Revision as of 03:17, 19 December 2010 edit81.154.204.46 (talk) →Literary terms← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 15:19, 3 January 2025 edit undoDrmies (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Checkusers, Oversighters, Administrators406,902 edits →M: done | ||
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All requests concerning literature topics should be entered here. Please add authors' names alphabetically under their last names and provide links—internal or external—and/or a brief description so as to help those who want to create an article. | All requests concerning literature topics should be entered here. Please add authors' names alphabetically under their last names and provide links—internal or external—and/or a brief description so as to help those who want to create an article. | ||
<u>Example</u>: | <u>Example</u>: | ||
*C | *C | ||
**<nowiki>]</nowiki>, British novelist, author of '']'' — see his blog at http://www.publicpoems.com. | **<nowiki>]</nowiki>, British novelist, author of '']'' — see his blog at http://www.publicpoems.com. | ||
Do NOT add a link such as <nowiki>]</nowiki>, as it will not be able to be created and it will be removed. | |||
You may also wish to have a look at ], ] and similar pages to learn more about collaborating on literature articles. | You may also wish to have a look at ], ] and similar pages to learn more about collaborating on literature articles. | ||
<br><br> | <br /><br /> | ||
==Authors (poets, novelists and fiction writers)== | |||
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==Authors (poets, dramatists and fiction writers)== | |||
===A=== | ===A=== | ||
* ] is a Pakistani novelist and poet. She wrote the book "The Sinking Wedding". Her book got featured in 6xmagazine in the 47 Wedding volume.(https://www.meraqissa.com/book/1923) (https://daastan.com/blog/the-sinking-wedding-by-sara-amir/)(https://www.magcloud.com/browse/issue/2479663) | |||
*] | |||
*] Fiction and adventure writer | |||
*] | |||
* ] is an American television writer/producer and theatrical book writer. He wrote the book and story for the Broadway musical "The Heart of Rock and Roll." His original screenplay, "Juror #2," directed by Clint Eastwood, is finishing production and will be released by Warner Brothers Pictures. He is also the creator/writer/executive producer of the television series “American Hiro” for FX, about the life of Benihana founder Hiroaki Aoki. Raised in San Francisco, he is a graduate of the USC school of Cinema-Television. (https://heartofrocknrollbway.com/cast-creative/) (https://www.goldderby.com/feature/jonathan-abrams-the-heart-of-rock-and-roll-broadway-video-interview-1205805257/) (https://pro.imdb.com/name/nm3524942/) (https://deadline.com/2023/12/clint-eastwood-juror-no-2-j-k-simmons-1235658892/) | |||
*] ,from nts barkakana | |||
*] | |||
* ] - co-author of ''The Adventures of Mystics & Merrymakers'' | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
* ], (born May 26, 1984 in Oslo, Norway) is a Norwegian writer, actor, producer and founder of StarReel Entertainment. He's best known for his work on Arrow, Seventh Son, Lego The Movie and Need For Speed. Links: , , , , , , , | |||
*], Persian poet, may be transliterated too as Abol Mo'ayyed Balkhi (ابوالموید بلخی), information about writer is available but must be translated from Persian sites: ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] Iranian poet; Born 1947 in Mashhad, Iran; Author of Diary of House Arrest (Rūznama-yi tabʿīd, 2003) and Blue Bicycle (Ducharkha-yi ābī, 2015). Links: , , , , | |||
*] artist, The Strange Adventures of H.P. Lovecraft | |||
*] a contemporary French Medieval Literature historian | |||
* ], Canadian poet, firefighter, soldier, and historian. Lived August 2, 1880-April 3,1960. Born in Rapid City, Manitoba, died in Edmonton, Alberta. Was regarded as the Kipling of the Kooteneays, or the Bard of Lemon Creek. Subject matter mostly the places, people, heritage, and experience of Western Canada and the First World War. In 1906, became the fourth member of the Edmonton fire department. Served for the entire duration of WWI, receiving the Military Medal in 1916. Later, a bard and historian of the Highland Games Association. Published three books of poetry: ''The Old Timer and Other Poems'' (1909), ''Canadian Born and Other Western Verse'' (1913), ''Troopers in France'' (1932). These represent the first books of poetry to actually be published in Alberta, and are of a more northern character in contrast to other contemporary Alberta poets. Many of his poems were also published in newspapers in Slocan and Edmonton, but at least one ("The Message of Grief", 1901) reached Toronto and Vancouver papers and other poems reached the Caledonian Society of Melbourne. "Comrades of the War Years" has also been presented as a response to McCrae's "In Flanders Fields", including by Jonathan F. Vance the military historian. Also wrote at least two articles for Edinburgh-based Scotia: The Journal of the St. Andrews Society, of which he was an honorary member. , , , , , , , (pg.328), , , , , (pg.82-83), , , (pg.271), (pgs. 18-23, 49-50, 65-70, 118), , | |||
*], poet/editor/author of Skywriting In The Minor Key: Women, Words, Wings | |||
* ] Poet, critic, writer. | |||
* ] Dr. Ajith Antony is an Indian author from Kerala, India.<ref> https://ajithantony.com/ </ref> He also works as a resident in the Department of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology in Goa Medical College, Bambolim, Goa <ref>http://www.gmc.goa.gov.in/images/Site_Images/photos/Forensic_Medicine/2020/Jul2020/Foren_Faculty_Details_2020.pdf {{Bare URL PDF|date=June 2022}}</ref>. He mostly writes Indian crime as well as fantasy under his real name. He is known for his crime thriller titled ‘Police Surgeon’ <ref> https://www.goodreads.com/ajantony </ref>and he currently resides in the coastal state of Goa. He writes western fantasy under the pen name of A.J. Antony. | |||
*], american author, filmmaker, and actress. | |||
*], American poet, wife of Amiri Baraka. Previous name Sylvia Robinson. | |||
* ] Henry Ferris Arnold (1902-1963) was a writer of weird fiction, best known for the short story ''The Night Wire.'' , , . | |||
*] Mexican Poet, author of "En vida, Hermano, En vida" and some other beautiful poems. | |||
*], French non-fiction writer and journalist resident in Londpn | |||
* ] M.R. Attar is the author of the ] which includes 1)"]" 2)"]" 3)"]". The reviews (on Amazon) have compared it to a Jewish Harry Potter. | |||
*] | |||
*], Author of "Baudelaire's "Argot Plastique": Poetic Caricature and Modernism", possibly of Richmond, VA | |||
* ] - author of ''Angie Moon and the Legends: The Speedster'' | |||
*] | |||
*], author of "Siva in Rags", "Insane in Rome" and "Symbolisme Psychedelique", | |||
* ] Marchel Alverson is a versatile writer/editor with over 20 years of experience in newspapers, magazines, marketing, public relations, creative writing, social media and website development. She is the author of ''Kissed by Madness'', ''Painted on Souls'', and ''Savor the Sweetness.'' Link: , , , , | |||
*] | |||
*], author of the novel ''On the Edge'' (and more) | |||
*] | |||
*], author of Skinny Dipping in the Lake of the Dead and Total Oblivion, More or Less | |||
*], Chicago author of novels "Ballad of the Blue Denim Gang," "The Vanished Child," "Dust" and "Rig." Also writer of non-fiction "Ghosts of St. Louis: the Lemp Mansion and Other Eerie Tales." Also humor/opinion columnist and critic. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] http://alisonluterman.com/ | |||
*], author of The Wedding Dance | |||
*], author of Children of the City | |||
*], author of the novel ] published in India in 2007 by HarperCollins, India. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] cult avant-garde poet | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*], full name Angelica Gibbs Canfield, short story author etc. 1930s--195os . Her short story "The Test" is often anthologized | |||
*] - 19th century British writer | |||
*] Wife of the late "Gonzo-style" journalist Hunter S. Thompson. Maintains Thompson estate & continues to edit & publish the works of Hunter S. Thompson. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] - American Science fiction writer | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] author, writer of Ordeal at Lichfield, set in 675 England | |||
*] | |||
*] Jamaican author, writer, novelist, educator, Writer of "The Lunatic" http://www.myspace.com/anthonycwinkler | |||
*] poet memoirist activist, writer of "The Prisoner's Wife" | |||
*] poet, web page http://ashutosh.over-blog.com | |||
*] author, film maker | |||
*] Canadian author | |||
*] Writer, Poet, Literary critic, literary schola, lecturer at leeds university, information about him and his biography can be found in leeds university website and in the internet literary information sites | |||
*] Indian Author, educationist, poet, scholar, blogger of http://consumerpsyche.blogspot.com/ | |||
*] born in 1954, Nasriganj,Bihar,India , Hindi Poet and Critics, editor of "Alochana" a great litreray magazine. Author of 4 poetry collection. Awarded "Sahitya Acadamy Award","Soviet Land Nehru Award", "Shamsher Samman" and many others. | |||
*] | |||
*] born 1982, American writer and photographer, author of "Chasing Eden" and "Razor Blades Between My Teeth." Has been publishhed in The Commonline Project, ], and Callaloo. She also writes for ] and ]. | |||
*Spirit de la Mare. Poet, writer and illustrator based in East London. Daughter of punk artist and TV presenter ]. | |||
===B=== | ===B=== | ||
*] | |||
*], Iranian writer | |||
*], is a UK author and winner of the Daily Mail Random House First Novel Prize () for My Name is Anna, published January 2019 by ]. Her second novel, Out of Her Depth, will be published by ] in 2022 (). Barber is an alumnus of ] and read English at ]. She is lives in Islington, North London, with her husband and son, and is the younger sister of restaurateur ] | |||
*] American poet/author/translator. "Goat Funeral" and "After Greece." | |||
*], chilean author, based in Guadalajara, Mexico. Gonzalo Rojas Pizarro Prize, Tierras Poéticas Prize y Fundación del Centro Oeste Argentino (References: | |||
*] Canadian/American author (Below Mile Zero, a novel of Key West) | |||
*], is the author of One Whirl, a 1944 satire | |||
*] Canadian novelist (Suspicions'), lawyer, and advocate of womens' rights, died ca. 1985 | |||
*], American horror and weird fiction author. Born in 1970 in Hartford, CT. , | |||
*] American cartoonist/writer/illustrator. "The Working Woman Book", "The Joys of Motherhood", "Dale Cards", Http://BarbaraDale.com | |||
*], Australian Canadian author and illustrator of more than ten children’s books, including Squish Rabbit and Perfect Pigeons — see . Her publishers’ websites: , . | |||
*] American novelist "H" A Novel, "The Artist" A Short Story, "My Last Summer at Orchard Beach" A Memoir. | |||
*], is the author of novels A Life Less Monogamous and Approaching the Swingularity: Tales of Swinging & Polyamory in Paradise, and his memoir My Life on the Swingset: Adventures in Swinging & Polyamory. He is the co-founder of Life on the Swingset, a website about swinging and polyamory and is the host of the website's podcast, Life On The Swingset. | |||
*] (1770-1844) Prolific British novelist, children's author, and literary critic. Works include "]" (1812), "]" (1812) and "]" (1840) | |||
*], fantasy author. Author of the Polar Bear Explorers Club series of fiction targeted at middle schoolers. | |||
*] British children's novelist. Works include '']'' and the '']'' series. | |||
*], US poet based in Spokane, formerly in Seattle, Phnom Penh, Philadelphia, and New England; publisher, performance artist, and librarian; author of Pushing Through Glass (2023), Of Spray and Mist (2019), Green Axis (2019), and more — see website at http://www.gregbem.com | |||
*] Canarian poet, playwright and musician 1538-1610. Works include 'Templo Militante' and Comedia del Recibimiento | |||
*] - ] poet | |||
*] Canadian poet/performance artist. "Impersonating Flowers", and "Invisible Foreground", both books of poetry. | |||
*], fantasy author. Her debut book, "To Shape a Dragon's Breath", was cited by the Washington Post as "an early contender for the best fantasy novel of 2023". (https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2023/05/08/nick-harkaway-bina-shah-moniquill-blackgoose/ , https://www.tor.com/2023/05/25/book-review-to-shape-a-dragons-breath-by-moniquill-blackgoose/ , https://locusmag.com/2023/06/liz-bourke-reviews-to-shape-a-dragons-breath-by-moniquill-blackgoose/). | |||
*] 15-year-old American poet/novelist. ] a book of poetry, ] a short story. (in progress), ] a novel (in progress). | |||
*], British writer. Author of the historical novel ]. | |||
*] (]) (1871-1943), Austro-Hungarian librettist <sup>(])</sup> | |||
*], English novelist and author of the Fighting Sail series of nautical fiction books. . Mentioned at ]. Draft here: ] (needs some work) | |||
*] | |||
*], The Painter's Secret Geometry: A Study of Composition in Art, shows how the great masters employed the "golden mean" and other geometrical patterns to compose their paintings. (Dover Publications; First Edition, First (August 20, 2014)) | |||
*] | |||
*], author of over 75 historical romance novels. Noted for premiering with a trilogy instead of a single book. Many of the books center around the fictional Westhaven family and their friends. () | |||
*] author of ] and ] | |||
*] | |||
*] Author of ], possibly from MIT | |||
*] 1975- | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*]: Noted Kannada Writer | |||
*]: Noted Italian poet | |||
*]: a children book writer and actor | |||
*], Canadian Author, scholar, and photographer, 1919-2003. | |||
*], American science-fiction author, activist, and publisher, 1954-. http://www.adventurebooksofseattle.com | |||
*] (born 1939) | |||
*] Writer. Author of 'Scepticism Inc.' | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*], writer of historical fiction for YA, e.g., ''Great Sweeping Day''. | |||
*], African-American fiction author, screenwriter, and ghost writer. | |||
*] quotes all over the Internet, identified as software writer and poet | |||
*] A group of New Jersey writers of prose and poetry, have website, published in many journals (both print and online) | |||
*] | |||
*] British writer, author of (amongst others) There Used To Be Trees . Blog at Bewildering Circumstances | |||
*] English writer, poet critic. See links- | |||
*], American literary novelist, historian and translator | |||
*] | |||
*], Italian writer | |||
*], Massachusetts novelist, author of The Road Less Traveled, Double Take, and The Fathers | |||
*], He is Filipino young poet, essayist, novelist. We recently requested for an article about him be created however, for some reasons, it has been deleted. We need the article as he is notable enough to earn publicity. | |||
*], Canadian author | |||
*], American fiction author | |||
*] Canadian author | |||
*] Canadian author | |||
*] WW2 prisoner of war and Canadian author | |||
*] Canadian author | |||
===C=== | |||
* ], American author, literary critic and academic. Finalist for the 2020 Pulitzer Prize in Biography for her book “Red Comet: The Short Life and Blazing Art of Sylvia Plath,” published by Knopf in 2020. Red Comet was a New York Times Top 10 Book of 2021, and won the Truman Capote Prize for Literary Criticism and the Slightly Foxed Prize for Best First Biography. Clark was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award and the LA Times Book Prize in Biography. Red Comet was a Book of the Year in many publications. Clark is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow and Professor of Contemporary Poetry at the University of Huddersfield. She has a BA from Harvard and a PhD in English from Oxford. Her two other prize-winning books are The Ulster Renaissance: Poetry in Belfast 1962-1972 and The Grief of Influence: Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes. Both are published by Oxford University Press. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, Harvard Review, Time, Times Literary Supplement, Air Mail, Lit Hub, and elsewhere. Her website is www.heatherclarkauthor.com with links to awards and articles. | |||
* ], American screenwriter, novelist and playwright. Author of "Daughters of Jubilation," "The Truth of Right Now," and many plays. She is a TV writer and producer and has written for "YOU," "Servant," and "The Flight Attendant" . | |||
* ], author, entrepreneur, and writer. Born in California, she has written over three mystery and suspense novels centered around holidays. She currently has six novels either released or set for release and has had her work mentioned in renown news outlets. You can reference her works at and | |||
* ] 19th century Dutch author, to be translated to English from Dutch Misplaced Pages. | |||
===D-E=== | |||
*] b. 1963 Former United States Army Green Beret and spiritual author,"The Journey of a Modern Mystic: The Battle for The Kingdom of God," 2006, ISBN- 13:978-0- 59567649-1. | |||
*] is best known for his humorous verse primarily in Italian or Irish-American dialect. Although popular for forty years as a poet, he was a versatile writer, and he built an international reputation as an author, columnist, and lecturer. | |||
*] author, dramatist and film maker | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] Author of the Worlds series, as well as many other fiction projects in the works. | |||
*] (American Poet, Published in Journals such as Sidebrow | |||
*] (American Poet, ], and Short Story Writer) | |||
*] Brazilian novelist, translator and comics writer. | |||
*] American novelist, the author of "An Island Away" and "Bonk's Bar" | |||
*] Australian poet | |||
*] (Russian author of detective novels) | |||
*], Sinthyia (American author, model) | |||
*] (author of Swimming in Silk and Angel Rock) | |||
*] (author of "Getting Lost: Mishaps of an Accidental Nomad" and an expert in the art of travel journaling) | |||
*], American writer, author of This Sober Life - www.ThisSoberLife.com or www.DaveBreslin.com | |||
*] (African-American ] and ], Author of Beloved, David www.davidakachi.com | |||
*], poet, essayist, novelist. , and | |||
*] (British author & occultist) | |||
*] American Writer Author's Website] | |||
*], Spanish Writer - see Spanish Misplaced Pages at http://es.wikipedia.org/David_Hernández_de_la_Fuente | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] (Weblog author of California) | |||
*] (Australian surf journalist and children's author of Erasmus James & the Galactic Zapp Machine — http://dcgreenyarns.blogspot.com) | |||
*] American author of books based on the Taoist philosophy. Translated the Tao Te Ching and annotated it, authored The Tao of Daily life, and runs the www.taoism.net website. | |||
*] Uruguayan-American novelist, author of The Invisible Mountain, winner of the 2010 Rhegium Julii Prize http://carolinaderobertis.com/ | |||
*] Canadian playwright, author of ] play cycle | |||
*] | |||
*] Tech Writer | |||
*] British/Nigerian author of ] | |||
*] Author of novel, A Cabinet of Wonders, | |||
*] | |||
*] (Swiss professor at Princeton/USC, expert on Goethe's Faust) | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*Dr. ] | |||
*], Holyoke, Mass. writer, novelist, author of The Delusson Family and The Shadows of the Trees | |||
*] (Romanian Writer, Author of To live in sin) | |||
*] ?Dutch poet | |||
*] | |||
*], Morehead, KY. writer, kentucky author of A Clock Without Hands, A: A Story of Abuse, Neglect, Escape and Survival in Eastern Kentucky | |||
*] (Horror/Children's author) | |||
*] A novel by Helen Fox | |||
*] German nazi poet. There's an article on an ], but none about himself | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] b. 1978, author of ''How This Night is Different'' and ''The Book of Dahlia'' | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] - Nominated for the Booker Prize in the 70s | |||
