form or shape
she was kind of wonderful-looking, with her fabulous, disheveled gestalt
she was kind of wonderful-looking, with her fabulous, disheveled gestalt
(noun) a female slave / (noun) a concubine in a harem
the irresistible odalisques sprawled across his dorm bed
the irresistible odalisques sprawled across his dorm bed
(noun) sustained and bitter railing and condemnation; vituperative utterance / (noun) an act or instance of vituperating
there is punitive, vituperative quality in the published reviews
there is punitive, vituperative quality in the published reviews
(adj) having or encouraging an excessive interest in sexual matters
a culture more enamored of prurient gossip than of literature itself
on biographies of great writers
a culture more enamored of prurient gossip than of literature itself
on biographies of great writers
an unfilled space; a gap (plural: lacunae)
for memoirs, they still leave holes, pockets of deliberate vagueness, writerly lacunae
on Joan Didion's memoirs (Year, Blue Nights)
for memoirs, they still leave holes, pockets of deliberate vagueness, writerly lacunae
on Joan Didion's memoirs (Year, Blue Nights)
(noun) brilliance, panache, quality of being active or spirited or alive and vigorous
Joan Didion, for all her stylistic brio, becomes straightforward
Joan Didion, for all her stylistic brio, becomes straightforward
(linguistics) the omission of a sound or syllable when speaking OR the act or an instance of omitting something
(adjective) of, relating to, or constituting a portent / (adjective) eliciting amazement or wonder; prodigious / (adjective) being a grave or serious matter / (adjective) self-consciously solemn or important; pompous / (adjective) ponderously excessive
She did clipped irony and she did sentences swelling with portent.
She did clipped irony and she did sentences swelling with portent.
(noun) a gluttonous, greedy, or rapacious person OR a type of bird
sheer verbal power, the cormorant-like ingestion of experience
a New Republic critique of Updike
sheer verbal power, the cormorant-like ingestion of experience
a New Republic critique of Updike
(noun) a brief moment of emotional excitement; shudder thrill
one can't help but experience a puritanical frisson
on Mad Men
one can't help but experience a puritanical frisson
on Mad Men