Constance Keating is a major fictional portrait, her death finally noble".
On one level, it is a shattering fictional portrait of a group of foot soldiers, mired in one of the war's obscure campaigns.
Her fictional portraits, based on herself in disguise, refer to widely known subjects and blur distinctions between the real and the artificial.
Some coalesce around the sort of novelist whose collected works paint a highly detailed fictional portrait of a specific time and place, usually far from here.
It was followed by Casanova (1998), a fictional portrait of the infamous libertine and writer.
The first part is a novella, a fictional portrait of how her parents' lives might have been without the interruption of the First World War.
The work takes the form of fictional portraits, most of them drawn in graphite on felt.
It's a fictional portrait that dramatically underscores the real-life affinities between scholarship and detective work.
A fictional portrait of a woman's grief after her longtime partner is murdered.
The fictional double portrait of Mary and James of 1583 was made for this negotiation.