{"text": "Two decades after Frank Herbert 's death , his son Brian Herbert , along with Kevin J. Anderson , published two sequel s - Hunters of Dune ( 2006 ) and Sandworms of Dune ( 2007 ) - based on notes left behind by Frank Herbert for what he referred to as Dune 7 , his own planned seventh novel in the Dune series .", "entity": [{"entity": "Frank Herbert", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [18, 31]}, {"entity": "Brian Herbert", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [51, 64]}, {"entity": "Kevin J. 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film was completed in 1979 and won the Prize of the Ecumenical Jury at the Cannes Film Festival .", "entity": [{"entity": "Prize of the Ecumenical Jury", "entity_type": "award", "pos": [43, 71]}, {"entity": "Cannes Film Festival", "entity_type": "event", "pos": [79, 99]}], "task": "NER"} {"text": "The Forsyte Saga , first published under that title in 1922 , is a series of three novels and two interludes published between 1906 and 1921 by Nobel Prize in Literature -winning English author John Galsworthy .", "entity": [{"entity": "The Forsyte Saga", "entity_type": "book", "pos": [0, 16]}, {"entity": "novels", "entity_type": "literary genre", "pos": [83, 89]}, {"entity": "Nobel Prize in Literature", "entity_type": "award", "pos": [144, 169]}, {"entity": "English", "entity_type": "else", "pos": [179, 186]}, {"entity": "John Galsworthy", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [194, 209]}], "task": "NER"} {"text": "The first actual missionary in Sweden and the Nordic countries ( and organizer of 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Schuyler Miller and John Drury Clark in 1936 , only three months before Howard 's death , Conan is described as standing 6 ft / 183 cm and weighing when he takes part in an attack on Venarium at only 14 years old , though being far from fully grown .", "entity": [{"entity": "P. Schuyler Miller", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [15, 33]}, {"entity": "John Drury Clark", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [38, 54]}, {"entity": "Howard", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [90, 96]}, {"entity": "Conan", "entity_type": "person", "pos": [108, 113]}], "task": "NER"} {"text": "Better parts followed , including The Cider House Rules ( 1999 ) , for which he won his second Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor .. 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G. Wells praised Growth of the Soil ( 1917 ) for which Hamsun was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature .", "entity": [{"entity": "H. G. Wells", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [0, 11]}, {"entity": "Growth of the Soil", "entity_type": "book", "pos": [20, 38]}, {"entity": "Hamsun", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [58, 64]}, {"entity": "Nobel Prize in Literature", "entity_type": "award", "pos": [81, 106]}], "task": "NER"} {"text": "In 1961 , his friend C. S. Lewis even nominated him for the Nobel Prize in Literature .", "entity": [{"entity": "C. S. 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) .", "entity": [{"entity": "Andersson", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [14, 23]}, {"entity": "Ulvaeus", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [26, 33]}, {"entity": "Drama Desk Award", "entity_type": "award", "pos": [56, 72]}, {"entity": "Outstanding Music", "entity_type": "else", "pos": [89, 106]}, {"entity": "Chess", "entity_type": "else", "pos": [125, 130]}, {"entity": "Tony Award", "entity_type": "award", "pos": [145, 155]}, {"entity": "Best Orchestrations", "entity_type": "else", "pos": [170, 189]}, {"entity": "Mamma Mia !", "entity_type": "else", "pos": [208, 219]}], "task": "NER"} {"text": "In March 1938 , Huxley 's friend Anita Loos , a novelist and screenwriter , put him in touch with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer ( MGM ) , which hired him for Madame Curie which was originally to star Greta Garbo and be directed by George Cukor .", "entity": [{"entity": "Huxley", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [16, 22]}, {"entity": "Anita Loos", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [33, 43]}, {"entity": "Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer", "entity_type": "organization", "pos": [98, 117]}, {"entity": "MGM", "entity_type": "organization", "pos": [120, 123]}, {"entity": "Madame Curie", "entity_type": "else", "pos": [148, 160]}, {"entity": "Greta Garbo", "entity_type": "person", "pos": [190, 201]}, {"entity": "George Cukor", "entity_type": "person", "pos": [221, 233]}], "task": "NER"} {"text": "Jonathan Lethem , in a 1998 essay in the Village Voice entitled Close Encounters : The Squandered Promise of Science Fiction , suggested that the point in 1973 when Thomas Pynchon Gravity 's Rainbow was nominated for the Nebula Award and was passed over in favor of Clarke 's Rendezvous with Rama , stands as a hidden tombstone marking the death of the hope that SF was about to merge with the mainstream .", "entity": [{"entity": "Jonathan Lethem", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [0, 15]}, {"entity": "Village Voice", "entity_type": "magazine", "pos": [41, 54]}, {"entity": "Close Encounters : The Squandered Promise of Science Fiction", "entity_type": "book", "pos": [64, 124]}, {"entity": "Thomas Pynchon", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [165, 179]}, {"entity": "Gravity 's Rainbow", "entity_type": "book", "pos": [180, 198]}, {"entity": "Nebula Award", "entity_type": "award", "pos": [221, 233]}, {"entity": "Clarke", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [266, 272]}, {"entity": "Rendezvous with Rama", "entity_type": "book", "pos": [276, 296]}, {"entity": "SF", "entity_type": "literary genre", "pos": [363, 365]}], "task": "NER"} {"text": "Writing for The Spectator in the UK , Graham Greene gave the film a mixed good review , characterizing the first half of the film as simple and direct and TRUE , but complaining that the second half displays a little less than life and that the last hour was permeated by banality and ennui .", "entity": [{"entity": "The Spectator", "entity_type": "magazine", "pos": [12, 25]}, {"entity": "UK", "entity_type": "country", "pos": [33, 35]}, {"entity": "Graham Greene", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [38, 51]}], "task": "NER"} {"text": "The rights to A. 