*] - author of the novel "]" that was made into the controversial movie starring ] and ] | |||
*] | |||
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*] Author of Gothic fiction from mid-late 20th century. Possible pseudonyms are Elsie Cromwell and Jane Godon | |||
*] | |||
*], author of "Raising Bookworms: Getting Kids Reading for Pleasure and Empowerment," co-author of Dumpy the Dump Truck, The Great American Mousical, Dragon: Hound of Honor, "Thanks to You: Wisdom from Mother and Child," "Simeon's Gift." Daughter of Julie Andrews. Editorial Director of The Julie Andrews Collection. Co-Founder, Bay Street Theatre, Actress, Director, Producer, Editor. | |||
*] popular touring spoken word artist | |||
*], author of You Can Choose Your Afterlife | |||
*] | |||
*], italian writer who teaches aesthetics at the University of Bologna. | |||
*] (1857-1940), born in Rockwood, Ontario. He flirted with poetry briefly with a text like "The Pasture Field" | |||
*] | |||
*] Australian writer "Sex, Drugs & Mum In The Front Row", editor "The Cud" online magazine | |||
*] | |||
*] American novelist | |||
*] Russian-born American poet | |||
*], Russian-Scottish writer of "The House by the Dvina" | |||
*] | |||
*Spirit de la Mare. London born performance poet and illustrator. First published at age eleven. Book due for release this year. | |||
* ], author, screenwriter and playwright. Born in Glasgow in 1966, she lives in Worcestershire and is the author of multiple genre books and screenplays. | |||
===F-G=== | |||
*] -- Born April 7, 1942 in Cairo, Egypt. Canadian novelist. Winner of the Trillium prize for fiction (2005) for his historical novel "L'Agonie des dieux". Former journalist, professor and civil servant, he holds a PhD in French Literature from McGill University in Montreal. He is the author of literary essays, notably on Voltaire and Rousseau, two children's books and four novels : "Amina et le mamelouk blanc" (1998 Trillium Book Award Finalist), "L’Honneur et la Disgrâce" (2002 Ottawa Book Award, finalist for the Radio-Canada Readers’ Prize), "L’Agonie des dieux" (2006 Trillium Book Award, 2006 Prix littéraire Le Droit, finalist for the Radio-Canada Readers’ Prize) and "Frères ennemis" (2010 Trillium Book Award Finalist). He was president of the Association des auteures et auteurs de l'Ontario français (AAOF) from 2006 to 2009. He lives in Ottawa. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] Montreal born novelist, author of ''The Daughter of Flames'' (2009) | |||
*] -- NYT Bestselling author of Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet. | |||
*] Published author and novelist, wife of novelist Martin Amis. She once had a wikipedia entry which was rather inexplicably deleted. | |||
*] -- Born December 18, 1979 in Torrance CA. American poet, author of short stories, author of ''The Way of The World'' (2007) | |||
*] -- Brazilian-born American novelist, author of ''The Seamstress'' (2008) | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] -- science fiction writer | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] (b. 1878) Poet who wrote "Blue Homespun" & "The Raconteur". Educated at Stanstead College, Bishop's and McGill Universities. Taught in Westmount High School on his return from Europe and afterward in Bishop's College School. His area of expertise in writing is Acadians and French Canadians literature. | |||
*]- Modern American Poet | |||
*] (Essayist and Daughter of Canadian Writer June Callwood) | |||
*] translator of the avant garde writers | |||
*]- | |||
*] Italian writer, historian and journalist with 5 books published, http://it.wikipedia.org/Sciltian_Gastaldi | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] novelist, playwright, professor. Author of the novel Blackbird Rising and the play Matter of Intent, winner of the Edgar Award from Mystery Writers of America. Visit www.garyearlross.com. | |||
*] poet | |||
*] | |||
*] Author | |||
*], Italian publishing house specialising in dictionaries and encyclopedias, see ] | |||
*] Eminent Indian Theatre director, popularly known as Solo Guru | |||
*] | |||
*] http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/ouch/2005/09/aspergers_not_a_disability.html, http://www.jkp.com/catalogue/author.php/id/1767, "kangarew" posts on http://www.asd-forum.org.uk/ | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] Author of Ghosts of the Southern Tennessee Valley, www.georgianakotarski.com | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
'''Gillott, Jacqueline Anne,''' '''Jacky Gillott''' (1940-1980) first woman radio film critic, journalist, novelist, author of Providence Place, Crying Out Loud, The Head, A True Romance, War Baby, Salvage, et al? Graduate University College London, 1960 | |||
*] Brazilian artist and poet | |||
*] | |||
*] Author of Thoughts from a Coma and An leavhar | |||
*] Author, member of The Broad Set Writing Collective, New Jersey native | |||
*] 16th century English text by Sir Thomas Elyot | |||
*] | |||
*] American poet, playwright and short-story writer. Winner of four Hopwood Awards at the University of Michigan, also the 2009 Lorian Hemingway Short Fiction Award, the 2009 Robert Frost Award of the Robert Frost Foundation, the 2010 Rita Dove Award in the International Writing Competition of Salem College, and others in fiction, poetry and drama. Publications in literary and national periodicals; one play, a juvenile work written in 1981, published by The Dramatic Publishing Company. He has taught at the University of Michigan, and currently teaches Literature and Art History in Grosse Ile, Michigan. | |||
*] | |||
*] Founder of the Deadxstop Publishing Company. Author of several independently published books including 4AM Friends. See his blog at askheychris.livejournal.com. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] US writer, author of The End is Known, (USA, 1949) | |||
* ], author, | |||
===H-I=== | |||
*], Romanian poet, painter and of and background, son of the Hutsul painter ] ( for more) | |||
* ] | |||
*], important Spanish author, poet and pedagogist exists in Spanish Misplaced Pages. Could someone translate hes article? I need information about this poet. Could somebody translate it? Spanish is not my thing. Thanks. | |||
*] A form of fiction reaching beyond the limits of the expected form through the incorporation of a wide variety of story telling methods, such as poetry, photogaphy, etc. | |||
* ], British author, public speaker and sobriety coach. Author of The Sober Survival Guide — has featured in national press, radio and TV, see his blog at | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
* ], American author, artist, poet, Ph.D., and public speaker. Author of ''Dead Precedents: How Hip-Hop Defines the Future'', ''Escape Philosophy: Journeys Beyond the Human Body'', and ''The Medium Picture'' ; editor of ''Boogie Down Predictions: Hip-Hop, Time, and Afrofuturism'', and ''Follow for Now: Interviews with Friends and Heroes'': | |||
*], author of ] | |||
*], author of The Last Sunrise, holocaust survivor | |||
* ], British actor, and playwright. Studied at ]. Won an olivier award in 2002 for his debut play f*cking Games, directed by ], for the ]. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
* ], Italian writer. | |||
*] | |||
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* ] (born November 23, 1977) author, professor, martial artist. Author of Eight Times Up (Orca Book Publishers, 2019), short-listed for Hamilton Literary Awards 2020. Professor at Mohawk College. Served as academic faculty at Wilfrid Laurier University, Laurier Brantford (WLU), McMaster University, University of Guelph, and St. Jerome's University (UWaterloo). Held Writing Centre positions at Laurier Brantford (WLU)and McMaster University School of Graduate Studies. Holds rank of Sandan (3rd degree black belt) with Aikido Yoshinkai Canada. | |||
*] Teenage American writer, author of BREAK and INVINCIBLE SUMMER. | |||
*] | |||
* ] - co-author of ''The Adventures of Mystics & Merrymakers'' | |||
*] | |||
*] Pioneering scholar of comparative literature, Professor Emeritus of Comparative Literature at IU Bloomington | |||
* Sergeant ] (December 27, 1841 - December 25, 1921), ] sergeant and author of '']''. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
* ], Award-Winning Canadian author of How Dim the Promised Land<ref>{{cite book |last1=Crown |first1=Bruce |title=How Dim the Promised Land |date=2017 |publisher=Vintage Copenhagen Publications |location=Toronto |isbn=9780995849242}}</ref> and The Romantic and The Vile<ref>{{cite book |last1=Crown |first1=Bruce |title=The Romantic and The Vile |date=2016 |location=Toronto |isbn=0995849226 |edition=1 |url=https://www.theromanticandthevile.com/}}</ref> and Editor of ]. | |||
*] | |||
*] Author of the Bonemender series | |||
===D=== | |||
*] Irish author whose novels include Something You Should Know, Not What You Think, Never Say Never and others | |||
*] and ], authors and missionaries to Nakuru, Kenya | |||
* ], American writer of fiction and poetry, five-time winner of Will Rogers Medallion, National Cowboy Hall of Fame Wrangler three-time winner, Western Writers of America Spur winner, three-time Lamplighter Finalist for his series "The Adventures of Wilder Good." Links: , , , , , | |||
*], novelist, author of "The Nun's Story" | |||
*], (b. 1887) son of Toronto-based ] owner ], ]. He was well-versed in writing as can be seen in "Just a Clerk", a poem of his. | |||
*], American journalist, writer and poet, author of five books. Links: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . | |||
*] | |||
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* ], founder of ], comic-book and movie scholar, producer of several documentaries, and comic-book author. | |||
*] | |||
*] Contemporary Lebanese author who chronicled the effects of civil war on the Lebanese psyche now living in exile in Paris. | |||
* ], born March 13, 1967, an American fiction and preadolescent fiction writer, author of Me and My Alter Ego series and other books including My Alter Ego Gone Wild, Me and My Alter Ego: Love-N-Business, It's Not About The Ego, Me and My Alter Ego II: Here Comes Jack, Bitter Fruit, April and Jackson's Emotional Rollercoaster, One Step Ahead, and Malinda's Milk and Honey. Link:, , , , , , , | |||
*] Writer of travel non-fiction, documentary film maker and explorer; ] | |||
*] | |||
* ], contemporary French novelist, who writes historical fiction. Many of her numerous works have been translated into German and English. Requested 6 August 2021. | |||
*] | |||
*] Contemporary author of the novel 'Monument' (2002) ] | |||
* ], Serbian Jewish author who lived from 1854-1918. Held diplomatic positions representing Serbia as well as wrote short stories about Jewish life in Belgrade. Stories are of ethnographic interest as they describe Belgrade's Sephardic community at a time when more of the community was beginning to assimilate into wider Serbian society. Links: , , . Mentioned in Misplaced Pages articles ] and ]. | |||
*] | |||
*] Uruguayan poet. | |||
*], Indian fiction writer who by age 14 had written over 10 books. According to the Google knowledge panel, he has been invited by Harvard University for his books. Links: , , , , , | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] | |||
* ], British fiction writer, children's historical novelist, author of A Question of Courage, First of Midnight, A Long Way to Go, Comeback, and others. , , , , , | |||
*] | |||
*] a book by Catherine Fisher | |||
*], Australian author. Links: , , , , , | |||
*] author of "To Other Women Who Were Ugly Once" | |||
*] | |||
*], August 29th 1925-January 16th 2021. American Non-Fiction Writer of around 20 books on The American Old West and a World War II veteran. A contemporary of Joseph G. Rosa and Leon Claire Metz. Still being published a few years ago. His bio of Bat Masterson is considered definitive and many of his works are the basis of Wiki articles on the Gunmen and Lawmen of the Old West. https://www.tributearchive.com/obituaries/19699707/Robert-Bob-Kendall-DeArment | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*], American writer and journalist, married to jazz pianist ]. Journalist, former staff writer for ] and author of three YA books. Sarah is a former New York State Golden Gloves Champion and currently coaches boxing in New York City. Sarah has been awarded MacDowell Fellowship and Pushcart Prize. Links: , , , , | |||
*], writer of romantic thrillers for teenagers | |||
*], American writer, author of the novel The Beasts They Turned Away, Links: , , , , , ,,, , , | |||
*], American memoirist, children’s book author, fiction writer and essayist, author of the memoir-in-essays Message From a Blue Jay (Buddhapuss Ink, 2014), the Stray Cat Stories Children’s Book series (Writer’s Coffee Bar Press), and publications in a wide variety of literary journals. Faye is also an animal and wildlife advocate who donates a portion of the proceeds from her children’s books to animal rescue organizations. Links: , , , , , | |||
*], science fiction and fantasy publication, edited by David Steffen. Founded in 2008, has been publishing original short fiction since 2015. Fiction published in Diabolical Plots has been been reprinted in Best Science Fiction of the Year, and The Best of British Fantasy, finalist for the Hugo Award For Best Short Story, The Locus Award for Best Short Story, and winner of the Nebula Award for Best Short Story. The same people who run it also publish the annual Long List Anthology as well as running The Submission Grinder tool for writers to find publishers for their work. Links: , , , , , | |||
*], South African author of ] and ] series. Links: , , , , , , , | |||
* ] , American author of ] <ref name="duncan-1">{{cite web |url=https://us.macmillan.com/author/emilyaduncan |title=Emily A. Duncan |website=MacMillan Publishers |publisher=MacMillan |access-date=14 June 2021 |ref=duncan}}</ref> <ref name="duncan-2">{{cite web |last1=Knight |first1=Rosie |title=Emily A. Duncan on BLESSED MONSTERS’ ‘Super Gross’ Love Story |url=https://nerdist.com/article/emily-a-duncan-interview-blessed-monsters/ |website=Nerdist |publisher=Nerdist |access-date=14 June 2021 |ref=duncan-2}}</ref> | |||
* ] - Colombian artist who has worked in several areas of art including, poet, voice actor who gave his voice to a character in a short film that won several international awards, writer, video game developer, painter, among other arts. The article has been published several times but no administrator, librarian has a clear consensus with it, they only delete the article without verifying the sources, quality controls, Wikimedia data, or identifiers. It is only deleted without verifying anything. According to a Misplaced Pages user, the article is being censored, hidden, or prevented from being created. What is known as a hate attack. ] - Identifier ID Author in biblioeteca.com https://www.biblioeteca.com/biblioeteca.web/escritor/jorge-luis-diaz-granados-lugo - Newspaper note where it is reported that he won first place in developing a video game https://www.elinformador.com.co/index.php/component/content/article?id=42639:sena-regional-magdalena-ganador-en-tecnobot-2012- According to a source where it is reported that he won the first place in developing a video game http://senamagdalena.blogspot.com/2012/10/regional-magdalena-ganador-en-tecnobot.html - - Knowledge panel showing your date of birth, name, and movie where you participated as a voice actor: https://www.google.com/search?q=jorge+luis+diaz+granados+lugo+nacimiento - - - - - - - - National and international film awards where he participates as a voice actor: - | |||
* ], (1468-1583) Famous poet born in Ashtachhap (]) | |||
* ] , British sports writer. Author of 'Unsuitable for Females: The Rise of the Lionesses and Women's Football in England' (2022), shortlisted for Football Book of the Year at the 2023 Sports Book Awards, and 'Woman Up: Pitches, Pay and Periods - The Progress and Potential of Women's Football' (2023), shortlisted for the Vikki Orvice Award at the 2024 Sports Book Awards. | |||
===E=== | |||
* ], is an Australian literary translator from Portuguese. Her work includes Spilt Milk, My German Brother, and Budapest by Chico Buarque, shortlisted for the 2005 Independent Foreign Fiction Prize (https://en.wikipedia.org/Independent_Foreign_Fiction_Prize); City of God by Paulo Lins; My Sweet Orange Tree by José Mauro de Vasconcelos; The Eternal Son by Cristóvão Tezza, shortlisted for the 2012 IMPAC Dublin Literary Award (https://en.wikipedia.org/International_Dublin_Literary_Award); and Near to the Wild Heart by Clarice Lispector, shortlisted for the 2013 PEN America Translation Prize (https://pen.org/2013-pen-translation-prize/), among others. Entrekin won the 2019 New South Wales Premier’s Translation Prize and PEN Medallion (https://www.sl.nsw.gov.au/awards/nsw-premiers-translation-prize/2019-winner-alison-entrekin), having been shortlisted three times previously; and the 2022 AAWP Translators' Prize for an excerpt of Great Sertão: Meanderings by João Guimarães Rosa. Her work has appeared in Words without Borders (https://wordswithoutborders.org/search/?search=Entrekin); Granta (https://granta.com/that-year-in-rishikesh/); Modern Poetry in Translation (https://modernpoetryintranslation.com/poem/soul-washing/); Wasafiri (https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/02690055.2015.1011406); and The White Review (https://www.thewhitereview.org/fiction/the-urban-cyclist/), among others. She has been interviewed and/or profiled in The Common (https://www.thecommononline.org/playing-frankenstein-an-interview-with-alison-entrekin/); Asymptote (https://www.asymptotejournal.com/blog/2015/02/18/interviewing-portuguese-translator-alison-entrekin/); Bomb Magazine (https://bombmagazine.org/articles/dilated-heart-alison-entrekin-and-clarice-lispector/); and AALITRA (https://aalitra.org.au/interviews/). Also see Amazon.com: (https://www.amazon.com/s?k=alison+entrekin&crid=2ME3NWNK319N2&sprefix=alison+entrekin%2Caps%2C419&ref=nb_sb_noss_1). | |||
*] is an American poet. She is the author of Dark Braid, which won the 2019 John Ciardi Prize for Poetry and was published by BkMk Press in 2020. Her work has appeared in the Atlantic , the American Poetry Review , AGNI , Poet Lore , Poetry Magazine , High Country News and elsewhere. Her debut collection was featured in Oprah Winfrey’s magazine Oprah Daily as one of the 29 best poetry books as recommended by acclaimed writers. She is a graduate of the Institute of American Indian Arts MFA in Creative Writing program and received a degree in visual art from the University of New Mexico . Additional links here: ,. | |||
*], English novelist, author of historical fiction novels and textbooks, including The Chronicles of Ascension series (2019) and Shorthand SOS (2019) — see his author page at | |||
*] - Author, Technology Enthusiast, Developer; born in Colorado. Author of The Secret Of Bright Inn . His website is reachable at joshuaemlen.com <ref>www.joshuaemlen.com</ref> | |||
*], (born September 12, 1970) American fiction writer, author of the novels Coiled in the Heart (Putnam 2004) and Temple Grove (University of Washington Press 2013). Links: , , , , , , , , , , , | |||
*], English Irish Musical Travel Diarist; born in Scunthorpe England. Author of Die Schokiberg Chronik (2003) and 52 Love Letters from the Lake (2020). Links: | |||
===F=== | |||
*] (born April 14, 1973) American writer, poet, educator, and author of Mother to Son, Twenty-eight Days of Poetry Celebrating Black History, Love Poems, I Am Woman, Kendall's Golf Lesson, Secrets of My Soul, and Immaculate Perceptions. Military spouse and 2018 winner of the Tom Howard Poetry Prize sponsored by Winning Writers. English professor and 2018 finalist for the Furious Flower Poetry Prize, semi-finalist for the 2018 Wheeler Poetry Prize and the North Street Book Prize. | |||
* ] - American novelist, author of ''Sunflowers in Bloom'' and ''In Our Bones'' () | |||
