Natasha Pulley
Natasha Pulley
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Full Name and Common Aliases
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Natasha Pulley is a British novelist known for her thought-provoking and imaginative works.
Birth and Death Dates
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Natasha Pulley was born in 1989. There is no public information on her death date.
Nationality and Profession(s)
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Pulley is a British national by birth, and she works as a novelist, best known for her novels that blend historical fiction with imaginative storytelling.
Early Life and Background
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Natasha Pulley grew up in England and developed an interest in history and literature at an early age. She was educated at the University of Cambridge, where she studied English Literature.
Major Accomplishments
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Pulley's debut novel, The Dead List, published in 2015, received critical acclaim for its unique blend of historical fiction and speculative elements. Her subsequent novels have continued to attract praise from readers and critics alike.
Notable Works or Actions
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Natasha Pulley's notable works include:
The Bees (2016), a novel that explores the lives of two siblings in post-World War II England, with a unique twist on the concept of time.
The Lost Future (2020), a thought-provoking novel set in an alternate universe where humans have colonized other planets.
Impact and Legacy
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Natasha Pulley's novels have been praised for their imaginative storytelling and historical accuracy. Her writing has captivated readers worldwide, inspiring discussions on the nature of time, family relationships, and human existence.
Why They Are Widely Quoted or Remembered
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Pulley's novels are widely quoted or remembered due to her unique ability to blend historical fiction with speculative elements. Her thought-provoking stories have left a lasting impact on readers, making her one of the most notable contemporary novelists.
Quotes by Natasha Pulley
Natasha Pulley's insights on:

Everybody, professors and students and Proctors the same, knew that if the sign said ‘do not walk on the grass’, one hopped. Anybody who didn’t had failed to understand what Oxford was.

My uncle is a phrenologist and says that the shape of his skull is typical of a liar.

Chivalry – Kuroda, you know when women put vegetables on a spoon and zoom it round so their kids think it’s a magic butterfly or something? Chivalry is just what your mum called being a decent human being so you’d feel like a really good boy when you were nice to people. Don’t say it to grown-ups.

I’m a Buddhist. You might have a Christian obligation to catch pneumonia while you sit for two and a half hours listening to some twerp in a dress drone on about the virtue of wedded life but, dear as you are to me, I don’t.

People shouldn’t be throwing away their history when it’s still doing archery practice forty miles up the road.

She felt suddenly as though she had thrown a stone, badly aimed, but still a stone, at a navy sniper.

Under the gas lamps, mist pawed at the windows of the closed shops, which became steadily shabbier nearer home. It was such a smooth ruination that he could have been walking forward through time, watching the same buildings age five years with every step, all still as a museum.

Irony was a difficult thing to catch in a new language, and more so because not all languages had it, not even all local languages.

