Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://citation.dbpedia.org/hash/70acd70a53e62247984a47999b629c5bc2505fbe7d48aa93aaadc5d12d447474> ?p ?o }
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- 70acd70a53e62247984a47999b629c5bc2505fbe7d48aa93aaadc5d12d447474 authorlink "John Burnside".
- 70acd70a53e62247984a47999b629c5bc2505fbe7d48aa93aaadc5d12d447474 date "2014-08-21".
- 70acd70a53e62247984a47999b629c5bc2505fbe7d48aa93aaadc5d12d447474 first "John".
- 70acd70a53e62247984a47999b629c5bc2505fbe7d48aa93aaadc5d12d447474 isCitedBy List_of_dystopian_literature.
- 70acd70a53e62247984a47999b629c5bc2505fbe7d48aa93aaadc5d12d447474 last "Burnside".
- 70acd70a53e62247984a47999b629c5bc2505fbe7d48aa93aaadc5d12d447474 newspaper "The Guardian".
- 70acd70a53e62247984a47999b629c5bc2505fbe7d48aa93aaadc5d12d447474 quote "To say J is unlike any other novel Jacobson has written would be misleading: the same ferocious wit runs throughout, while the minutiae of male-female relations are as sharply portrayed as ever. Nevertheless, the comparisons...will inevitably be made with earlier dystopian visions...".
- 70acd70a53e62247984a47999b629c5bc2505fbe7d48aa93aaadc5d12d447474 title "Review of J by Howard Jacobson".