* ] - ] professor and author of ''It's Time to Fight Dirty'' () | |||
* ] - ] poet () and ] artist (). Writer of . | |||
* ] (born 13th December 1995) is an Australian author originally from Perth, where she also received her education at Perth College and Methodist Ladies' College. She describes her education as an extraordinary experience. Raised in a Christian environment, she chose to begin and concentrate on writing her debut novel, The Last Report (2024), at the age of 26. Her work was inspired by her own views on climate change and its catastrophic impact on the planet. She has a strong passion for the sciences and philosophy and is currently pursuing a Doctor of Philosophy in Biomedical Sciences. | |||
* ] was educated near Oxford. During the English author's extraordinary life, he has been an aeronautical engineering student, dispatch rider, graphic designer, full-time busker, guitarist and singer, recording two albums. Having grown up in rural Buckinghamshire Lazlo says: “The beautiful Chiltern Hills offered the ideal playground for a child’s mind, in contrast to the ultra-strict education system of Bucks.” Brought up as a Buddhist, he has travelled widely, surviving a student uprising in Athens and living for a while in Cairo, just after Sadat’s assassination. Later, he spent some time in Central Asia and was only a few blocks away from gunfire during an attempt to storm the government buildings of Bishkek in 2006. He has a keen interest in theologies and philosophies of the Far East, Middle East, Asia and Eastern Europe. After a long and successful career within the science industry, Lazlo Ferran left to concentrate on writing, to continue exploring the landscapes of truth. Among his books are ] , ] , ] , ] Volume 1: , ] Volume 1: and ] - | |||
*] (1904-1957) Canadian-born writer, daughter of ]. She was author of The Earthen Lot, 1928; Small Town, 1931 (awarded Femina Vie Heureuse prize, 1932–1933); Grand Harbour, 1934; Miledi, 1942, published in America as Bride of Glory (Literary Guild choice) | |||
*] - Romanian author, best known for ''Song of the Nephilim'' () | |||
*] (born April 14, 1982) is a TV Screenwriter and young adult fantasy author. She is author of ''The Rite of Wands'', BHC Press , ''The Rite of Abnegation'', ''The Binge Watcher’s Guide to Doctor Who: A History Of Doctor Who And The First Female Doctor'', Riverdale Avenue Books, and her short stories appear in the anthology collections ''The Whispered Tales of Graves Grove'' (bestselling) and ''Unknown Realms'', Fiction-Atlas Press. She has received awards from the Literary Classics Book Awards, the Foreword Magazine INDIES Book Awards, the Imadjinn Awards, the Royal Dragonfly Awards and finalist in the International Book Awards, and Author Elite Awards. She was one of 35 writers worldwide chosen by Authority Magazine for her expertise on writing compelling science fiction and fantasy stories. She holds a BA in Business Administration from Ashland University. | |||
* ] - author of "The Buslife Kitchen" | |||
*] (born 1979) was a children's editor and now an author, of such books like Boy 87, 2018 (awarded the Waterstones Children's book award) and Lost, 2020. | |||
*{{ill|Seiji Fujii|ja|藤井誠二}} - author of the manga '']'' | |||
===G=== | |||
* ], is a professor, and award-winning poet and literary translator. She is the editor of the first anthology of food poems "Quesadilla and Other Adventures: Food Poems" (2019), and has translated, among others, "Firesongs" (2019), "Shakuni: Master of the Game" (2019), and "The Midnight Sun: Love Lyrics and Farewell Songs" (2018). Links: , , , , , , | |||
* ] American poet; Born 1993 in Carrollton, Texas; Author of Farewell to Solitude, Of Elegance and Quintessence, Harmony, and Tabitha Tearwater: Guardian on Ellis (a YA fiction novel). Garrett is also an LGBT rights activist and beauty pageant winner | |||
* ] Canadian author; writer of weird fiction and horror , . | |||
* ], novelist, best selling author of “The Prophecies of Karma” () — see his page on Goodreads () , and , writer, director, and award winning producer of short and feature films - see his page on IMDb (), he is mentioned in the list of notable science fiction authors around the world on Misplaced Pages at ] and at () | |||
* ], American author | |||
* ] - author of ''Self-Management for Actors: Getting Down to (Show) Business'', co-author of ''Acting Qs: Conversations with Working Actors'' | |||
* ] (ISNI: 0000 0003 7326 9126), author from Winnipeg, Manitoba, originally from Morden, Manitoba (). He is mentioned on Misplaced Pages without having a separate page , , and . He wrote the Thunder Road trilogy (Thunder Road, Tombstone Blues, and Too Far Gone) and Graveyard Mind (published 2018). Other links: , , , , , . | |||
* ] - best-selling American novelist () | |||
* ] (born December 3, 1990) - Malaysian novelists with two novels: ''The Battle for Oz'' (published September 2015) and ''The Slave Prince'' (published May 2018) by Inkshares, she won the Geek & Sundry Fantasy Contest in 2016 and was nominated as a CLEO HotShot 2018 () | |||
* ] (1425-1493) - Italian noble, diplomat, and humanist born in ]. Chancellor of ] from 1466 to 1488. An avid collector of classical texts. In the latter half of the 15th century he compiled the '']'' which included a direct copy of the recently-discovered '']'', a 9th century manuscript containing the ''Opera Minora'' of ], including the ], which had been considered a lost work until that point. Eight folia from the ] section of the ''Codex Aesinas'' are written in ] script and are thought to be originals taken from the ''Codex Hersfeldensis'', making them the only extant remnant of that lost manuscript. | |||
* ] (born December 15, 1993), Youngest South African Comic Writer. She wrote, designed and edited The Legend of Dollaretta: See https://dollaretta.com/ | |||
* ] has become legendary for his cutting edge fetish thrillers of damsels in distress, as well as their dangerous victimizers and the even more dangerous people who seek to find and free them. Starting with the pioneering publisher H.O.M. way back in the 1980s, he's now known throughout the web for his groundbreaking approach to the genre as well as his mass-market writing ability. | |||
===H=== | |||
*] is an author, photographer, editor and educator. Author of Lincoln Highway: Main Street across America and Reflecting a Prairie Town: A Year in Peterson , coauthor of Purebred and Homegrown: America's County Fairs and coeditor of America from the Air: An Aviator’s Story . He has exhibited his photographs from coast to coast, and has contributed chapters and photographs to many books and exhibits. He is an Affiliate Fellow at the Center for Great Plains , has exhibited and lectured widely. | |||
*] is a Canadian poet whose poem "Bonedog" is featured in the film ]. Author of two books of poetry: "Rotten Perfect Mouth" and "Shiner". Winner of the 2015 Montreal International Poetry Prize. Awarded a MacDowell fellowship in 2017. Links: , , , , , , , , , | |||
* ] - American writer of western novels, often under the pseudonym John Benteen. . | |||
* ] - Indian-Bengali writer, born in Kolkata, West Bengal in 1997. Sudipto is also a poet, lyricist and reviewer. Author of '']'' , '']'' (''অভিনীতের আরম্ভ'') (''The Beginning of Acting''?) , ''Unencumbered'' , '']'' (''স্বপ্ন দর্শন'') (''Dream Vision''?) . , , , , | |||
* ], literary critic, teacher, biographer, and lecturer. A leading scholar of ] and Southern literary studies more broadly, he is the author of four works of literary criticism and a forthcoming biography of ]. He has also edited or co-edited three collections of critical essays, including Swamp Souths: Literary and Cultural Ecologies and Undead Souths: The Gothic and Beyond in Southern Literature and Culture. His book Faulkner, Writer of Disability won the C. Hugh Holman Award for Best Book in Southern Studies. He has held a Fulbright Professorship at the University of Munich and is currently Professor of English at Florida Atlantic University. Sources: , , , , , . | |||
* ] - author and filmmaker who wrote '']'', a modern retelling of the ] about an alternate reality where ] becomes president in 2016. They also directed the documentary ] (2004), about the NESARA cult/conspiracy theory, the precursor to ], and two feature length movies made with generative AI tools: The Epic of Gilgamesh (2024) , and The Eternal Recurrence (2024) . He has also made the first TV show made with AI, The Disposable Soma | |||
* ], American Cartoonist and writer/artist of Tinderella and Desperate Pleasure. Links: , , , | |||
* ] - novels about the 18th century https://www.elsahart.com/ | |||
* ] - author () | |||
* ] - author of ''The Zoltan Chronicles'' (2019) () | |||
* ] - co-author of ''The Adventures of Mystics & Merrymakers'' | |||
* ] - Irish poet based in London, born December 12 1915; died June 19 2002, aged 86. Appeared on television and radio. ( ) | |||
* ] - American poet, queer Afro-Latinx activist, and performer. Her poetry collection ''HoodWitch'' (Acre Books, 2019) was a finalist for the 2020 Lambda Literary Award for Bisexual Poetry, the 2019 Balcones Poetry Prize, and the 2019 Julie Suk Award. She was editor-in-chief of ''Borderlands: Texas Poetry Review''. Hicks has received several awards, including Palette Poetry’s 2020 Sappho Award, 2020 Right of Return USA Fellowship for previously incarcerated artists, the 2020 Tin House Poet-in-Residence for poets working on a second collection, the 2020 Texas Commission on the Arts Touring Roster, the 2020 Best of Net Award for Poetry, and the 2019 Lambda Literary Writer’s Retreat for Emerging Writers Nonfiction fellowship. | |||
** As a performer, Hicks became the first black woman on the Austin Poetry Slam team when she became the 2009 Grand Slam Champion. She was also a 2009 Women of the World Poetry Slam finalist, a 2009 Famecast top three finalist, and a member of the 2008 Neo Soul Poetry Slam Team. Their work is anthologized in ''The Long Devotion: Poets Writing Motherhood'' and ''When There Are Nine'', and has been featured in American Poetry Review, the Cincinnati Review, HuffPost, Kenyon Review, The Rumpus, Slate, Texas Observer, and others. | |||
** She was born in Gardena, California, but raised in Central Texas. Hicks received a BA in English from Texas State University-San Marcos in 2010 and an MFA in Creative Writing from Sierra Nevada University in 2018. Since 2013, Hicks has been on the roster for hip-hop collective Grid Squid Entertainment and released their third spoken word album, ONYX in June 2019. She has toured both nationally and internationally as a solo act since 2007, performing in more than 30 states, as well as in Jamaica and Canada. Hicks has performed at venues and festivals such as the Nuyorican Poets Café, Busboys and Poets, Chicago’s The Green Mill, San Antonio’s Tobin Center, Warehouse 508, Austin’s Pecan Festival, SXSW, EXSE, Rock the Republic Festival. | |||
** Her visual art has been on exhibition at the Texas State University’s Gallery of the Common Experience, the Insomnia Gallery in Houston, and featured in Five:2:One’s print magazine. Throughout her 16-year career, she has been billed alongside popular writers and artists such as Aaron Stephens, Airea Dee, Alesia Lani, Andrea “Vocab” Sanderson, Ashlee Haze, Barbara Youngblood Carr, Brian Turner, Brockhampton, Budd Powell Mahan, Carolyn Forché, and Camille Dungey. | |||
** An activist and member of the Statewide Leadership Council, established by the ], she advocates for policy changes related to pretrial incarceration, immigrant detention, and the use of cash bail. Along with Mano Amiga, she advocated for the ''cite-and-release ordinance'' in the city of San Marcos, which was passed in 2020. This legislation, which limits police discretion and lowers the potential for escalation, is the first of its kind in the state of Texas. Her pretrial incarceration story was featured in PBS’s Independent Lens Documentary Series “45 Days," and is featured in “Racially Charged,” a Brave New Films project forthcoming in early 2021 and narrated by Mahershala Ali. Hicks has been a keynote speaker, featured writer, or mentor for Adroit's 2020 Summer Mentorship Program, Writers' League of Texas 2020 Workshop and Craft Talk series, the LA Review of Books 2019 Publishing Cohort, the Writers by the River Reading series, the 2020 OutWrite Festival, the 2014 Austin International Poetry Festival, the University of Texas, and Texas State University. | |||
**Links: | |||
* ], author of multiple acclaimed adventure book series including The Tesoro Series and Perception and Deception. | |||
* ], author of multiple acclaimed book series including Before INC. and Myths from Dimension Three, along many other short stories. | |||
* ], British author, with over a million books downloaded. He is the creator of The Undead, a self-published series that has become a cult hit. Author of Extracted series, a best-selling time-travel series. | |||
* ], American author born in St. Louis, Missouri on July 8th, 1952. Author of The One That Got Away (2019) which is a humorous novel set in St. Louis at the time of the Great Mississippi River Flood of 1993. | |||
* ], American novelist, author of the best-selling book ''Sometime After Midnight: A Collection of Poetry & Short Stories'', and the first book in ''The Outcrossed Series'', ''Into the Forgotten Forest'' — see | |||
* ], American writer, poet and spoken word performer author of the ''The Old Weird Albion'' and ''Obsolete Spells'' and vocal performer and author of the spoken word and music album ''Chanctonbury Rings''. Born in Binghamton, New York, 1972 now resident in the UK. | |||
* ] (]) - author of ''109 Positive Poems and Quotes to Get You Through the Day''. 5 star readers review rated author. Dale R. Horton is an author born and raised in Hollis, Queens, New York City. Owner of Valiant World Media Group and host of The Wrong Agenda podcast. Youtuber who does challenge videos Links to bio and interviews/news coverage: , , , | |||
* ], American memoirist, novelist, and dance critic born 1976. Author of The Lost Night (Dutton 2005), a memoir about her father's unsolved murder, and The Risk of Us (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2019), a novel. The New York Times called The Lost Night "enthralling," and the San Francisco Chronicle named it one of the best books of the year. The Associated Press called The Risk of Us "gorgeous." | |||
* ], novelist and film critic. British author of popular childrens' novels including FloodWorld and sequel DustRoad, the Warhammer Advantures: Realm Quest series and three instalments in the official Star Wars: Adventures in Wild Space series. Film writer for The Guardian, Sight & Sound, the BFI, Little White Lies and Time Out, where he worked in-house on the film desk. Articles and reviews are referenced in several Misplaced Pages articles including ], ], ] among others. Also plays in London-based folk rock band The No Sorrows, self-titled LP available on Spotify: . Not to be confused with actor ] or footballer ]. Further references on personal website: | |||
* ], (Born in 1985. poet and editor. Author of ''Sugar Factory'', a collection of poems with a series of paintings by writer and artist Sarah Riggs, in conversation with Hughes's poems. An editor at Fence. Born in Napa, California, grew up in small towns of Agua Caliente and El Verano in the Sonoma Valley. Currently lives in Brooklyn, New York. Active in avant-garde poetry communities. Work influenced by and descending from Joanne Kyger, Matthew Rohrer, Rebecca Wolff, Tomaz Salamun, Charles Simic, Larry Eigner, Lorine Niedecker, Joe Wenderoth, New York School, and San Francisco Renaissance poets. Teaches creative writing at Rutgers - New Brunswick.) Links: , , , , , , , , , | |||
* ], Born May 1986, is a bestselling American Fantasy and Science Fiction author with more than thirty novels published. He is an active member of SFWA (]) and best known for Rogue Dungeon, the Yancy Lazarus series, Bibliomancer (the Completionist Chronicles Expanded Universe), Shadowcroft Academy for Dungeons, and his LitRPG epic Viridian Gate Online. In addition to writing, James and his wife Jeanette run Shadow Alley Press, a publishing company based out of Lexington, Kentucky that focuses on Urban Fantasy, High Fantasy, Cultivation Novels, Military Science Fiction, and Gamelit stories. James Hunter is also a former Marine Corps Sergeant, combat veteran, and pirate hunter. He served from 2005 to 2009 and deployed twice with the ], first to ] in 2007 and then in 2009 as part of CTF151 (])—a multinational task force established to help mitigate piracy off the eastern coast of Somalia. - | |||
* ], British beginner novelist born 2004, author of Synthesis, a fictional book about an alternate victorian world with some disturbing secrets regarding a new type of slavery. | |||
* ], American novelist and game designer, author of Vampire Hotel revamped, Werewolf Therapy, Jack the Ripper's Secret, Vampire Hunter 101, Ancient Steel Fantasy Steampunk 101, Space Cadet Alpha, Trick or Treat the role playing game, Vampire Hunt, Ancient Steel Healer's Handbook, zombie convention. — see his profile on Amazon can be found at | |||
===I=== | |||
*] (born December 8 2003), author of Fleeing From The Flames, realistic fiction writer. | |||
===J=== | ===J=== | ||
* ] (born January 5, 1993) is an American novelist and journalist who previously served as a correspondent for ] in Hong Kong and Washington. His debut novel ''Foster Dade Explores the Cosmos'' will be published by ] in May 2023. In 2016, at the age of 23, Jenkins became the youngest writer in the publication's history to write a cover story for Time Magazine . Born in ], Jenkins grew up in ]. He is a descendant of ] passenger and ] governor ] and second colonial governor of North Carolina ]. Jenkins attended ] from 2008 until 2011 and pursued his undergraduate education at ], where he majored in the ]. While studying abroad in ], Jenkins published freelance pieces for ] and ], and was hired after college as a staff writer in ]'s Hong Kong bureau. In 2017, he was transferred to Time's Washington bureau to work as its congressional correspondent. While in Washington, Jenkins wrote profiles of such political figures as ], ], ], and ]. Jenkins left ''Time'' in 2018 to pursue a M.A. in the ]'s Division of the Humanities. He is currently a Ph.D. student in the ] at ]. | |||
*] is a Chinese prodigy writer .She is the author of],We are Growing ],Look over Here,],The True Story of the Mischievous Child,],Number One Schoolgirl, and ]. | |||
*] is an American television writer and director. His credits include ], American Dreams, ], Dirty Sexy Money, ], Sorority, and ]. | |||
* ] - co-author of ''The Adventures of Mystics & Merrymakers'' | |||
*] (d. 2001) is an American television/theatre writer, producer, and executive | |||
*] | |||
* ], British author best known for ] | |||
*], author of 'Nine Miles from Gundadai' | |||
*] | |||
*] (Daniel R. Jones is a writer from Indianapolis, IN. He received his Master of Fine Arts degree from Lindenwood University and a Bachelor of Arts degree in journalism from Bethel College. He currently serves as Editor-in-Chief at Bez & Co, a Christian online literary journal. Previously, he’s worked published in over a dozen journals, newspapers, and magazines, including Aphelion, Black Rabbit Quarterly, Parody Poetry, and the South Bend Tribune. He was a 2017 nominee for the Rhysling Award with the Speculative Fiction Poetry Association and won an award for best poem in the 2013 edition of Crossings, Bethel College’s Literary Journal. Daniel R. Jones’ first poetry collection, ''The Wrenching of the Hip That Precedes the Blessing,'' was published in October 2020 with Wipf and Stock.) (Amazon Author Page, showcasing his book: ) (Author Website: ) (Listing as a 2017 Nominee for the Rhysling Award by the SFPA (Publication in "In the Bend" Magazine: ) (Publication of book ''The Wrenching of the Hip That Precedes the Blessing'' with Wipf & Stock ) (Bez & Co, the online literary journal Daniel R. Jones serves as Editor-in-chief: ) (Duotrope listing of Bez & Co's literary journal: ) | |||
