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Who Wrote That? (Part 3) Quiz

Question: Who wrote the play Man and Superman?
Answer: George Bernard Shaw, an Irish comic dramatist, literary critic, and socialist propagandist, wrote Man and Superman. In this play, Shaw expounded his philosophy that humanity is the latest stage in a purposeful and eternal evolutionary movement of the “life force” toward ever-higher life-forms.
Question: Who wrote the novel Brighton Rock?
Answer: The novels of Graham Greene treat life’s moral ambiguities in the context of contemporary political settings. One of Greene’s finest novels, Brighton Rock (1938) explores the contrasting moral attitudes of its main characters with a significant degree of intensity and emotional involvement.
Question: Who wrote the collection of iconoclastic biographies titled Eminent Victorians?
Answer: The English biographer and critic Lytton Strachey opened a new era of biographical writing at the close of World War I. Adopting an irreverent attitude to the past and especially to the monumental life-and-letters volumes of Victorian biography, Strachey proposed to write lives with “a brevity which excludes everything that is redundant and nothing that is significant.” He is best known for Eminent Victorians, a collection of short sketches of the Victorian idols Cardinal Manning, Florence Nightingale, Thomas Arnold, and General Charles (“Chinese”) Gordon.
Question: Who wrote the novel series Children of Violence?
Answer: The novels and short stories of the British writer Doris Lessing are largely concerned with people involved in the social and political upheavals of the 20th century. Her most substantial work is her series of novels about Martha Quest, who grows up in southern Africa and settles in England, called Children of Violence (1952–69).
Question: Who wrote the ode “To a Nightingale”?
Answer: The English Romantic poet John Keats wrote “To a Nightingale” in 1819, the year in which he wrote all his greatest poetry.
Question: Who wrote Home to Harlem and its sequel, Banjo?
Answer: With the publication of two volumes of poetry, Spring in New Hampshire (1920) and Harlem Shadows (1922), Claude McKay emerged as the first and most militant voice of the Harlem Renaissance. In both his novels Home to Harlem (1928) and Banjo (1929), he attempted to capture the vitality and essential health of the uprooted black vagabonds of urban America and Europe.
Question: Who wrote The English Teacher?
Answer: R.K. Narayan was one of the finest Indian authors of his generation writing in English. Among his best-received novels are The English Teacher (1945), Waiting for the Mahatma (1955), The Guide (1958), The Man-Eater of Malgudi (1961), The Vendor of Sweets (1967), and A Tiger for Malgudi (1983).
Question: Who wrote Anatomy of Melancholy?
Answer: Robert Burton wrote the treatise Anatomy of Melancholy in 1621. A master of narrative, Burton includes, in a section on melancholy caused by love, examples of most of the world’s great love stories, showing a modern approach to psychological problems.
Question: Who wrote the epic poem Paradise Lost?
Answer: John Milton wrote Paradise Lost, which is generally regarded as the greatest epic poem in the English language.