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{"text": "Alternate history shades off into other fantasy subgenres when the use of actual , though altered , history and geography decreases , although a culture may still be clearly the original source ; Barry Hughart ' s Bridge of Birds and its sequels take place in a fantasy world , albeit one clearly based on China , and with allusions to actual Chinese history , such as the Empress Wu .", "entity": [{"entity": "Alternate history", "entity_type": "literary genre", "pos": [0, 17]}, {"entity": "fantasy", "entity_type": "literary genre", "pos": [40, 47]}, {"entity": "Barry Hughart", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [196, 209]}, {"entity": "Bridge of Birds", "entity_type": "book", "pos": [214, 229]}, {"entity": "China", "entity_type": "country", "pos": [306, 311]}, {"entity": "Chinese", "entity_type": "else", "pos": [343, 350]}, {"entity": "Empress Wu", "entity_type": "person", "pos": [373, 383]}], "task": "NER"} {"text": "Media coverage of Lewis 's death was almost completely 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"NER"} {"text": "Possibly , Stoker was not inspired by a real edifice at all , but by Jules Verne ' s novel The Carpathian Castle ( 1892 ) or Anne Radcliffe ' s The Mysteries of Udolpho ( 1794 ) .Elizabeth Miller , Dracula : Sense & Nonsense .", "entity": [{"entity": "Stoker", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [11, 17]}, {"entity": "Jules Verne", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [69, 80]}, {"entity": "novel", "entity_type": "literary genre", "pos": [85, 90]}, {"entity": "The Carpathian Castle", "entity_type": "book", "pos": [91, 112]}, {"entity": "Anne Radcliffe", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [125, 139]}, {"entity": "The Mysteries of Udolpho", "entity_type": "book", "pos": [144, 168]}, {"entity": ".Elizabeth Miller", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [178, 195]}, {"entity": "Dracula : Sense & Nonsense", "entity_type": "book", "pos": [198, 224]}], "task": "NER"} {"text": "Moving to London in 1945 , he became intent on propagating this religion , attracting media attention and writing 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"Spears has earned numerous awards and accolades , including a Grammy Award ; seven Guinness World Records ; six MTV Video Music Awards , including the Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award ; seven Billboard Music Awards , including the Millennium Award ; the inaugural Radio Disney Icon Award ; the GLAAD Media Award ' s Vanguard Award and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame .", "entity": [{"entity": "Spears", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [0, 6]}, {"entity": "Grammy Award", "entity_type": "award", "pos": [62, 74]}, {"entity": "Guinness World Records", "entity_type": "book", "pos": [83, 105]}, {"entity": "MTV Video Music Awards", "entity_type": "award", "pos": [112, 134]}, {"entity": "Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award", "entity_type": "award", "pos": [151, 187]}, {"entity": "Billboard Music Awards", "entity_type": "award", "pos": [196, 218]}, {"entity": "Millennium Award", "entity_type": "award", "pos": [235, 251]}, {"entity": "Radio Disney Icon Award", "entity_type": "award", 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Schuyler Miller , noting that the novel 's climactic situations seem to be telegraphed , suggested that Heinlein presented his background situations so effectively that readers solve the story 's mysteries more quickly than Heinlein allowed his characters to .", "entity": [{"entity": "The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction", "entity_type": "magazine", "pos": [22, 63]}, {"entity": "P. 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"task": "NER"} {"text": "In the Swahili and Indonesian culture , many of his stories are being told under the name of Abunuwasi or Abunawas , though this confuses Nasreddin with an entirely different man - the poet Abu Nuwas , known for homoerotic verse .", "entity": [{"entity": "Swahili", "entity_type": "else", "pos": [7, 14]}, {"entity": "Indonesian", "entity_type": "else", "pos": [19, 29]}, {"entity": "Abunuwasi", "entity_type": "person", "pos": [93, 102]}, {"entity": "Abunawas", "entity_type": "person", "pos": [106, 114]}, {"entity": "Nasreddin", "entity_type": "person", "pos": [138, 147]}, {"entity": "Abu Nuwas", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [190, 199]}, {"entity": "homoerotic verse", "entity_type": "literary genre", "pos": [212, 228]}], "task": "NER"} {"text": "In 1998 , he was a member of the jury at the 48th Berlin International Film Festival .", "entity": [{"entity": "48th Berlin International Film