*] | |||
*] Australian author of 'Tales of Glok: Flame, Honour and Redemption (unfinished) | |||
*], author of "The Bard: Or, the Towers of Morven: a Legendary Tale". Links: , , | |||
*] Can someone (with expertise) put together a separate article with a list of ] prolific publications? | |||
*] | |||
*], Canadian writer of weird fiction and science fiction. Lives in Victoria, British Columbia. Author of ''When the Stars are Right,'' ''Shout Kill Revel Repeat,'' and ''Stonefish.'' Editor of collections including ''Chthonic.'' , . | |||
*] | |||
*] German writer/poet, three of his poems set to music by Arnold Schoenberg, see German wikipedia entry at http://de.wikipedia.org/Jakob_Haringer | |||
* ] Scottish novelist and author of ''The Impossible Journey'', a new book having an increasing amount of press interest in India. See , , and . | |||
*] | |||
*] Collected Poems, poet of great note in Irish and Irish American circles, resident of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, instructor at Univ. of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, disciple of Kavanagh and Beckett. | |||
*] | |||
*], American children's book author of ''The Way I Feel'' and ''Roonie B. Moonie: Lost and Alone.'' | |||
*] Noted Telugu author and poet | |||
*Jane Elliot, author of The Little Prisoner, a personal memoir of her childhood with her sexually abusive step-father | |||
*] | |||
*] Author of "The Holy Order of Womb Women" | |||
*] Poet, Screenwriter, Film and TV Producer, fiction writer, memoirist.Author of "Universe, Disturbed" and "Tongue for Folie." www.JaniceBrabaw.com | |||
* American poet, translator, essayist, story writer. See www.JanineCanan.com | |||
*] | |||
*] author of ''Standing Tall''. http://www.icebergpublishing.com | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] (writes under ]) | |||
*] (Author of The Autobiography of Santa Claus, How Mrs. Claus Saved Christmas, The Great Santa Search). | |||
*] | |||
*] (Author of The Key of Time, the Realm of Twilight, and Unlimited Heroes). | |||
*] | |||
*] is a poet and translator. She published a collection of poems, ] (Anvil, London 2005) and an anthology of contemporary French poetry, ], (together with ], Anvil, London 2009). | |||
*] | |||
*] (Author of the soon to come biographical novel "Dysfunctional:adj") | |||
*] (Author of "Dear Isabelle", mystery/thriller). | |||
*] (Author of "The Hollow" & "The Haunted"). | |||
*] (Author of "Blood, Sex and Prayer", "Bearing the Pall", "Reliquary", "Manhattan Beatitude", etc) | |||
*], (Author of "Nestleton Magna" historical/religious fiction novel) | |||
*], (J.F. (Jeremy) Lewis is the author of 2008 "Staked", 2009 "ReVamped", and 2011 "Crossed", urban fantasy vampire novels published by Simon & Schuster imprint Pocket Books- see his website: www.authoratlarge.com and blog: writethefantastic.blogspot.com) | |||
*] (Author of the "The Pawn Prince") | |||
*], (Belgian writer) | |||
*] (Horror author. Books include Zombie Bukkake, Twisted Loneliness, Sucked Up Fhit,and See You in Tea) | |||
*] {born April 8, 1914, died 2000} writer of novels about conditions in British prisons: Who Lie in Gaol, Women in Prison, Yield to the Night. | |||
*] (req. 2008-12-23) Author of Maggody (a.k.a "Ozark" & "Arly Hanks") and Claire Malloy humorous mystery series. | |||
*] Author of the Karen Pelletier mystery series, and I wanted to add link from one of her books to http://en.wikipedia.org/The_Raven_in_popular_culture | |||
*] | |||
*] Known TV & Theatre Actor. () | |||
*] Virginia author of speculative fiction. | |||
*] | |||
*] Prominent young essayist and originator of the concept of the "lyric essay" | |||
*]Canadian novelist () | |||
*] Canadian author of ''The Heart of Teaching''. http://www.icebergpublishing.com | |||
*] American author of ''Just enuf to get by''. http://www.justenuftogetby.com/ | |||
*], British 1936–2007, wrote musicals with composer ] including ''Dazzle'', ''Dracula Spectacular'' and ''Big Al''. | |||
*] Writer, director, performer and founder of FoolishPeople. Author of Cirxus and Dead Langauge. http://www.johnharrigan.com | |||
*] | |||
*] (born 1945), North American poet and educator. | |||
*] British Poet, writer. | |||
*] Christian speaker and writer of The Archives of Anthropos series (allegorical fantasy) and many inspirational/devotional books. | |||
*] British author of the 2002 suspense novel Walls of Silence (translated in to German and Spanish) and False Positive (2004); Biography - Jolowicz, Philip: An article from: Contemporary Authors Online by Gale Reference Team (Digital - Jun 13, 2007) - HTML | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] American actor, singer, designer has worked on many regional and Off-Off Broadway productions. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*], important Spanish poet from the 20th century <small>(], ])</small> | |||
*] | |||
*] Author of the queer as folk novel Every nine seconds. | |||
*] Arab American author | |||
*] Texas writer; www.josephdmartin.com | |||
*] (American Expressionist Painter) | |||
*] American author of the ''Emily and Alice'' children's book series. | |||
*] - British Crime Thiller author - | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*], German-American Jewish writer, was a prisoner at Buchenwald concentration camp. (]) | |||
===K=== | ===K=== | ||
* ] (February 18, 1919 - November 4, 2004) was an American children's author and illustrator. She wrote or contributed to 16 books starting in the early 1950s.Her titles include <i>The Duchess Bakes a Cake</i>, <i>The Habits of Rabbits</i>, <i>The Perfect Pancake</i>, and <i> How Many Dragons Are Behind the Door?</i>. - , , , | |||
*] - A popular Indian Science fiction writer writing in Hindi Language. | |||
*] - Canadian author | |||
*Emmanuel Ngwainmbi, known by the pseydonym ] is a Cameroonian author who has spent most of his life in the United States. He is the author of 20 books, including novels and poetry collections, among them Sim’s Poetic Column; A Bush of Voices, Whispers on My Pillow, Theaters of War and Growing Flames, Fury and Lavender. Other writings appear in Sankofa, Chapel Hill Press, Janus; La Colombe, Yaoundé University Press; The Brave-War Veterans Anthology; Washington Review; Electric Acorn, Dublin, Ireland; Lynne Reiner Publishers; Symphony of Verse; New Poets of West Africa; Malthouse Press; New Horizons by Yaoundé University Press, Howard University Magazine, Sensations Magazine, allpoetry.com, and more. Kane won the Kom-USA award for poetry. He serves on the Editorial boards of 12 peer-reviewed journals and a member of the Poets and Writers, Inc., Charlotte Writers Club, and others. Emanuel has received critical acclaim for his writings and awards in journalism and the social sciences from the Chinese Academy for Social Sciences, Family Christian Association of America, among others, for his contribution to the social sciences; cited by Nobel Laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Pulitzer Prize winner Gwendolyn Brooks, and leading African-American Social Scientists Molefi Kete Asante and Blyden Jackson. | |||
*] - Australian fantasy author of ] and the Fallen Moon series ( (released August 2009; a nominee on the short-list for the ]), (released February 2010), and (to be released September 2010)) and an . | |||
**His writings have already caught the attention of readers and newspaper editors. Also, columnists and press reports at the Matthews Weekly, Virginia Pilot, Daily Advance, Charlotte Observer, Publishers Weekly, Lenka’s List, and Goodreads have already agreed to review the novels. His networks at LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, and other social media platforms follow his work. | |||
*] a popular German fantasy author | |||
**Links: , , , , | |||
*] American Author of 2 books, also Youtube personality and acclaimed blogger | |||
*] a popular Indian author, converted to Islam | |||
* ] (Indian author; Best known book name: The Selfish Betrayals; Born on August 8, 1987 in Kanpur, India; He has verified knowledge panel on Google and also a verified author on Goodreads. He has contributed significantly towards technical training of students and young professionals of Kanpur. He initiated the Jagruk India online campaign. The Selfish Betrayals is the first book written by him and is dedicated to his two little ones, who were unfortunately lost at different points of times. He is the only author in the world to dedicate his book to the children that were lost due to miscarriage. Links: , , , , , , , , , , , | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
* ], Yiddish-language writer, her ''Diary of a Lonely Girl, or The Battle against Free Love'' was recently (2020) published in English translation by Syracuse University Press. , , , , . Plenty more easily found with Google. | |||
*] | |||
*] Lebanese Author of 4 books, and winner of ''Saiid Akl'' literary Award for PYTHAGORAS the Mathemagician | |||
* ] , (born March 22, 1964) British / Irish author. Author of Belisarius Military Master of the West Book One : Nika. | |||
*] | |||
*] Romantic Fiction Author | |||
*], (born December 18, 1979), American author and journalist. Born Constantino Díaz-Durán. Co-author of Modern Kinship: A Queer Guide to Christian Marriage (Westminster John Knox Press, 2019). | |||
*] Australian Author of 5 Books of Elita | |||
*] seeking an in-depth article for her novel "The Forgotten Garden" | |||
*], (born October 11, 1977) American author. Author of The Burdens Trilogy and co-author of Modern Kinship: A Queer Guide to Christian Marriage (Westminster John Knox Press, 2019). | |||
*] an award winning romantic comedy author and popular lecturer on business & craft of writing | |||
*] | |||
* ] ((born October 22, 1985) Pakistani-American author. Author of Dear Yasmeen and The Flight of the Arconaut () | |||
*] | |||
*] Edinburgh-based writer of medical crime thrillers http://www.kenmcclure.com/ | |||
* ] (stylised lowercase) is a non-binary author born in Australia to Malaysian Chinese parents (). They are the author of The Spider and Her Demons (Penguin Australia, 2023) () and the recipient of the Penguin Random House Write It Fellowship 2019 (). sydney is openly aromantic and asexual (). | |||
*] author of two novels (and some other various published works) and an aspiring entrepreneur | |||
*] | |||
* ] ((born March 15, 1985) British author. Author of The Bogsproggler and The Bogsproggler: In Balen-Town) () | |||
*] author of the 2009 comic release of "Chester the Crafty Pervert" | |||
*] (theatre and pop culture theorist) | |||
* ], (born February 5, 2001) American author and activist. Author of The Bookweaver's Daughter (Tanglewood Publishing, 2020) and contributor to Teen Vogue, Huffington Post, and Refinery29. Founder of Homegirl Project, a national political organization for young women of color. | |||
*], a journalist who attacked gamers with an article "The 'sex-box' race for president". | |||
*], A young talented Teenage Poet and Writer from the Philippines!". http://www.kevinpaquet.com | |||
* ] - author of ] ({{URL|nicolekiefer.com}}) | |||
*], American Author of Karakal (Lost Horizon-The Return) | |||
*], Korean-American memoirist, author of 10,000 Sorrows, the authenticity of which is questionable | |||
* ] - co-author of All American Boys - he has a website at | |||
*] done, see ] | |||
*] - Korean Poet http://www.smith.edu/poetrycenter/poets/khyesun.html | |||
* ], American novelist, author of I'm Not Dying With You Tonight — see his article at | |||
*], A young Canadian poet who published "Wordspeak" in 2008 | |||
*]- Canadian unpublished playwright. | |||
* ] (born May 24, 2000) - British author of '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'', '']'', and '']'' (, , , , , , , ) | |||
*] (Fiction novelist for young women) | |||
*]- Award Winning American author of four story collections, six books of poetry.www.marilynkrysl.com | |||
* ], is a Canadian comic writer and colourist living and working in Winnipeg, MB. He is best-known for his ongoing series of fantasy books based around the character Shame. As a colourist, he has won a Wizard Fan Award for his work in 1993 and 1994 as well as a Comic Buyer’s Fan Award in 1998. ( ) | |||
*] | |||
*] - Canadian poet (b. 1971) http://www.sunfirecove.com | |||
* ], American novelist and magazine editor, better known for her 2015 ] '']''. She has since written a second book: ] (2019) and her first novel is set to be premiered as a film in Netflix on Oct. 7th, 2022. You can find some more info in https://www.jessicaknoll.com | |||
*] - Children's book author http://www.kurtisscaletta.com, http://www.randomhouse.com/author/results.pperl?authorid=81599 | |||
* Kamalakanta Roul, a well known oriya poet of India. His poem "Bedanaa Aka Phagunare" and "Jaga Hey Chasi Bhai" are the two most celebrated work in oriya literature. He is the first youngest columnist of orissa who started to write at the age of 18 on oriya language and nationalism, Indian Politics and International Relations. He is also a research scholar of Delhi university contributed articles to different journals i.e, 'mainstream' and 'world focus' and so on. His Book " A Comparative Perspective on Indian politics" with a joit author is in press.presently, he is working on "Violence and the state". | |||
* ] (September 4th, 1988) is an American poet. He lives in Baltimore, Maryland, and teaches at Goucher College. His first collection, Tap Out, was published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt in 2019. (, , , , , , ) | |||
*] | |||
*] - Croatian Poet and novelist | |||
* ] - co-author of the Tales of Estolia series | |||
* ] (born November 24, 1968) - American author of the fantasy-romance series Tales of Estolia | |||
Kenkou Cross - Author of the Monster Girl Encyclopedia series - His fandom link -> monstergirlencyclopedia.fandom.com | |||
* {{ill|Sumiko Kiyooka|ja|清岡純子}} - A Japanese photographer who took nude photos of young girls in the 1970s-1990s and sold photo books. | |||
* {{ill|Ryu Kurokage|ja|Ryu Kurokage}} - - A Japanese photographer who took nude photos of young girls and sold photo books. | |||
===L=== | ===L=== | ||
*] | |||
* ] is an American author living in Italy. He writes science fiction, fantasy and historical fiction, all with a sprinkle of humor (See and ). Among his books are ''The 45th Nail''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1633200329|title=The 45th Nail|website=Amazon.com|access-date=Sep 28, 2019}}</ref>, WWII historical fiction set in Italy; ''Asylum''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.amazon.it/Asylum-story-Lahey-illustrated-English-ebook/dp/B07J1VZRYC|title=Asylum: A story by Ian Lahey|website=Amazon.com|access-date=Sep 28, 2019}}</ref> an illustrated tale for children, as well as nonfiction and various participations in short story anthologies since 2014. | |||
*] | |||
*] author of the mystery/suspense thriller, Gypsies, Tramps, and Thieves www.larryseeley.com | |||
*] is an American author of mystery, fantasy, and historical romance. Also a produced playwright and screenwriter. - , , , , | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
* ], Argentine Writer and Film Director, author of () and — and of Zombie mockumentary see his imdb page at https://www.imdb.com/name/nm6542503/. His and reviews of his work | |||
*] | |||
*] female Lebanese writer most productive in the 50's and 60's, prosecuted (unsuccessfully) for including sexually explicit material in her book "I am alive" (1958) and her collection of short stories "Ship of Tenderness to the Moon" | |||
*] |
* ] (]) - author of ''A Betrayal in Blood'' | ||
*] | |||
* ] is a British author, actress, and broadcaster born in Hong Kong. She is mostly known for her Kumari book series trilogy and she resides in London. . . | |||
*] - leading ROK writer of experimental fiction | |||
*] (w/ Rdr from ]) -- biographer ('']'', ]), convicted forger of literary memorabilia, and memoirist () | |||
*] - Author of the novel ''The Bright Forever'' | |||
*]- Author and Historian (Most notably The Poetic Edda) | |||
*] is an American writer who has Afro-Puerto Rican roots. She is author of two . Two articles: and | |||
*] - award winning children's author | |||
*] | |||
* ], American writer, author of the Outside the Thalsparr series of historical fiction fantasy novels. | |||
*] (Lisa Alcalay Klug) - Author of ''Cool Jew: The Ultimate Guide for Every Member of the Tribe'', a 2008 ] honoree | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
* ], American writer, academic and ex-priest, author of Spoiled Priest— . | |||
*] | |||
*] Argentina | |||
*] | |||
*] American poet, playwright and short-story writer. Winner of four Hopwood Awards at the University of Michigan, where he earned an MFA in Creative Writing, he is also the winner of the 2009 Lorian Hemingway Short Fiction Award, the 2009 Robert Frost Award of the Robert Frost Foundation, the 2010 Rita Dove Award for poetry in the International Writing Competition of Salem College, and many others in fiction, poetry and drama. Publications in literary and national periodicals; one play, a juvenile work written in 1981, is published by The Dramatic Publishing Company. He has taught at the University of Michigan, and currently teaches Literature and Art History in Grosse Ile, Michigan. | |||
*] | ] - (req. 2008-04-11) - Founder of the Electronic Poetry Center at the University of Buffalo. Has written and published several books on poetics, and computer language. Glazier has his PHd in English. He currently teaches full-time as a professor at the University in Buffalo. He instructs classes with a focus on creative language, digital poetics, and contemporary poetic conventions. He is also the Professor of Graduate Studies in the Media Department at the University at Buffalo. --> | |||
*] | |||
*] - author ("The Black Tower," "The Pale Blue Eye," "Mr. Timothy") and reviewer (Salon.com, Washington Post) | |||
*] | |||
*] - author of emeighty (Letters), Gingko Kitchen (Coach House) and Tulpa (Coach House Books). Also the co-host of Sex City, Toronto's only radio show that explores the interconnections between sexuality and culture. Hosts a Toronto salon series called The Box which which encourages communication across creative borders | |||
Louise Catt - an Actor born in 1960 who acted in various plays and a smalll range of TV shows. she was possibly best known for her role as flint in the piglet files. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] British writer (auther of e.g. "Time to Pay" and "Blindfold") | |||
*] | |||
*]. a.k.a. Luis Felipe G. Lomeli ]. Mexican writer (author of e.g. "Ella sigue de viaje") | |||
===M=== | ===M=== | ||
* ] - Auther of (Stalking Horse-1989) and (On The Third Day-1986) | |||
* ] (born 30. June 1990 in Eau Claire, WI) is an American writer. He is the author of Flamingos (chosen as a best book of 2016 by Blake Butler for VICE Magazine), Peripatet, Drain Songs, and others. His work is available online and in print. He was previously the Hemingway Fellow at the University of Idaho. His work has earned accolades from Maggie Nelson, Kevin Killian, Sam Lipsyte, Dennis Cooper and more. | |||
* ] (1919-2007) was an Australian bibliographer and bookseller - she wrote the definitive works on Australian children's literature and children's book illustration | |||
* ] is an American author and musician. little more than 2.5 million books sold out of 34+ titles | |||
* ] (born of Lebanese parents in Manchester in 1913, died 1967). During the Second World War he fought in North Africa, Sicily and Italy, was wounded and was awarded the M.C. In the closing months of the war, when he was Chief Instructor of an OCTU, he wrote his first novel 'The Monastery'. Later novels include 'Cassino' and 'Patrol', the latter republished 2020 by the Imperial War Museum. He was film critic of the Daily Mail. His work has been highly praised by William Boyd. | |||
