Jean-Jacques Rousseau; Rousseau (French philosopher and writer born in Switzerland; believed that the natural goodness of man was warped by society; ideas influenced the French Revolution (1712-1778))
Alfred Damon Runyon; Damon Runyon; Runyon (United States writer of humorous stylized stories about Broadway and the New York underground (1884-1946))
Ahmed Salman Rushdie; Rushdie; Salman Rushdie (British writer of novels who was born in India; one of his novels is regarded as blasphemous by Muslims and a fatwa was issued condemning him to death (born in 1947))
Malory; Sir Thomas Malory; Thomas Malory (English writer who published a translation of romances about King Arthur taken from French and other sources (died in 1471))
More; Sir Thomas More; Thomas More (English statesman who opposed Henry VIII's divorce from Catherine of Aragon and was imprisoned and beheaded; recalled for his concept of Utopia, the ideal state)
H. G. Wells; Herbert George Wells; Wells (prolific English writer best known for his science-fiction novels; he also wrote on contemporary social problems and wrote popular accounts of history and science (1866-1946))
Eudora Welty; Welty (United States writer about rural southern life (1909-2001))
Adeline Virginia Stephen Woolf; Virginia Woolf; Woolf (English author whose work used such techniques as stream of consciousness and the interior monologue; prominent member of the Bloomsbury Group (1882-1941))
Elie Wiesel; Eliezer Wiesel; Wiesel (United States writer (born in Romania) who survived Nazi concentration camps and is dedicated to keeping alive the memory of the Holocaust (born in 1928))
Chesterton; G. K. Chesterton; Gilbert Keith Chesterton (conservative English writer of the Roman Catholic persuasion; in addition to volumes of criticism and polemics he wrote detective novels featuring Father Brown (1874-1936))
Cheever; John Cheever (United States writer of novels and short stories (1912-1982))
Albert Camus; Camus (French writer who portrayed the human condition as isolated in an absurd world (1913-1960))
Aldous Huxley; Aldous Leonard Huxley; Huxley (English writer; grandson of Thomas Huxley who is remembered mainly for his depiction of a scientifically controlled utopia (1894-1963))
Irving; John Irving (United States writer of darkly humorous novels (born in 1942))
Heller; Joseph Heller (United States novelist whose best known work was a black comedy inspired by his experiences in the Air Force during World War II (1923-1999))
Ernest Hemingway; Hemingway (an American writer of fiction who won the Nobel prize for literature in 1954 (1899-1961))
Hermann Hesse; Hesse (Swiss writer (born in Germany) whose novels and poems express his interests in eastern spiritual values (1877-1962))
Ken Elton Kesey; Ken Kesey; Kesey (United States writer whose best-known novel was based on his experiences as an attendant in a mental hospital (1935-2001))
Helen Adams Keller; Helen Keller; Keller (United States lecturer and writer who was blind and deaf from the age of 19 months; Anne Sullivan taught her to read and write and speak; Helen Keller graduated from college and went on to champion the cause of blind and deaf people (1880-1968))
Franz Kafka; Kafka (Czech novelist who wrote in German about a nightmarish world of isolated and troubled individuals (1883-1924))
Benjamin Franklin; Franklin (printer whose success as an author led him to take up politics; he helped draw up the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution; he played a major role in the American Revolution and negotiated French support for the colonists; as a scientist he is remembered particularly for his research in electricity (1706-1790))
Grimm; Jakob Grimm; Jakob Ludwig Karl Grimm (the older of the two Grimm brothers remembered best for their fairy stories; also author of Grimm's law describing consonant changes in Germanic languages (1785-1863))
Did he author his major works over a short period of time?
Learn English with... Proverbs of the week
"You'll always miss 100% of the shots you don't take." (English proverb)
"To touch the earth is to have harmony with nature." (Native American proverb, Oglala Sioux)
"If you hear a person talking good about things that aren't in you, don't be sure that he wouldn't also say bad things about things that aren't in you." (Arabic proverb)
"Be patient with a bad neighbor. Maybe he’ll leave or a disaster will take him out." (Egyptian proverb)
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