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2007-01-10 08:03:07 · 15 answers · asked by Little Miss Helellena 3 in Arts & Humanities Books & Authors

15 answers

A novel is a book, but a book does not have to be a novel. For example, works of non-fiction are books, but they aren't novels. A novel is always a work of fiction. In other words the author of a novel makes it up. The author of a book of non-fiction, depends on research and facts, and uses them to write a work that is factual. Unfortunately, very occasionally the lines between fiction and non-fiction are blurred. Truman Capote did this in his "non-fiction novel" In "Cold Blood." But in general these definitions hold.

2007-01-10 08:05:52 · answer #1 · answered by Karma Chimera 4 · 3 1

Novel could be a good pattern for a film, and a book itself have a different world and meaning (Bulhakov, G.Marquez),
books produce pictures
and novel is a project for a picture? Maybe short forms are more emotional, and a world of book create pictures, but not like a given pattern,like building some creation of meaning through the world of particular book.

2007-01-10 08:17:49 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

There is no difference. Novels are books. And new books are always novel.

2007-01-10 21:22:49 · answer #3 · answered by los 7 · 0 1

A book is any type of material...doesn't neccarily have to be printed material. For example a work of fiction (which is a novel) can come in printed material form or it can come in audiobook or cd book form or the older version called cassette books.

2007-01-10 09:43:48 · answer #4 · answered by Linda 1 · 0 0

A book is the general term for literature, a novel is a genre within books (e.g like poetry, plays etc) which is like a longer "story" type book. In other words it's made up fiction rather than say an autobiography

2007-01-10 08:06:42 · answer #5 · answered by kaleidoscope_girl 5 · 0 3

A novel is a book of fiction.

Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo-French, new, from Latin novellus, from diminutive of novus new. It became used to describe a work of prose fiction, longer than a short story. It was adopted during the reformation, as the word had been used to describe a new legal constitution in ancient Rome.

It probally started with Thomas More’s Utopia and was established in the late renaissence with works like Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress.

A book, is a collection of paper, parchment or other material with text, pictures, or both written on them, bound together along one edge, usually within covers. Each side of a sheet is called a page and a single sheet within a book may be called a leaf, as the first internationally traded books were (Bhuddist) indian leaf books, written on palm leaves.

The first books were greek scrolls of Papyrus sheets - glued together to form a 30 page scroll. This custom gained widespread popularity in the Hellenistic and Roman world, although we have evidence that tree bark (Latin liber, from there also library) and other materials were also used. Rome books (volumae = volume) were longer than 30 pages, and could not fit into the hand, so were cut (tomos in Greek = tome).

According to Herodotus (History 5:58) the Phoenicians brought writing and also papyrus to Greece around tenth or ninth century BC and so the Greek word for papyrus as writing material (biblion) and book (biblos) come from the Phoenician port town Byblos through which most of the papyrus was exported to Greece. Indeed the name of the Bible, is also from this town's name.

The modern book shape was developed by the ethiopians, and this was copied by the Byzantine monks, to form the codex However, since the early books were short, so that they fitted into the hand, a codex is composed of many books; a book is of one scroll. It is called codex by way of metaphor from the trunks (codex) of trees or vines, as if it were a wooden stock, because it contains in itself a multitude of books, as it were of branches.

Paper was invented by the chinese, captured by the arabs in 760 ad, and up to 1100, exported to Europe, as Charta Damascura. Early maps (charts) were printed on paper, as it was more stable than parchment. The europeans thought it was a new type of Papyrus, so called it paper, by mistake.

Today a book is taken to mean the whole binding, but this is only true if it contains one story -subject.

2007-01-10 08:06:05 · answer #6 · answered by DAVID C 6 · 2 1

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2016-04-13 17:55:34 · answer #7 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Actually, a novel is a type of book. It is one which contains a long fictional story.

Books, besides novels, can be of any type - non-fiction, poetry, short stories, etc.

2007-01-10 08:13:17 · answer #8 · answered by Bob B 2 · 3 1

A book can be anything, an encyclopaedia, a cookery book, a biography, a story etc. A novel is a story usually for adults.

2007-01-10 08:06:59 · answer #9 · answered by KB 5 · 1 2

hmm...i think a novel is a long story book about the life or lives of certain character(s).

a book is well a story but isnt necessarily about life of a person

2007-01-10 08:07:03 · answer #10 · answered by cookie 4 · 0 2

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