* ] is a poet from São Tomé and Príncipe whose most widely read works include ''Leve, Leve'' and ''Bo tende?''.--] (]) 06:59, 5 December 2008 (UTC) | |||
* ]- is an American poet who has authored 12 books and has been nominated for the Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize. | |||
* ] is a Ugandan poet and playwright (, , ) | |||
* ] (born 1971) is an American poet and artist, whose poetic works include Radical Elements, Learning To Walk, The Writing Paper, Creed Of The Poet, Poseidon's War, Sand Vine, Kudzu Castles, Splash of Paint, Mother's Prayer, The Cure, Palimpsest, Listening To The Rain, Lady Fish and The Writing Spider among many others. | |||
* ] British novelist of Young Adult fantasy. Winner of 2009 Great Britain Sasakawa Foundation Award, author of 'Wild Swans' fairytale retelling ''The Swan Kingdom'' (2008 USBBY International Book, long-listed for Branford Boase Award, short-listed for Lincolnshire Young People's Book Award) and original fantasy ''Daughter of the Flames'' (Long-listed for YALSA Top Ten Books for Teens). Website . | |||
* ] is an Indian author, social entrepreneur, multi-genre author, film and book critic, and undergraduate student researcher. She has published in various journals, magazines, and anthologies nationally and internationally, and released two books of her own. Currently, she is running an online literature festival. She has been recognized by six media houses for her initiative during the quarantine period. Her works can be seen on Reader’s Digest, Times Of India, Sahitya Akademi Bimonthly Journal, Lucidity Int. Poetry Journal, SEAL (South East Asian Literature) festival anthologies and AIPF Int. Anthology (Austin International Poetry Festival). | |||
*] is British poet who has authored ten collections of poetry, most with Enitharmon Press, written three children's novels published by Heinemann, written and co-written books about writing, most recently 'Writing Your Self' with John Killick, also co-edited books of poetry by contemporary women poets (mostly British). She was shortlisted for the Forward Prize best single poem of 2007. | |||
**Crowned with The Best Manuscript Awards for fiction & non-fiction categories (Mumbai Litofest, Literature Festival 2018), she was also appreciated for her short story ‘Healing of Wounds’ by the National Children’s Literature Festival led by Ruskin Bond. Her latest releases include Mocktail and #Metoo. Her movie reviews have been published in various newspapers and journals like 'Just film' magazine, Different truths,'Creation and Criticism' (A Quarterly International Peer-reviewed Refereed e-Journal Devoted to English Language and Literature) and many more. She has extensively worked and published her research on 'The Expression: An International Multidisciplinary e-Journal', A Peer-Reviewed Journal | and "THE AERONAUTS: AN AMALGAM OF MANY DIFFERENT SITES AND MANY DIFFERENT VOYAGES" which was based on a contemporary movie. Her upcoming projects include a poetry film and a song that she has written. To learn more visit | |||
* ] is a former journalist and NYT bestselling American author of ] http://www.harpercollins.com/authors/20217/Mary_Kay_Andrews/index.aspx | |||
* ] is an American mystery author who writes the Alpine mystery series and the Heraldsgate Hill Bed & Breakfast cozies. | |||
* ] - is a Belizean-American poet from the South Side of Chicago and one half of Poetry duo Black Plantains with Malcolm Friend. They teach, write, and study in Amherst, MA. JR is a 2016 Pushcart Prize nominee, a 2017 Emerging Poet’s Incubator Fellow, and the 2018 Individual World Poetry Slam representative for the Boston Poetry Slam. Their poetry is published or forthcoming in Moko Literary Magazine, Maps for Teeth, WusGood, Cosmonauts Avenue, Winter Tangerine, Freezeray Literary Journal, Drunk in a Midnight Choir, Cantab Anthology, Vinyl Poetry Journal and elsewhere. Their second collection of poems “Since When He Have Wings” is available on Pizza Pi Press. | |||
*], noted inspirational speaker and author of ''God's Promise'' | |||
*], Italian poet from XIII Florence (see ])<ref name="Garzanti1"/> | |||
; | |||
*], died 1313, Italian poet from ] (see ])<ref name="Garzanti1"><cite id="garzanti">{{cite book |title=Enciclopedia Garzanti della letteratura |last=Garzanti |first=Aldo |authorlink=Aldo Garzanti |year=1974 |origyear=1972 |publisher=] |location=Milan |pages=1 |language=Italian}}</cite></ref> | |||
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*] is an American television writer and producer. Her credits include ], Grace Under Fire, The Naked Truth, ], Newhart, Cheers, ], 8 Simple Rules, Life on a Stick, ], Raising Dad, My Big Fat Greek Life, ], The Fighting Fitzgeralds, Sabrina, The Teenage Witch, ], Everybody Loves Raymond, A Minute With Stan Hooper, ], All Is Forgiven, and Major Dad. She served as ] on five series. | |||
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*] Modern Polish poet see http://pl.wikipedia.org/Andrzej_Mandalian | |||
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*] (born c.1963), American screenwriter | |||
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*] (born 1967) Irish-American poet. | |||
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*] (born 1951) | |||
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*] (1904-1977) | |||
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*] -- wrote 'Aliens and Linguists', an examination of the language sciences in science fiction | |||
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*], Egyption writer, a novelist interested in the enviromente and scientific heritage. | |||
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*] website: www.marciaford.com & marciaford.blogspot.com a ] ] of multiple ] books as well as the new political book ], blogger, and book and magazine editor. | |||
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*] (20th cent. writer, not ]) | |||
*] (author of HET ORDERBOEK and DE RODE DRAAD -Director's Cut. http://www.mariokluser.nl) | |||
* ] - author of middle-grade books '']'' and '']'', published under ] () | |||
*] | |||
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* ] (An essayist, performer, and poet, Thomas March is the author of Aftermath (2018), his first poetry collection, which poet Joan Larkin selected for The Word Works Hilary Tham Capital Collection. OUT Magazine praised its “diamond-sharp lyricism” and hailed it as “a stimulating, if sober, tonic for our times.” His work has appeared in The Account, The Adroit Journal, The Believer, Bellevue Literary Review, Glass: A Journal of Poetry, The Good Men Project, The Huffington Post, New Letters, OUT, Pleiades, RHINO, and Verse Daily, among others. Since 2018, he has been the host and curator of Poetry/Cabaret, a bi-monthly “variety salon” performance series. Nominated for four Broadway World Cabaret Awards (including “Best Variety Show or Recurring Series” and “Best Host or Emcee”), the show brings together the city’s top poets, comedians, and cabaret performers to share their responses to a common theme. Broadway World has called Poetry/Cabaret “a daring, edgy, and divinely human way of looking at art and artists.” He has performed his tragicomic monologues at venues across New York City, including Ars Nova, The Duplex, The Green Room 42, Joe’s Pub, and Sid Gold’s Request Room. With painter Valerie Mendelson, he is the co-creator of A Good Mixer, a character-based dramatic poetry and visual art hybrid project based on an obscure 1933 bartender’s guide of the same name—consider it a boozier, more urbane Spoon River Anthology. Excerpts from the project have already been included in curated shows at The Westbeth Gallery in New York City and at The Delaware Valley Arts Alliance in Narrowsburg, NY. Selections from the series were also featured as part of the S.T.E.P. (“Saunter, Trek, Escort, Parade”) project’s Fall 2018 exhibit at the Queens Museum and Flux Factory. With PEN America’s Prison Writing Program, he has served as a judge for the Prison Writing Contest’s poetry panel and for the inaugural L’Engle-Rahman Award for Mentorship. He has recently become a Contributing Editor to GRAND, a literary journal launched in 2021 and founded by Aaron Hicklin, Editorial Director of Document and proprietor of One Grand Books. He is a founding member of The Theaterists, a New York City collective of writers and performers informally affiliated with The Public Theater. A past recipient of the Norma Millay Ellis Fellowship in Poetry, from the Millay Colony for the Arts, he has also received an Artist/Writer grant from The Vermont Studio Center.)( ) | |||
*] | |||
*] Artist/Writer, ], website: http://www.markferrari.com/ | |||
* ] (A fiction writer and novelist. His notable works are "The Reign of the Kingfisher" novel (2019), “Chickenshit.” published in JMWW (2022), “Miss May Piecework.” published in Magazine (2015), “How to Tell Your Wife You’re Not Presbyterian.” published in Midwestern Gothic (2015), “The Street and the Stutter.” published in Petrichor Machine (2015), “Cursed Rain.” published in Pithead Chapel (2014), “Fallout.” published in Bartleby Snopes (2014), and “Tornado Alley.” published in Heavy Feather Review (2013) He is currently a Creative Writing professor at Murray State University (KY). He holds a PhD in English from Indiana University and a MFA in Literary Studies from Eastern Illinois University. His studies investigates metafiction.) ( ) | |||
*] (born 1979) Satire/Comedic writer. Staff writer for http://CricketSoda.com and contributing write for http://IGotNewsForYou.com. | |||
*] | |||
* ] - author of ''The Medusa Amulet'' - see ] | |||
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* ] - Yiddish language writer, short story collection translated into English by Ellen Cassedy as ''On the Landing'' (2018) | |||
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* ] (is a teenage Nigerian author who independently published her debut novel ''MISSING'' at the age of 18 while studying law at . She didn't stop there, she went ahead to release a second book months after the first and has gained the attention of an international audience.) | |||
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* ] (born 27. February 1975 in Houston, TX) is an American writer. She is the author of the memoir Insanity: A Love Story. She writes about her struggles with bipolar disorder and infertility. She has also written fiction, including the novel What Moves Her. She is the editor of Joy, Interrupted: An Anthology on Motherhood and Loss. She is a graduate of Scripps College. Her PhD focused on feminism and composition studies. Mccarter is married to author William Matthew McCarter.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://g.co/kgs/WWf8dj|title=Search: Lucal C Wesker|website=Google.com|access-date=Sep 28, 2019}}</ref> | |||
*]'''Bold text''' | |||
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* ] - author of ''The Adventures of Endill Swift'', published in at least five languages, selected for the federation of children's book's pick of the year | |||
*] Modern contemporty poet, Philosopher (Honorary Doctorate in Metaphysics). Three time International Poet of the Year nominee. | |||
*], Columnist | |||
* ] (born November 9, 1989) - American writer. He is the author of The Living Saga. Currently, book one, Surviving, is the only book of the series published. It is a post-apocalyptic fiction story that is based in East Tennessee.<ref>{{cite book |last1=McFall |first1=Jaron |title=Surviving |publisher=Self-Published |isbn=1719826560 |pages=4-10}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.amazon.com/Surviving-Living-Saga-Jaron-McFall/dp/1719826560/|title=Surviving (The Living Saga)|website=Amazon|access-date=Sep 28, 2019}}</ref> Personal life: He is currently employed as a teacher at East Ridge Middle School in Whitesburg, TN.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://erms.hcboe.net/?PageName=TeacherPage&Page=1&StaffID=396405&iSection=Teachers&CorrespondingID=396405|title=East Ridge Middle School: Jaron McFall|website=Hamblen County Department of Education|access-date=Sep 28, 2019}}</ref> He was the president of the Alpha Beta Iota chapter of Phi Theta Kappa while he attended Walters State Community College.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.ptk.org/About/AboutPhiThetaKappa/News/TabId/3936/ArticleId/268/Completion-Challenge-Issued-to-Walters-State-Community-College.aspx|title=Completion Challenge Issued to Walters State Community College|website=Phi Theta Kappa News|access-date=Sep 28, 2019}}</ref> He graduated with an Honors Degree in History, Magna Cum Laude.<ref>{{cite AV media|url= https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QR8SA-q7oMo&feature=youtu.be&t=5612 |title=WSCC Commencement|date=May 2013|location=YouTube|time=1:33:32|access-date=Sep 25, 2019}}</ref> While attending Walters State, Jaron also was the recipient of the USA Today All Tennessee Academic Award.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.ws.edu/_media/pdf/comm-marketing/annual-report/2012-2013-Annual-Report.pdf|title=Apple Distinguished Program|website=Walters State Community College|page=17|access-date=Sep 28, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.capitol.tn.gov/Bills/108/Bill/HJR0023.pdf|title=House Joint Resolution 23|website=Tennessee General Assembly|access-date=Sep 28, 2019}}</ref> He is also a graduate of East Tennessee State University where he graduated Cum Laude with a B.S. in History.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.etsu.edu/reg/graduation/may_2016_program.pdf|title=Commencement Ceremony 2016|website=East Tennessee State University|page=42|access-date=Sep 28, 2019}}</ref> | |||
*], (born 1972) author and poet, wrote the novel "Dead Angels Bleed"; DamnAge Publishing (http://pub.home.damnage.net/) <ref>http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/title.cgi?1128829 Dead Angels Bleed, (Mar 2010, Michael Charles Rogers, publ. Damnage Publishing, 978-0-557-31070-8, 274pp)</ref>. | |||
*] | |||
* ] (born 2. September 1996 in Iceland) is an Icelandic fiction author and blogger. She is the author of The Adventures of Raven Darling: Lessons learned in Tokyo as well as Goodbye, Ingrim. She writes creative writing resources on her website and is a travel blogger on Travels of 2 Sisters. | |||
*], young poet and screenwriter. | |||
*] (1903-1978) Trotskyist journalist, writer, and publisher in Samizdat, author of "Notebooks for the Grandchildren: Recollections of a Trotskyist Who Survived the Stalin" <ref>http://www.amazon.com/Notebooks-Grandchildren-Recollections-Trotskyist-Survived/dp/1573923885</ref> | |||
* ] (born August 15, 1983) is an American writer. He is the author of the young adult novels Trailing Tennessee (Craigmore Creations, 2013) and Willa (Black Rose, 2019).<ref>https://www.craigmorecreations.com/trailing-tennessee</ref><ref>https://www.blackrosewriting.com/teenya/willa?rq=cory%20mimms</ref><ref>https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/cory-wheeler-mimms/trailing-tennessee/</ref><ref>https://www.publishersweekly.com/9781940052007</ref> His short fiction has appeared in Joyland Magazine,<ref>http://www.joylandmagazine.com/regions/pnw/boat-building</ref> and he has reported for Oregon Business, Oregon Home, Beer West, and Pamplin Media.<ref>https://www.oregonbusiness.com/component/search/?searchword=cory%20mimms&searchphrase=all&Itemid=399</ref> He studied writing and publishing at Portland State University and screenwriting at New York Film Academy. <ref>https://www.imdb.com/name/nm7971297/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1</ref><ref>https://ooligan.pdx.edu/tags/cory-wheeler-mimms/</ref> | |||
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* ] (born 4 August 1980) is an Irish poet, publishing editor of Beir Bua Press, founding editor of Beir Bua Journal, and primary school teacher. She has written experimental poetry collections and visual poetry collections on motherhood, loss, and the absurd surrealism of life through the lens of the avant-garde. She is the publishing editor of Beir Bua Press, a Tipperary-based indie poetry press.<ref></ref> Moloney King edits Beir Bua Journal which celebrates the unknown through video poetry, audio poetry, word poetry, and visual poetics. <ref></ref> Moloney King was nominated for a Pushcart in poetry after starting to specialise in neo-postmodern poetry during Ireland's first Lockdown <ref></ref> The movement from a mainly lyrical poetry scene in Ireland is being ushered in with passion and edge as is noted in the national newspapers by new poetry journals, like Beir Bua. <ref></ref> | |||
*] | |||
*] Angolian Writer born in 1941 | |||
* ] is a British writer, historian, and professor. He has written the books Endeavour (2018), The Weather Experiment (2015) and Damn His Blood (2012). There are two other Peter Moore writers on Misplaced Pages but not this one. The Weather Experiment was one of the New York Times 100 Notable Books of 2015 and Endeavour was a Sunday Times History Book of the Year.<ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref> | |||
*], Author- Poet- Philosopher, wrote "Messages"; Reflections of being (www.maurice-skillern.com) | |||
*] Contemporary Indian poet. | |||
* ] is an American romance writer with multiple awards wins such as the RONE <ref> </ref> for her book "Redemption" and the Catherine <ref> </ref> for "Ghost of a Promise," plus finalist placements in the Holt Medallion <ref> </ref> for "Ghost of You," Reviewer's Choice <ref> </ref> for "The Dysfunctional Test," Reader's Favorite Silver Medal <ref> </ref> for "Bewitched," and the RITA Awards <ref> </ref> also for "Redemption." Her books have foreign translation rights in the Czech Republic, Romania, The Netherlands, and Germany <ref> </ref> where she has routinely hit Spiegel's Bestseller list <ref> </ref>. She's graced the "Top 10 Reads" & "Must Read" lists in USA Today's Lifestyle/Entertainment Section <ref> </ref> often in her career, and she was a B&N March Pick <ref> </ref> for "Return to Me." Though she has numerous titles to her name, she is probably best known for her "Redwood Ridge" <ref> </ref> series. She was born in Wisconsin, but now resides in South Carolina. | |||
*] Forbes magazine's longest serving foreign correspondent who went on to become a novelist | |||
*] Prolific bibliographer. Warfare, Sports, and Spy Fiction seem to be his topic areas. 102 results on Amazon, but some are duplicates. Maybe 40-50 unique bibliographies? One or two pictorial histories as well. | |||
* ] is a veterinarian and non-fiction author. Co-author, with husband Bill Wasik, of Rabid: A Cultural History of the World's Most Diabolical Virus, published by Viking in 2012, and nominated for the PEN/E.O. Wilson Literary Science Writing Award. Her work has also appeared in Outside, Wired, The San Francisco Chronicle, and The New York Times "Kids" section. , , , , . | |||
*] author of World War, The: History Of The Nations And Empires Involved And A Study Of The Events Culminating in The Great Conflict | |||
Moira Lovell | |||
*] Contemporary ] poet and author of ''Kannada'' and ''Renuka'' | |||
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* ] (Born 16 April 1979, Saint Paul Minnesota, USA) American Actor and the Author of the book series 'Death is Only the Beginning' and 'Making Way For the New' He was born April 16, 1979 in the city of Saint Paul Minnesota, and currently calls the sunny California mountains his home. Brandon Notch is an independent artist, storyteller, writer, actor and tattooist. | |||
*] A family of vampiric shapeshifters of the same era of ] (Several brothers: Vlrikus, Joseph, Cadell, Bedivere, Spyrling, Isaac, Esmond, Russel, Cadwallader, and Einion; and one sister, Carys.) | |||
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*] - Comic book author and novelist; published works include OLYMPUS and THE LIGHT. | |||
*]- Highly anticipated up and coming Crime/Noir fiction novelist, born and raised in Tucson, Arizona. Spent two years in New York writing his first novel "Clowns Don't Carry Guns". | |||