Festival", "entity_type": "event", "pos": [45, 84]}], "task": "NER"} {"text": "In the 1990 steampunk novel The Difference Engine by William Gibson and Bruce Sterling , Ada Lovelace delivers a lecture on the punched cards programme that proves two theorems , the discovery that , in reality , would not be made until 1931 by Kurt Gödel .", "entity": [{"entity": "steampunk novel", "entity_type": "literary genre", "pos": [12, 27]}, {"entity": "The Difference Engine", "entity_type": "book", "pos": [28, 49]}, {"entity": "William Gibson", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [53, 67]}, {"entity": "Bruce Sterling", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [72, 86]}, {"entity": "Ada Lovelace", "entity_type": "person", "pos": [89, 101]}, {"entity": "Kurt Gödel", "entity_type": "person", "pos": [245, 255]}], "task": "NER"} {"text": "He directed Mac ( 1992 ) , which won the Golden Camera Award at the Cannes Film Festival , Illuminata ( 1998 ) , and Romance and Cigarettes ( 2005 ) .", "entity": [{"entity": "Mac", "entity_type": "else", "pos": [12, 15]}, {"entity": "Golden Camera 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received good notices and was nominated for the National Book Award in March 1962 , though Walker Percy ' s The Moviegoer won .", "entity": [{"entity": "National Book Award", "entity_type": "award", "pos": [51, 70]}, {"entity": "Walker Percy", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [94, 106]}, {"entity": "The Moviegoer", "entity_type": "book", "pos": [111, 124]}], "task": "NER"} {"text": "In 2005 , McEntire starred as Nellie Forbush in the Carnegie Hall concert production of the Broadway musical South Pacific with Alec Baldwin as Luther Billis and Brian Stokes Mitchell as Emile de Becque , directed by Walter Bobbie and with an adapted script by David Ives .", "entity": [{"entity": "McEntire", "entity_type": "person", "pos": [10, 18]}, {"entity": "Nellie Forbush", "entity_type": "person", "pos": [30, 44]}, {"entity": "Carnegie Hall concert", "entity_type": "location", "pos": [52, 73]}, {"entity": "Broadway", "entity_type": "organization", "pos": [92, 100]}, {"entity": "South Pacific", 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Joshi and David E. Schultz are preparing various volumes of Smith 's letters to such of his individual correspondents as Donald Wandrei , Robert H. Barlow , and August Derleth .", "entity": [{"entity": "S.T. Joshi", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [9, 19]}, {"entity": "David E. Schultz", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [24, 40]}, {"entity": "Smith", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [74, 79]}, {"entity": "Donald Wandrei", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [135, 149]}, {"entity": "Robert H. 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Wodehouse and Ratcliffe , p .", "entity": [{"entity": "The Saturday Evening Post", "entity_type": "magazine", "pos": [20, 45]}, {"entity": "Something Fresh", "entity_type": "book", "pos": [72, 87]}, {"entity": "novels", "entity_type": "literary genre", "pos": [127, 133]}, {"entity": "Blandings Castle", "entity_type": "book", "pos": [141, 157]}, {"entity": "Wodehouse", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [160, 169]}, {"entity": "Ratcliffe", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [174, 183]}], "task": "NER"} {"text": "It recounts the tale of a man who is considered a madman due to his perceptions of a different 1845 , a reality in which long-dead famous people , such as the poets Robert Burns , Lord Byron , Percy Bysshe Shelley and John Keats , the actor Edmund Kean , the British politician George Canning , and even Napoleon Bonaparte , are still alive .", "entity": [{"entity": "Robert Burns", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [165, 177]}, {"entity": "Lord Byron", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [180, 190]}, {"entity": "Percy Bysshe Shelley", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [193, 213]}, {"entity": "John Keats", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [218, 228]}, {"entity": "Edmund Kean", "entity_type": "person", "pos": [241, 252]}, {"entity": "British", "entity_type": "else", "pos": [259, 266]}, {"entity": "George Canning", "entity_type": "person", "pos": [278, 292]}, {"entity": "Napoleon Bonaparte", "entity_type": "person", "pos": [304, 322]}], "task": "NER"} {"text": "Likewise , in 1963 , J. 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Stannard , Vol. i pp. 470-71 In August 1938 Waugh , with Laura , made a three-month trip to Mexico after which he wrote Robbery Under Law , based on his experiences there .", "entity": [{"entity": "Maria Teresa", "entity_type": "person", "pos": [33, 45]}, {"entity": "Auberon Waugh", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [85, 98]}, {"entity": "Hastings", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [121, 129]}, {"entity": "Scoop", "entity_type": "book", "pos": [171, 176]}, {"entity": "Stannard", "entity_type": "person", "pos": [229, 237]}, {"entity": "Waugh", "entity_type": "writer", "pos": [273, 278]}, {"entity": "Laura", "entity_type": "person", "pos": [286, 291]}, {"entity": "Mexico", "entity_type": "country", "pos": [321, 327]}, {"entity": "Robbery Under Law", "entity_type": "book", "pos": [349, 366]}], "task": "NER"} {"text": "He won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for his 1947 long poem The Age of Anxiety , the title of which became a popular phrase describing the modern era .", "entity": [{"entity": 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