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*] - (Nov. 30, 1888 - March, 1966) was a former Assistant District Attorney of NYC, trial lawyer, writer of light verse, opera and theater fan. from | |||
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*], Belgian writer born in 1971, novelist and poet. He won several literar awards in Europe. His last novel, "The Man Who Refused To Die", is published in English translation. More info at http://www.nicolasancion.com or consult wiki page in French. | |||
*], freelance writer, writing teacher, and editor of . Sweeney is a long-time student and assistant to Natalie Goldberg. | |||
*], British novelist (a page which was unnecessarily speedy deleted) (see ]) | |||
*], Canadian Jewish writer | |||
*] | |||
*] TV scriptwriter-turned-right wing commentator. | |||
*], author of two novels, more information at http://mycancerjourney.com/ | |||
*], or, Josefina, Josephine, author and playwright. Chicana. | |||
*], author of the book "Diary of a Troubled Teenager" | |||
*], Argentinean. | |||
*], India. | |||
*], TV scriptwriter and performer on show "Ghost Hunting with Matt De Burgh" | |||
Brandon Garic Notch is an artist, storyteller, actor, writer, tattooist, philanthropist, and member of San Bernardino Masonic Lodge: Phoenix Rising number 178, and a 32nd degree Scottish Rite Freemason. As a tattoo artist, Brandon Notch has become renowned for his exceptional skills and artistry. Each stroke of his tattoo machine is imbued with precision, creativity, and a deep understanding of his clients' desires. Notch's ability to bring their visions to life on their skin is nothing short of magical. His intricate designs, vibrant colors, and attention to detail have garnered him a dedicated following of tattoo enthusiasts who seek out his work from all corners of the globe. | |||
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*] is an American television and theatre director and producer. He has as directed over 100 productions at the amateur, academic and professional level and has held faculty posts at the ], Carnegie Mellon University, Harvard University, ], Georgetown University and UCLA. He served as the artistic director of the New Playwrights Theater in Washington, D.C.. In 2002, Frisch was hired by ] to be a producer on ]. He is a member of the ], ], Directors Guild of America, and the Writers Guild of America | |||
*], children's book illustrator | |||
*] is a poet. He likes to make poems based on what he observed and concluded and apply it in the everyday life so that he can relate to others. Some of his poems are not good if you will look it into the rhyming words applied and the pattern he uses but he always make sure that there will be no vile word found and that his poem can help. You can see his poems in http://www.poemhunter.com/obed-dela-cruz | |||
*] (Author of Let's Kill Uncle) | |||
*] (poet) | |||
*] (poet,writer,critic, translator)he is a persian radical and post medernist poet. he published poem in M-A-G (Muse Apprentice Guild) magazine edithed by charles bernstein.his works on language,literature, politics and sexuality characterize radical thought in iran. he also tarnslated works from american Beat Generation into the persian.like "Howl" by Allen ginsberg. | |||
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*] wrote a satricial poem entitled 'My Country' about polution, overt capitalism, and loss of Australian culture in favour of American culture. | |||
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*] (famous Chinese Author) | |||
*] (Biographer of Proust) | |||
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*] has written very, very many books for the young: , | |||
*] (playwright and novelist) | |||
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*], bibliography and book descriptions | |||
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*], author of Monsoon Summer, Rickshaw Girl, the Sunita Experiment, and the First Daughter novels (http://www.mitaliperkins.com) | |||
*] | |||
*] (http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/garvin/poets/mcarthur.html) | |||
*] (http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/19/books/19TAUB.html?ex=1167714000&en=1a37ebfbeaac5d10&ei=5070)(Author of THe Last Best Hope and Sunshine Soldiers, both NY Times bestsellers) | |||
*], (UK poet) | |||
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*], (US/UK novelist) | |||
*], (Award winning Altantic Canadian Author) | |||
*] - Literary critic dealing mostly with Autobiographies, suggested the "Autobiographical Pact" or "Contract". | |||
*] Australian poet and critic | |||
*], (Theatre Company in Milwaukee, Wisconsin) | |||
*], (Russian poet) -- this article used to exist | |||
*] (UFO Author) "The Pine Bush Phenomenon". http://www.pinebushufo.com/ | |||
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*], American novelist / author of "An Island Away" and "Bonk's Bar" | |||
*], author of Criticism on Globalisation through poetry. | |||
*], The type where there are a bunch of rich and poor families who try to get along. | |||
*] - Author of many books including Children of the dead end great grandfather of Enzo and Owen Cuseo and grandfather of lucy cuseo and father of Dr. Owen T.P. Mcgowan also has a movie on his book Children of the dead end | |||
Not content with being a master of one craft, Brandon Notch has also ventured into the realm of literature. As an author, he has penned several critically acclaimed books that explore the depths of human emotions and the complexities of life. Notch's writing style is captivating, with a raw honesty that resonates with readers on a profound level. Whether he is exploring themes of love, loss, or personal growth, his words have the power to transport readers to new worlds and evoke deep introspection. | |||
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* ] is a writer and poet from Pakistan who writes critical analysis of English Literature and he is well known name in Pakistan. With 4 volumnous printed books of prose and one of poetry. Must be considered for the Wikepedia. | |||
Beyond his skills as a tattoo artist and author, Brandon Notch has also found success in the world of acting. His on-screen presence is magnetic, commanding attention and breathing life into every character he portrays. Notch's ability to inhabit a variety of roles with authenticity and depth is a testament to his versatility as an artist. Whether he's portraying a troubled protagonist or a charismatic villain, he brings a unique energy and intensity that captivates audiences and leaves a lasting impression. | |||
*] Canadian Writer.Author of By the White Book | |||
*] | |||
What truly sets Brandon Notch apart is his unwavering dedication to his craft and his relentless pursuit of artistic excellence. He approaches each new endeavor with a hunger to push boundaries and challenge himself creatively. Notch's willingness to take risks and explore new avenues of self-expression has allowed him to continuously evolve as an artist, leaving an indelible mark on every medium he touches. | |||
Rachel Shukert, American author and playwright rachelshukert.com | |||
*] | |||
Notch's talent and artistry have not gone unnoticed. His work has garnered numerous accolades and recognition from both the artistic community and the public. Despite his success, Brandon Notch remains humble, constantly seeking inspiration and new ways to grow as an artist. He is known for his genuine interactions with fans and his willingness to share his knowledge and experiences with aspiring artists, making him a beloved figure in the creative world. | |||
*] Spanish author. Wrote Grimpow: The Invisible Road | |||
*] German/Jewish Writer.Author of Rubinstein's Auction | |||
In an industry where specialization is often encouraged, Brandon Notch stands as a testament to the power of multidimensional creativity. His mastery of tattoo artistry, writing, and acting is a testament to his boundless imagination and his relentless pursuit of artistic expression. As he continues to leave his mark on the world, one can only imagine the new horizons he will explore and the new boundaries he will push. Brandon Garic Notch is a true artistic force, and his influence on the art world is set to endure for years to come. | |||
*] Arab American writer and Lecturer at Stanford University. Author of '']''. | |||
*] | |||
* ] - The author of ] (article created by me), eBoys and more. | |||
*]Best Selling Author (Canadian)] | |||
Early Life: | |||
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As a child Brandon Notch was a skater-kid and snowboarder. Surrounded by people covered in tattoos had sparked his curiosity as he started to pursue a career working as an artist. He eventually earned an apprenticeship at the age of 16 under Diamond Dave Rothburg of Body & Soul Tattoo in Sherman Oaks California. Brandon started out as a tattoo artist working in the Los Angeles area in the state of California. He is now an internationally recognized artist, author, and actor. Brandon continues working out of his private custom artistry workspace. Continuously cranking out unique custom art in his studio in between acting jobs while focusing on all aspects of art, from writing, to painting, and tattooing. The tattoo work you can expect to see from Brandon Notch ranges from American traditional tattoos to vibrant colored, black and gray, Japanese art and portrait tattoos to mention a few. The world-renowned workspace is commonly known as Sacred Saint Studio and has been around since 2001. | |||
*] Thai/American author. | |||
*] ] | |||
Career: Acting | |||
*] Queer northern-tradition shaman and a pansexual FTM transgendered intersexual. Author of: Hermaphrodeities: The Transgender Spirituality Workbook, 2002. Co-editor of Best Transgender Erotica, 2002. | |||
Brandon Garic Notch is a member of the Screen Actors Guild - American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, SAG-AFTRA. imdb.me/Brandon.Garic.Notch | |||
*] ] | |||
Brandon Notch started his acting career by playing small roles in music videos made by famous | |||
*] 1960s Beat lyricist and novelist | |||
pop stars like YG Feat. A$AP Rocky: Handgun and Logic: One Day feat. Ryan Tedder. He then | |||
*] AKA Remi or Rem de Leon - Filipino writer working on a series of novels set in 8th Century Philippines, also the founder of ] and former Professor of ] at the ] | |||
got his first break when he landed a role in the movie Street Dreams: Los Angeles starring Lester | |||
*] British author of children's books | |||
Speight, Vanessa Deleon, and Siya. | |||
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In 2020 Brandon got cast in the movie Birds of Prey next to a cast that included Margot Robbie, | |||
*] Indian Urdu Poet & author of 21 books.He translated bhagvad Geeta (Sanskrit Poetry by Ved Vyas) in Urdu poetry. | |||
Ewan McGregor, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Jurnee Smollett, Rosie Perez, and Chris Messina. | |||
*] Indian Urdu Poet & author of six books. | |||
Brandon played in the Last Looks TV series starring Ron Gilbert, Dakota Fanning, Rai Quartley, and Brandon Garic Notch. | |||
*] Author of several "anime style novels" | |||
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Writing: | |||
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He is also prominent for writing a series of entertaining and provocative books with | |||
*] Former Senior Magistrate of the Australian Childrens' Court; author of Childrens Courts and Community Welfare in NSW | |||
themes of magic, psychology, metaphysics, and Kabbalah. With fascinating story telling exposing one to the dark arts, metaphorically speaking. (July 28, 2016) Death Is Only the Beginning by Brandon Notch, Publisher: AuthorHouse ISBN-10: 1524620882 ISBN-13: 978-1524620882 UNSPSC Code: 55101500 and (2023) Making Way For The New: Seven Steps to Spiritual Alchemy to name a few of his published works. | |||
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*] Peruvian writer, AKA Rosa Cerna Guardia (Two last names are used in Spanish: Cerna is the last name, Guardia is the second last name). | |||
*] American Author. "The Junction" and "A Shadow From The Past" also did some film work | |||
*] (born 28 October 1978 in Pontypool, Wales) is a British writer. He uses his initials as his pen name. He is the author of the children's picture book series 'Harry The Happy Mouse'. (). The books focus on teaching different values such as kindness, teamworking, saying thank you and 'pay it forward'. (). | |||
*] International writer. Novel: "Are we dreaming or Is it real...?" | |||
*] | |||
* ] (born 7 September 1971 in Bucharest, Romania) is a Canadian-Israeli novelist and writer. A former diplomat, she is the author of Recognitions Trilogy and several other titles, and the recipient of the John C Laurence award from the UK Society of Authors, UK. She is a member of the Quebec Writers’ Federation, Society of Women Writers and Journalists, UK and Goodwill Ambassador for the UK Charity Children of Peace. Links: , , , , , , , , , | |||
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* ] (Krzysztof Ireneusz Fiszer, born 5 May 1990, Sztum, Poland. Polish author writing under a pseudonym Christopher Nuin, self-publishes as Krzysztof Fiszer. Author of fantasy short stories, as well as poems and song lyrics.) , , | |||
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* ] was born in Diwaniya, Iraq, in 1987. His family emigrated to the United States in 1994 as asylum-seekers. () He has authored a 2019 debut book of poetry, ], which focuses on the traumatizing experiences of refugees, the phenomenon of being torn between two places but being unable to call either one 'home', and the fragmentation of identity that characterizes the migrant's polarizing existence. () His work has been highlighted by ], ], the ], and the ]. He holds a B.A. in Urban Planning from Edinboro University of Pennsylvania. - , , , , , , , , , | |||
*] American writer.Wrote Geek Mafia and the upcoming sequel.Also wrote many table top role playing game manuals and was a writer and designer for City of Heroes.More information can be found at www.rickdakan.com. | |||
*] German writer who wrote novels set in a historic background in and around WWII. | |||
* ] was born in San Salvador, El Salvador, in 1990. He is the writer of the first collection of Salvadoran Folkloric books in English, ]. The collection contains over 60 stories from different sectors, for example, urban, colonial and indigenous legends (mainly Cuzcatlecs, Mayas and Lencas), fairytales, and folktales from all over El Salvador. | |||
*], Maine novelist, author of Papa Martel and The Apple of His Eye | |||
*] | |||
===O=== | |||
*] Author of ] | |||
* ] is a Cuban-American poet and essayist. She is the author of No Map of the Earth Includes Stars<ref>https://www.spdbooks.org/Products/9780990666905/no-map-of-the-earth-includes-stars.aspx</ref>, winner of the 2014 Marsh Hawk Poetry Prize<ref>https://marshhawkpress.blogspot.com/2015/02/new-from-marsh-hawk-press.html</ref>, and of Interrupt, a 2015 chaplet by Belladonna* Collaborative<ref>http://www.belladonnaseries.org/chaplets/</ref>. She is a recipient of a 2018 BRIO Nonfiction Award <ref>http://www.bronxarts.org/brio_winners_2018.asp</ref>, two Jerome Travel and Study Grants (2014 & 2010)<ref>https://www.jeromefdn.org/search/node?keys=olivares</ref>, and a 2015 Lower Manhattan Cultural Council Workspace Residency<ref>https://dev.lmcc.net/person/christina-olivares/</ref>. Author page and bio<ref>http://www.christinaolivares.com</ref>. No Map of the Earth Includes Stars was reviewed by Jacket2<ref>https://jacket2.org/reviews/field-invisible</ref> and micro-reviewed by the Poetry Foundation's Harriet<ref>https://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2016/09/party-like-its-1898</ref>. Her poetry has been anthologized in Bettering American Poetry Volume 2<ref>http://www.vidaweb.org/voices-of-bettering-american-poetry-volume-2-christina-olivares/</ref>. Her nonfiction has been published in Makhzin<ref>http://www.makhzin.org/issues/dictationship/thoughts-on-the-erotic-in-audre-lorde-s-archive</ref> and the Kenyon Review Online<ref>https://www.kenyonreview.org/2017/12/a-better-tomorrow/</ref>. Olivares received her MFA in Poetry from CUNY Brooklyn College and her BA in Interdisciplinary Studies from Amherst College. | |||
*]. | |||
*] American poet and novelist. | |||
* ] is an American poet and non-fiction writer. He is the author of three books of poetry: Class, Circus, and Civilian. He has been published in several journals, including Curbside Splendor, Front Porch Review, Missing Slate, and Troubadour 21. He is also a noted performance poet, with noted performances at the Toronto Poetry Slam and Last Poet Standing, among others. He was a winner of the Knight Arts Challenge in 2015.<ref></ref> | |||
*] 2009 Texas State Poet Laureate. Author of two novels, four collections of short fiction, four books of essays, seven collections of poetry. Texas State University System Regents' Professor. Web site: pauldruffin.com | |||
*] screenwriter, already linked, cowboy expert | |||
* ] (born March 5, 1984) is an American novelist and short story writer from New York. He is the author of four books in the horror genre, as well as three short story collections. He has been published in multiple fiction anthologies and online, including Even in the Grave, Unburied and In The Shadow of the Horns. His non-fiction writing has been published by Interstellar Flight Press<ref></ref>, Weird House Magazine and many others. He is also the Bram Stoker Award-winning author of The Triangle. <ref></ref> | |||
* ] Author of several Hugo nominated stories. | |||
===P=== | |||
* ], is a Scottish ] and writer of ]. Born Sian Duffy on May 8, 1981 in Glasgow, Scotland. She has an LLB, as well as degrees in English and Theatre Studies and Teaching from the ]. Her first novel, ''Take a Breath'', was published in 2014 and shortlisted for the Scottish New Writer's Award. The E-book went on to become a best-seller, placing in the top ten best-selling books in the Amazon ] during 2014. It was translated into Italian and published as Chiudi gli occhi (Close Your Eyes) by Rome based publisher, Fanucci Publishing, although their rights were later withdrawn due to their failure to pay the contracted royalties. | |||
**Paisley has traveled extensively, living in Glasgow, London, Santiago, Hamburg (where she met fellow Scottish author ] during his tour there in 2013), Amsterdam, Montreal and Ottawa. She continued writing short stories, screenplays and finally completed her second novel in 2020 during the periodic of isolation mandated due to the ]. Paisley presented the award for Best Drama Screenplay at the ] Awards 2020, alongside Italian actress ] and Canadian journalist Tammi Christopher. He ''Grieving'' series of novels include ''Take a Breath'' (Celandine Books 2014) and ''Madness & Soil'' (Celandine Books 2020). Screenplays: Take a Breath (2019) - | |||
* ] (born June 7, 1962 in Columbus, Ohio), is an American author of romantic fiction. Adopted as Debra Anne Bishop when she was months old by John (Jack) Milner and Mary Maxwell Bishop, she was raised in Springfield, Ohio. Debra graduated from Shawnee High School in June, 1980 and from Springfield Joint Vocational School's merchandising program. She married Michael Parmley on Feb. 28, 1981. They have two sons. Debra has a BA in English Literature from Marywood University. Currently living in the Memphis, TN area with her husband. Her career began when her first novel ''A Desperate Journey'' was in the American Title II contest, sponsored by ] and ] in 2006. Ten unpublished romance novelists competed for one publishing contract with ], readers voted online and each month two authors were voted off. Debra made it to the second round and then signed with an agent who sold her book to Samhain Publishing. A Desperate Journey came out a year later in ebook in 2008 and in print in 2009. Debra went on to sign with Desert Breeze Publishing, Secret Cravings Publishing DCL Publications and Boroughs Publishing Group . In 2013 she self published Twilight Dips, an anthology of her early poetry from her college days. She hosted Book Lights Radio, for Readers Entertainment from 2016 to 2017 where she interviewed authors of fiction every Tuesday night on Blogtalk Radio. In 2017 she opened Belo Dia Publishing Inc. to publish most of her back list and became a hybrid author. | |||
**List of standalone novels: A Desperate Journey (Samhain Publishing 2008 in eBook, 2009 in print, republished by Belo Dia Publishing Inc. 2016), Aboard the Wishing Star (Desert Breeze Publishing, republished by Belo Dia Publishing Inc. 2016), Dangerous Ties (Desert Breeze Publishing, republished by Belo Dia Publishing Inc.), Isabella (Bride of Ohio; American Brides series, Belo Dia Publishing 2016), Check Out (Belo Dia Publishing Inc. 2017), Jenna's Christmas Wish (Belo Dia Publishing Inc. 2018), The Twelve Stitches of Christmas (co-author Robert Arrow, Belo Dia Publishing Inc. 2018). ''Special Forces Operation Alpha World'' series: Protecting Pippa, (Originally ], republished by Aces Press 2018), Split Screen Scream (Aces Press 2018). ''Brotherhood Protectors World'' series: Montana Marine, (originally ], republished by Twisted Pages Press, 2018), Defensive Instructor (Twisted Pages Press, 2018), Marine Protector (Twisted Pages Press, 2018). ''Butterflies Fly Free series'' series: Trapping the Butterfly (book one), Dancing Butterfly (book two). ''The Hunger Roads Trilogy'' series; A Change of Scenery (book one, Belo Dia Publishing Inc. 2018). ''Poetry'': Twilight Dips (poetry anthology, 2013).<ref></ref> | |||
* ] Nepalese author and transator born in Eastern Nepal, who is an assistant professor of English in Tribhuvan University. He has written novels, short stories and poems in both Nepali and English language. He also works as Editor-in-Chief of The Gorkha Times. <ref></ref> He currently lives in Kathmandu, Nepal. . . . | |||
* ] - Australian crime writer | |||
* ] American writer of weird fiction. | |||
===Q=== | |||
* ] is an English author of novels and film criticism. "Anthony Quinn was born in Liverpool in 1964. He was educated at St Francis Xavier’s College, a Catholic Grammar School, and at Pembroke College, Oxford, where he read Classics. His earliest break in journalism was to write book reviews for the recently launched Independent, whose literary editor was Sebastian Faulks. He has interviewed many writers, including Lorrie Moore, Alan Hollinghurst, William Boyd, Sarah Waters, Richard Ford, Michael Frayn, PJ O’Rourke, Ian McEwan, the Amises pere et fils. He was for fifteen years the film critic of the Independent (1998-2013). Having been a judge on the 2006 Man Booker Prize he wrote his first novel the following year: the two events may have been related. The Rescue Man (2009) won the Authors’ Club Best First Novel Award. His next book, London, Burning, will be published in March 2021. He lives in Islington." Books include: The Rescue Man (2009).Half of the HumanRace (2011).The Streets (2012).Curtain Call (2015).Freya (2016).Eureka (2017).Our Friends in Berlin (2018).Klopp: My Liverpool Romance (2020).London, Burning (2021).<ref>{{Cite web|title=Quinn-Anthony|url=https://www.rcwlitagency.com/authors/quinn-anthony/|access-date=2022-02-06|website=RCW Literary Agency|language=en}}</ref> He grew up Catholic but doesn't consider himself a "Catholic novelist" (paywall).<ref>{{Cite web|last=enquiries@thetablet.co.uk|first=The Tablet-w|title=Anthony Quinn - faith, footie and fiction|url=https://www.thetablet.co.uk/features/2/20042/anthony-quinn-faith-footie-and-fiction|access-date=2022-02-06|website=The Tablet|language=en}}</ref> Other sources (ignoring reviews).<ref>{{Cite web|date=2009-01-04|title=Anthony Quinn: 'I can never go home again'|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/features/anthony-quinn-i-can-never-go-home-again-1219728.html|access-date=2022-02-06|website=The Independent|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|date=2017-07-02|title=Eureka: novelist Anthony Quinn on completing his acclaimed trilogy|url=https://theartsdesk.com/books/eureka-novelist-anthony-quinn-completing-his-acclaimed-trilogy|access-date=2022-02-06|website=theartsdesk.com|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=Lee|first=Jenny|date=2020-11-25|title=Tyrone crime writer Anthony Quinn on his new novel Turncoat|url=http://www.irishnews.com/arts/2020/11/25/news/tyrone-crime-writer-anthony-quinn-on-his-new-novel-turncoat-2136748/|access-date=2022-02-06|website=The Irish News|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|last=Rose|first=Hilary|title=Writer in residence|language=en|url=https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/writer-in-residence-cm6r3pxqjdg|access-date=2022-02-06|issn=0140-0460}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=Best selling Tyrone crime novelist launches Yeats inspired historical thriller|url=https://www.northernirelandworld.com/news/best-selling-tyrone-crime-novelist-launches-yeats-inspired-historical-thriller-2489043|access-date=2022-02-06|website=www.northernirelandworld.com|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=Breathing life into a lost world; Huyton-born writer Anthony Quinn brings alive two lost Liverpool worlds in a bravura debut novel. - Free Online Library|url=https://www.thefreelibrary.com/Breathing+life+into+a+lost+world;+Huyton-born+writer+Anthony+Quinn...-a0191794329|access-date=2022-02-06|website=www.thefreelibrary.com}}</ref> ] (]) 21:49, 6 February 2022 (UTC) | |||
===R=== | |||
* ], American novelist, author of Eric Olafson, Space Pirate — she is easily found all over the net by googling. Since I am Vanessa I have a conflict of Interest creating the post myself. , , , | |||
* ] - 20th century novelist and wife of ] () | |||
* ], American poet and essayist, author of ] (, , ) | |||
* ], Sharron Renée Rhodes is an American author. () (self edit) | |||
* ], Holly Rhiannon (Kindzierski) is a Canadian author. Additionally, she co-founded and is acting CEO of Montreal small press "The Stygian Society" and champions AI-free works of fiction via the Society's writing challenge "The Order of the Written Word". ( ) | |||
* ], writer and filmmaker from Cleveland, Ohio, USA | |||
* ] American Novelist/non-fiction writer. Author of "Serenity War: A Noble Series Book", "Modern Bible Companion: A guide to reading the New Testament", and "Coaching Flag Football: What to expect as a parent volunteer (and how to succeed)" He uses J.D. Richardson for his Fiction pen name and Jason Richardson for his Non-Fiction. Since I am J. D. I have a conflict of interest and am unable to create the page. The URLs below have a description of the author. - , , , | |||
* ] - author of ''The Atlantis Gene'' | |||
* ] writer of “The Guitarist in the Doorway Fiction” about San Francisco Homeless Crisis. Greg Roensch is a writer who lives in San Francisco, California. In addition to owning a writing and editing business (Six String Communications), Greg writes books for young adults, travel articles, short stories, and songs. I am not Greg Roensch and I have never met him or had contact with him. | |||
* ] - (1889-1978) author of Angel's Flight (1927) and 3 other Los Angeles novels. Brief bio at <ref>https://m.imdb.com/name/nm0752514/bio/</ref> NOT THE MONTANA POLITICIAN | |||
===S=== | ===S=== | ||
* ], 1932-1996 - Puerto Rican author of speculative fiction. | |||
*] Author of Garden Spells, amongst other books. | |||
*]Indian Writer.Poet,Short -Story Writer,Novelist. | |||
* ], American poet, author of ''We Ran Rapturous'' (The Atlas Review 2019), winner of The Atlas Review 2019 TAR Chapbook Contest: ]. Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1993. Founder of Stranded Oak Press ]. | |||
*] Indian writer. Author of The Mahabharata - A Child's View. See her website: http://www.samarni.com | |||
*] American poet. Author of Anamorphosis Eisenhower (Lost Roads), Vertical Elegies: Three Works (UDP); Vertical Elegies 5: The Section (Georgia) and Street Mete: A Work in Vertical Elegies (forthcoming, Palm). Son of Anne Dean Truitt (prominent late American artist) and James Truitt (prominent late American journalist). | |||
*], America writer, author of ''The Light We Lost'', Kirkus Starred, a Reese Witherspoon bookclub suggestion, NYTImes Bestseller. | |||
*], a noted contemporary Pakistani Punjabi poetess. She has taken part in poetry sessions in India, Europe and North America | |||
*] Japanese-American poet, translator, editor. website: http://www.factorial.org/sn/sn_home.html | |||
* ] - author of ''Breathing God'' | |||
*] - (req 2008-05-27)- Author of Liquored Words & Afterthoughts and a Canadian poet. | |||
*Shirley Toulson- poet | |||
* ], 1994 -, is an American writer and founder of the Prague-based non-profit performance and poetics collective revolving around the pragmatics of language, ], z.s. <ref>https://www.advojka.cz/archiv/2022/5/instantni-nostalgie</ref><ref>https://espanol.radio.cz/object-paradise-el-colectivo-artistico-que-quiere-devolver-la-vida-y-la-voz-al-8742138</ref><ref>https://www.praguemorning.cz/tyko-say-vinohrady/</ref><ref>https://praguemonitor.com/business/press-release/09/06/2021/poetics-collective-objectparadise-celebrates-zizkov/</ref><ref>http://casopis-ink.cz/2018/11/22/tyko-say-smichov/</ref><ref>https://smygl.is/2020/01/27/pragverska-ljodasenan/ |website=MENNINGARSMYGL</ref><ref>https://dergi.salom.com.tr/haber-882-roksan_mandelacutein_yeni_projesi_objectparadise.html</ref><ref>https://www.praguemicrofestival.com/2020/author/tyko-say</ref><ref>https://www.versopolis.com/festival-of-hope/festival-of-hope/1094/object-praha</ref><ref>https://hudsonhall.org/event/tentacle/</ref><ref>https://www.flowchartfoundation.org/events-public-programs-2021</ref><ref>https://praguemonitor.com/culture/26/01/2022/objectparadise-volume-ii-to-be-released-on-seattle-based-sifter-grim/</ref><ref>https://salom.com.tr/haber-121067-roksan_mandelacutein_ikinci_studyo_albumu_cikiyor.html?fbclid=IwAR1cFnNZvJcajVAki7YlnPmLASZgOEdo5fUhP3YO1OzF2CoTl6NOsSeFJUM</ref><ref>https://smygl.is/2019/12/14/paradisarljod-fra-prag-og-new-york/</ref><ref>https://objectparadise.com</ref> | |||
*] - Indian (Malayalam) Writer, Journalist, Critc, Children's Story Writer, Essay Writer etc. Books include the Iswarante Chiri (God's Smile), Stories told by Swami Vivekananda, Subhashita Saram, Ramayan Quiz etc. The official Sudhir Neerattupuram's website can be found here: http://www.neeratt.blogspot.com/ | |||
*] author of ''Body of the World'' official website: http://www.samtaylor.us/ | |||
* ] (Author of the Techromancy Scrolls) (Film Director of Zombie Hotline), born July 28, 1966 in Lakenheath England, is a bestselling American fiction author of lgbt romance, paranormal, and scifi novels. - , , and . | |||
*] author of ''Dragonsdale'' and ''Riding the Storm'' | |||
*] by William Joyce creator of Rolie Polie Olie, Robots, and Meet the Robinsons | |||
* ] (Bestselling writer of humour books The Beautiful Poetry of Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin Life Coach and Choose Your Own Apocalypse with Kim Jong-un & Friends , all published by Canongate . Written about in publications including The Guardian, The New Statesman and McSweeneys ) | |||
*] | |||
*] - Scottish author of women's fiction. Books include The Motherhood Walk of Fame, Double Trouble, What If. | |||
* ] (poet/writer) (author of Boleyn, How My Cat Saved My Life and Other Poems, Three Words, Mistakes Were Made, Micro, and Plight of the Pangolin). Founder of . Links: , , , , , , , , | |||
*] Philadelphia-based American author of Green Grass Grace. | |||
*] writer of ] | |||
* ] (born December 24, 1927 in New York, New York, United States) is an American author. | |||
*] | |||
Other Names: Norma Simon; Norma Bernice Simon | |||
*] | |||
Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit, MI: Gale, 2002. From Contemporary Authors Online. | |||
*] | |||
Full Text: COPYRIGHT 2018 Gale, a Cengage Company | |||
*Sathyanarayana.M.V.S. (sathya narayana)Indian English poet from Nellore, Andhra pradesh. Books: Golden Lotus, Plastic faces and other poems (Monfakira). see: www.poemhunter.com//// www.museindia.com////// member of World poets society.Winner of Editor's choice award from www.theenchantingverses.co.nr(December 2009) | |||
*] Late 19th century U.S. author of "David and Abigail", "The Lady Paulina" etc. | |||
* ] (born November 21, 1968) is an American ] of ], ] and poetry. Her first poetry collection, In Favor of Pain, was nominated for a 2017 Elgin Award]. Her most recent book, Bitter Suites, was nominated for a 2018 ] in the Superior Achievement in Long Fiction category]. She is also the publisher of ], a 52 year old speculative fiction publication, as of January 2019]. | |||
*] | |||
*] (]) Franco-British writer, author of "Lizard." | |||
* ] - author of ''Salt on the Snow'' | |||
*] American poet. Website | |||
*] (] - ]) Portuguese poet | |||
* ] - ] - author of the short story collection ''The Unfinished World and Other Stories'', which has received praise from The New York Times.. | |||
*] - Horror writer from Columbus, OH | |||
*] (] - ]) Irish writer of fairy tailes and novels about Ireland. | |||
* ] - author of ''The Pawn Prince'' | |||
*] Russian Author | |||
* ], born in Ireland in 1956 , is a British crime author and screenwriter. | |||
*] Russian science fiction author | |||
*] (aka ]) Author of ''Mess-Mend: Yankees in Petrograd'' | |||
* ] (born April 23, 1973 American novelist; USA Today bestselling author of more than 30 novels in the romantic comedy genre, including The Mr. Match series, the Singletree series, the Kasper Ridge Series, and the Kings Grove Series. Stewart also writes with co-author Marika Ray on the No Place Like Home series and the Royals of Sailfish Banks. She has spoken at multiple conferences and also runs a successful indie editing and story coaching company call Evident Ink.) (https://www.delanceystewart.com; https://www.amazon.com/stores/Delancey-Stewart/author/B00A8OZDKU; https://www.goodreads.com/series/list/6581742.Delancey_Stewart.html; https://www.fantasticfiction.com/s/delancey-stewart/; https://www.fictiondb.com/author/delancey-stewart~214171.htm; https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/authors/2147368/delancey-stewart/; https://www.thriftbooks.com/a/delancey-stewart/782840/; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ZKYMeoO8Oo; https://www.washingtonindependentreviewofbooks.com/reviewer/delancey-stewart; https://www.evidentink.com) | |||
*] science fiction writer | |||
*], Indian writer (The Anger of Aubergines, Banana Flower Dreams, My Sainted Aunts)and painter. | |||
* ] - American novelist; author of the bestselling 17-volume Caribbean Adventure series (https://waynestinnett.com) | |||
*] children's fantasy, science fiction, and (most recently) mystery writer (author of the Joe Grey cat mysteries) | |||
*], A novel by Craig Lesley. Website here: | |||
*] |
* ] - author of ''The Little Ships'' | ||
*] (pseudonym ]) (req. 2009-01-21), Iconic pulp-fiction novelist . Bio - Bibliography - | |||
* ] (born July 16, 1989) is an American ] of ] and host of The Wildest Podcast ]. Her debut novel, Fragile, was published in July 2017. ] | |||
*] American author of The Minotaur takes a Cigarette Break | |||
*] Zen Poet d. 1980. Collection of poems translated to English by Lucien Stryk entitled "Triumph of the Sparrow." | |||
* {{ill|Shinya Suzuki|ja|鈴木信也}} - author of '']'' | |||
*] (1871-1916), born in Fredericton, N.B. Poet who wrote "Let Us Rise Up and Live!". | |||
*] American Author and Playwright rachelshukert.com | |||
*] Welsh Poet, Lecturer | |||
*]American author, model | |||
*] (India) | |||
*] | |||
*] biographer of Raymond Carver. | |||
*] | |||
*], Danish writer and illustrator, born 1963, page available on Danish wikipedia | |||
*] | |||
*] Librarian, author and poet | |||
*] writer of the Shapeshifter series | |||
*] American poet | |||
*] | |||
*] wrote the Third-Grade Detectives series | |||
*] wrote several books related to sociology | |||
*] | |||
*] Author of children's fantasy historical fiction novel Fire in the Straw, ISBN 1-4251-3277-4 | |||
*] Author of The Tyrannosaurus Tic: A Boy's Adventure with Tourette Syndrome, ISBN 1-4251-5501-4 | |||
*] | |||
*] Author of poetry and short stories, most often considered horror and fantasy. check ] | |||
*] -- Author of ] and ] | |||
*] on Gossip. | |||
*], American poet, author of "When The Handwriting On The Wall Is In Brown Crayon", "Everybody's Breaking Pieces Off Me", also Quiet Time poems in the CWR devotional "Everyday With Jesus". | |||
*] - Canadian author. Books include the Shadowy Horses, Mariana, Named of the Dragon. Mariana won the Catherine Cookson Literary Prize. The official Susanna Kearsley website can be found here: http://www.susannakearsley.com/ | |||
*] Canadian children's author, lives in Port Hope, Ontario. Author of Puddleman. | |||
*] Indian(Odia/Oriya) poet, fiction writer, translator, editor. website: http://www.subhransupanda.webs.com publicatoins - morning is not so far | |||
*] Author of adaptation of ''The Castle Spectre'' | |||
*] British poet and neuropsychologist, author of Always Two, Emotional First Aid etc. website http://www.poem.sh | |||
*] Author of poetry relating to african american experiences. website http://www.geocities.com/sjbm@sbcglobal.net/sibyls_place | |||
*((Simon Vincent)) American author and poet, author of Waypoint 90, and Sea Lust website http://www.simonvincent.com | |||
*] Author of two series of mysteries, including Murder on the Iditarod Trail. Publisher sites http://www.harpercollins.com/authors/15432/Sue_Henry/index.aspx and http://berkleysignetmysteries.com/author173 | |||
*] | |||
===T=== | ===T=== | ||
* ], English author of A 1970s Childhood () | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] Author of 'The Year of the Horsetails','The Unholy Pilgrim','Shadow of Wings' and 'Monarchs, Rulers, Dynasties and Kingdoms of the World'] | |||
*] | |||
*] Author of Lakhota Language and Whimsical Children's Stories. Her latest work is "Compassion" - ISBN: 978-1449595418. Author's Amazon.Com Bio: http://www.amazon.com/Tashna-Erin-LaVaux/e/B002Y2FJKS/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_1 Author's Website: http://www.tnwcreations.com/] | |||
*] Author of Killed by a Passing Snowflake synopsis and review can be found at | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*], fictional country in Taulia universe | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] (Identical Twin Illusionist) - | |||
* | |||
*] (Poet of Hindi Book hasarate) | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] (Author of both horror and metaphysical books.) | |||
*] | |||
*], author of '']'' and many other books--His name currently redirects you to '']'' not a biography (requested 9-15-09) http://www.amazon.com/Sir-MacHinery-Tom-McGowen/dp/0695801678/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1253042804&sr=1-1. | |||
*] (author of THE CANAL BRIDGE, IN THE SEASON OF THE DAISIES, DERRYCLONEY, ISCARIOT; 2008-09 Fellow of the Christopher Isherwood Foundation; www.tomphelan.net) | |||
*] (author of Maumau American Cantos, Thumbprint, and short history of the saxophone) | |||
*] (Author of Still Working After All These Years) | |||
*] (author of Nithy jeevitham) | |||
*] (SF Examiner column writer) (Books include THE DISAPPEARANCE AND THE SLOW AWAKENING, RAPID EYE METAPHORS, and SIMPLICITY REGURGITATED: POEMS AND SHORTS) | |||
*] (owner of Pen of Travis: www.pen-of-travis.mystarship.com) | |||
*] (author of Millennium Millennia, also known as Tradell Mizrahi, his personal blog: thequeentradell.weebly.com) | |||
*], grandson of WWII US Army General ], author of ''Dress Gray'' (ISBN 0385134754) ''Heart of War'' (ISBN 0451187709), ''Army Blue'' (ISBN 0747202443) and ''Full Dress Gray'' (ISBN 0006160794). | |||
*] (大历十才子; pinyin: Dàlì Shí Cáizǐ) - Chinese poets during the Tang Dynasty | |||
===U-Z=== | |||
*] ( Author of the Hollow trilogy ). | |||
*] | |||
*]-book series by Peter Steinberg | |||
*] - Poet and writer of critical essays | |||
*] - Author of novel '']'', article in 'The Guardian' http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2008/oct/03/women.manet and Misplaced Pages article on Victorine Meurent refers to www.awomanwithnoclotheson.com | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*], author of the NYT bestseller ] | |||
*] | |||
*] 17th century metaphysical British poet | |||
*], author, Peruvian, Spanish & French language writer, see Spanish Misplaced Pages article on him | |||
*] - author around 1968, ('Seven Sunflower Seeds' et al.) english editions with Collins, German editions popular with Franckh publishers | |||
*] | |||
*] - new Australian author of ''Jacklin:a convict's story'' | |||
*] - contemporary American poet and theorist | |||
*] | |||
*], (born 1960), Dutch novelist | |||
*] - | |||
*] - Author of Sahdia book series | |||
*] Artist / Writer. Author of ''The Campaign Equation'', spinoff of the ''Equations'' series by Kenneth Tam. Cover artist for all the ''Defense Command'' novels. http://www.icebergpublishing.com | |||
*] Author / Game Publisher, co-founder of Paradigm Concepts and co-creator of ]: the World of Shattered Empires and ]: the Invisible World. | |||
*] Children's author, popular speaker and proffesor of children't literature at BYU. See bradwilcox.com | |||
*] - (req. prior 2008-04-09) - slipstream author | |||
*] | |||
*] (b. 1884) | |||
*] (1895-1990) outsider art; used photography, magazine cuttings, etc and painting to create his compositions | |||
*], of Sam Weskit on the Planet Framingham, etc | |||
*] (Bill) (1914-2006) author of Archer in Africa - | |||
*] (1858-1945), born in Monmouthshire and educated at home with a private tutor, he became High Sheriff of Monmouthshire. He also wrote poems such as "The Penalty of Love". | |||
*], music critic | |||
*] Award-winning South African poet, novelist and actress (translated by Nobel Laureate ]). See: http://www.nb.co.za/listing/stockenstr-m/3035/ and http://www.stellenboschwriters.com/stockenst.html | |||
*] Fiction Writer | |||
*] famed poet & internet superstar, published "Collected Works" in 2004 | |||
*] (1969-) author of This Little Red Bitch in My Chest, This little Blue Bitch in My Head. This are the only two works I have been able to find so far are there others and is there any history on this poet. | |||
*] Helen Keller | |||
*]The Gardens of Kyoto, Our Kind, Where She Went: Stories | |||
*] pseudonym of Mark and Julia Smith, who also write as Julia Gray, see the German | |||
*] 嚴忌, one of the authors of the ] - Songs of the South | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] author and illustrator of ] | |||
*] | |||
*] Dark poets | |||
* ], contemporary writer, not ]; author of ''Champagne'', ''Jellybeans and Chocolate'' | |||
===Unsorted=== | |||
Here is a list of people (mainly novelists) who currently have stub entries in http://www.nndb.com (]). The NNDB is of questionable reliability and should not be quoted as a source in Misplaced Pages and independent assessments will have to be made regarding notability: | |||
* ], English athriller novel author () | |||
*] - vs. ] - (req. prior 2008-02-16) - writer and author of ''The Real Reasons for the Upcoming War With Iraq'' | |||
*] - (req. prior 2006-06-01) - storyteller and author of "From the Imagination of a West Texas Farm Boy" | |||
* ] - 2nd-century BC Jewish poet; near contemporary of ], ], and ] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
* ], Swedish writer. Author of 2020 novel Att omfamna ett vattenfall (To Embrace a Waterfall) and a collection of her articles 2007-2017 . Editor of Swedish literary journal CONST Literary Preview . Freelance journalist for some of Sweden's most prominent newspapers and magazines. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
* ] - (b. 1989) American poet. He is the author of Black and Blue published in November 2017, and Light in the Darkness published in August 2018. He earned a bachelors degree in Business/Marketing from Huntington University. link to his website, Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook: , , , | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
* ], (b. December 22, 1975 in Coffeyville, Kansas) American writer of horror fiction, and television writer and producer. Originally from Coffeyville, Kansas, Scott attended the University of Kansas. Author of the books ''Kill Creek,'' ''Violet,'' and ''Midwestern Gothic.'' He is the co-creator/executive producer of Disney Channel’s ], ] and ], and Netflix’s ]. , , . | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
* ], (b. 1959 in Marlborough, Massachusetts) American writer of weird fiction and fantasy. His titles include ''The Sea of Ash,'' ''Fellengrey,'' and ''Midnight in New England.'' Grew up in Westborough, Massachusetts and still resides there. Brother of weird fiction writer ]. , . | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
* ] - American Writer. She is the Author of "Poems for My People", an Anthology of Poetry and for her Award Nominated work on Shine Your Eyes (2020). She is 1st Generation Nigerian American and currently resides in Los Angeles, California where she work as an Art Director. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
link to her imdb, The Art Directors Guild, News Article in Variety, News Article, News Article in Cineuropa, News Article on Fandango, Published work, Misplaced Pages Article, and Bio on Amazon: , , , , , , , , | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
] (G.R. Tomaini is an American poet, philosopher, and artist known for his contributions to systematic philosophy, queer theory, and interdisciplinary arts. His published works include three philosophical monographs and seven poetry collections, exploring themes of American idealism, spirituality, identity, and queer existentialism. Tomaini holds a Master’s degree in Systematic Philosophical Theology from Union Theological Seminary, where he studied under Cornel West and Gary Dorrien, and a Bachelor’s degree in Philosophy from Rutgers University–New Brunswick, where he was mentored by Drucilla Cornell. His works are cataloged in bookstores and libraries internationally, including the Harvard University Book Store, and have earned him endorsements from notable intellectuals like Slavoj Žižek and Cornel West. He is currently considering a PhD in Philosophy and Art through the European Graduate School. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
Tomaini’s notable works in philosophy include Encyclopedia of American Idealism: Entries Toward a Novel Method and System of Philosophy (Manticore Press, 2022), which is prefaced by Cornel West and endorsed by Slavoj Žižek, and Tractatus Perfectio-Philosophicus: Or, Discourses On The Dharma of Civilization And Its Odyssey Toward International Harmony (Manticore Press, 2024), which examines idealism, realpolitik, and civilization’s moral trajectory. His forthcoming The Pre-Encyclopedic Journals of G.R. Tomaini (Anxiety Press, 2024) will document his early philosophical thoughts and reflections. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
Tomaini’s poetry collections include Ballad of An American Ganymede: Explorations of Queeritude In Fifty-Seven Cantos (Anxiety Press, 2022), The Rainbow Cantos: Two Attempts At Queering The Canon (Pumpernickel Press, 2022)—containing the individual volumes Kiss Me, Ahab! and Gayowulf, a queer reimagining of the Beowulf epic—The Psalms of Babylon: Or, 112 Flowers of Malaise (Indigo Dragon Press, 2023), which was reviewed by Dr. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Wittgenstein 2.0: An Autobiographical Play Written In Poetry (Anxiety Press, 2024), and American Upanishads (Anxiety Press, 2024), which blends Buddhist and Christian themes. His poetry often explores LGBTQ+ identity, spirituality, and the relationship between myth and modern life, gaining him a following within literary and academic communities. | |||
* ] - (req. 2009-9-6) short story writer. | |||
* ] - script and story writer for ], ] and others. | |||
Tomaini is also a prolific visual artist, with over 100 drawings and paintings that echo the themes found in his writing. He has held five art shows in the past year, with his compositions currently valued at $250 per piece. His artwork has been exhibited in the United States and is represented by Anxiety Press, where he also contributes as a Poetry Editor. His literary works have been published in numerous journals and magazines, including Outcast Press, Selcouth Station Press, Agapanthus Collective, Roi Fainéant Press, The Incognito Press, and American Writers Review. His poetry is being adapted into stage plays and poetry albums, and he continues to build an interdisciplinary legacy in literature, philosophy, and art.) | |||
* ] - (req 2010-03-11) Indian author, writes fantasy and science fiction, wrote The Enemy of My Enemy, Banana Republic and Crickematics | |||
* ] - -Spanish biographer,novelist and fantasy writer ... no references? | |||
* ] - (req. Mar. 3, 2010) poet, journalist, and fiction writer. Recipient of the Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg prize for poetry and two Pushcart nominations. Author of The Books of Elsewhere and the Parallel Press poetry collection Cherma. | |||
* ] - Created Walt Disney World online encyclopedia allears.net | |||
*], 1986-, is an American-New Zealand author of poetry. His book Lay Studies was shortlisted for the Mary and Peter Biggs Award for poetry at the 2020 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards. He is married to Man Booker Prize Winning novelist, Eleanor Catton. - , , , , , | |||
* ], Japanese translator and author of short stories, novels, and children's tales. Toyoshima was said to be highly respected by Osamu Dazai. There is already a detailed Japanese Misplaced Pages article on Toyoshima, so it may be best to selectively translate that as a start: . | |||
* ], American author and blogger. He is the creator of "Tales from the Gas Station," an internet-based serial story and winner of the "NoSleep" subreddit's "Best Series of 2017." He is also the author of the novel "Tales from the Gas Station: Volume One," based on the internet series. His blog can be found at | |||
* ] - author of ''Age of Quintessense'' | |||
* ] - British literary critic, author of well regarded works on French literature including 'The Art of French Fiction', 'The Novel in France', 'Jean Racine, Dramatist', 'Baudelaire'. He contributed to Scrutiny, to the NY Review of Books and to the Spectator between about 1930 and the early 1960s. He worked for the BBC for about 10 years. But there is, very oddly, no biographical information anywhere about him. His books, where there is normally some brief account to be found, give nothing, not even a date of birth. I don't know how one would go about getting any information - there must still be people alive who knew him, maybe his publisher would be a way in? I don't know if he is still alive. If so, he will be of very advanced age. He was. probably still is, a significant and influential critic for a generation of English readers. He brought to the French tradition the spirit of English criticism of the day, always focused on evaluation, close reading, and a humane accurate and balanced sensibility. | |||
* ], 1903-1980, was an American author of children's mystery novels. In the novel, Flaxen Braids, she wrote of her mother's childhood in Sweden, before emigrating to the United States. | |||
* ], author of the Joe Johnson series of thrillers. Originally from Grantham, Lincolnshire, now in St. Albans in Hertfordshire. | |||
===V=== | |||
*] (18 March 1809 - 28 June 1844); Afro-Cuban poet and independence activist; executed by firing squad in ] for conspiracy (see ]). | |||
* ], Pae Veo is a Canadian author. Additionally, he co-founded Montreal small press "The Stygian Society" and champions AI-free works of fiction via the Society's writing challenge "The Order of the Written Word". ( ) | |||
*]; English author of: A look into the life and love of Severus Snape : An Essay | |||
*]; an Air Force veteran, is an Indian English poet, translator and editor. Founder and chief editor of two literary journals, VerbalArt & Phenomenal Literature published by Authorspress, New Delhi. Editor of two poetry anthologies: ] & ] - , , , | |||
*]; a Vietnamese American author, editor, and actor. Her published works include the novella ''Wounded Wisteria'' and the novel ''Squid Season''. - ], ], ] | |||
===W=== | |||
*]- American crime-fiction author and former journalist. Finalist for the 2013 ]. Wrote ten books in two nationally bestselling series, the ] and the ] novels. (, ) | |||
*] - Vermont author of various works related to the occult and cryptids | |||
* ], (born March 18th, 1999) Author and screenwriter of various philosophical horror works, published by The Flenser since 2019. (, ) | |||
*] - British crime novelist, author of '']'' (winner of the ], nominated for the ], winner of the ]) and The Dead Line. Previously journalist at the ], the ] and the Guardian, winning Press Awards for her work on MPs' Expenses and the ]. Winner of the ]. (, , , , ) | |||
*] veterinarian and writer | |||
* ], (born May 15, 1996) erotic author. Wrote boy love erotic novels. <ref>{{Cite web|url=https://g.co/kgs/WWf8dj|title=Search: Lucal C Wesker|website=Google.com|access-date=Sep 28, 2019}}</ref> | |||
*]; an American author of topical subjects set on the Plains. Author of two novels, Kings of Broken Things and In Our Other Lives, and a short fiction collection. Winner of National Endowment for the Arts creative writing fellowship, fellowship at Akademie Schloss Solitude, Nebraska Book Award. Published in Best New American Voices, Kenyon Review, Southern Review, Narrative. Official Website: theodore-wheeler.com; news coverage sample: , , , , | |||
* ] - American Writer. Author website at | |||
* ] (award winning author with McSweeney's Publishing, best known for Heaven (2020) but also Daddy Boy in 2023) (https://emersonwhitney.com) | |||
* ] - co-author of the ] series. | |||
* '''Kimberly K. Williams''' (Poet) author of Sometimes a Woman https://recentworkpress.com/product/sometimes-a-woman/ and Finally, the Moon. Born: Peekskill, NY Raised: Detroit, MI Lives in Canberra, Australia | |||
* ] - author of ''Wake of the Nightshade'' | |||
* ] - author of '']'' | |||
* ] - American author of the ]. The series contains 4 books. He published his first book when he was 16 years old. (, ) | |||
* ] (]) - American author best known for ''26 Absurdities of Tragic Proportions'' (, , ) | |||
* ] American christian fiction author of over 80 novels with publishers such as ] and ]. Author website at ]. Current article redirects to ] | |||
===Y=== | |||
*], Indian novelist, who published his first book at the age of 25. Author of 'What life is all about' – ]; see his blog at ] | |||
===Z=== | |||
*] poet, experimental novelist, hybrid writer, essayist. Has also written widely about feminism, veganism, ableism, and having Ehlers Danlos Syndrome. Author of the fragmentary/experimental novels In a Dream, I Dance by Myself, and I Collapse (winner of Civil Coping Mechanisms' Mainline Contest, 2016)and A Child Is Being Killed (Aqueous Books) which poet ] called "a saint of a little book". Work has been published in ], ], ], Entropy, ], Nebula: Journal of Multidisciplinary Scholarship, ], DIAGRAM, Huffington Post, ], West Branch, and elsewhere. Work on trauma and literary theory ("traumatized texts"), veganism, feminism, and ableism been cited in several academic peer reviewed articles (see google scholar), ], and elsewhere. Reviews and interviews in ], ], Big Other, Entropy, ], Eileen Myles's website, interview series by ] (see his blog), Which Side Podcast, Grab the Lapels, ], and elsewhere. www.carolynzaikowski.com | |||
*] (1529 - 1560); Venetian poet. | |||
*] Poet, fiction writer, essayist, visual artist, publisher/editor of Red Mare Books, and an eco-feminist. Her work has appeared in Alien Buddha, Unlikely Stories Mark V, Red Fez, Thrice Fiction, and more. Her books include: , , , , , , , , . Interviews with her: , , . | |||
*] (Young Adult (YA) and Middle Grade (MG) author of The Banshee Song Series, Keen, Lament, The Case of the Missing Robot. She has also contributed to anthologies such as Warriors Against the Storm, Paws, Claws, and Magic Tales, Ironwood Alchemy, and other online publications.) ( | |||
*] is an impressionistic, post-romantic poet from the United States. I have had many requests for an official Misplaced Pages article on this man from both the student body and members of the faculty at the two Colleges where I am teaching as an English Literature Professor. Some of his works have appeared on midterm tests as well as on finals in the Universities' itineraries and there is heated interest on this person among a good sample of my students, friends and colleagues. Sources: 35,000 <ref>{{Cite web|url=https://search.yahoo.com/yhs/search;_ylt=AwrC3OtZBvxcknIA4AAPxQt.;_ylc=X1MDMjExNDcwMDU1OQRfcgMyBGZyA3locy1zeW1hbnRlYy1leHRfb25iBGdwcmlkA09iUEZyTTdTUlpxWUh4NnE1T0FaU0EEbl9yc2x0AzAEbl9zdWdnAzEEb3JpZ2luA3NlYXJjaC55YWhvby5jb20EcG9zAzAEcHFzdHIDBHBxc3RybAMwBHFzdHJsAzI0BHF1ZXJ5A2pvaG4lMjBsYXJzJTIwendlcmVueiUyMHBvZXRyeQR0X3N0bXADMTU2MDAyMDU3Ng--?p=john+lars+zwerenz+poetry&fr2=sb-top&hspart=symantec&hsimp=yhs-ext_onb¶m1=69151340-878c-4a25-99af-6d3c16988d9c_2019-05-07_cr¶m2=hp_dsp_rapha¶m3=nfm__wk19_2019¶m4=1000&type=cr_hp_rapha_wk19_2019|title=Search: John Lars Zwerenz|website=Yahoo.com|access-date=Sep 28, 2019}}</ref><ref>https://www.google.com/search?q=john+lars+zwerenz&oq=john+lars+&aqs=chrome.2.69i59l2j0j69i57j0l4.7774j0j8&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8</ref> | |||
== Works== | |||
=== Non-fiction === | |||
* '']'' - Malcolm Gladwell's eighth book, and the sequel to his 2000 bestseller ] | |||
* ] - educational and narrative book by Winona Guo and Priya Vulchi that discusses topics of race in the style of taking interviews across America, it has been mentioned in several news sites. In 2017 the authors became the youngest TED residents ever with a TED talk with over a million views on similar topics to the book. Additionally they founded ths CHOOSE foundation which has been recognized by Princeton University, Teen Vogue, and others. Multiple colleges feature this book as a common text for incoming students. , , , , , | |||
* ] - motivational book by Dale R. Horton that was an Amazon #1 seller in category. Has a 5 star readers favorite review rating. Deals with the struggles of everyday life and mental health. , | |||
* '']'' - memoir written by ] and published in 2009. In it, he argues that his client ] should not have been sentenced to death due to his mental illness. | |||
* ] - book about how computers work | |||
* ], by anthropologist ] () | |||
* '']'' - book about Asian murder cases that were solved through forensic evidence; these recorded cases came from countries like ], ] and ]. The case of ] was one of the 16 murder cases included in the book. | |||
* '']'' - non-fiction book by ] (; ) | |||
* '']'' - memoir by ] | |||
* '']'' by ] | |||
* '']'' by journalist ]; similar to '']'', which came out more than a decade after. | |||
* '']'' by ] professor David Faris (2018), ISBN 978-1-6121-9695-4 - Author argues the Republican Party has taken control of the US by fighting dirty and that the Democratic Party only can regain power by doing the same. Faris says DEMs have been left at an unfair disadvantage, but they can level the playing field by admitting new blue states (splitting California and giving statehood to DC and Puerto Rico), switching the House to IRV, and packing the Supreme Court. Some of this was discussed after the 2020 elections resulted in a DEM trifecta, but none of it was carried out. Author (]) might also be notable enough for an article. (, , , , , ) | |||
* '']'' - memoir by ] that memorializes her marriage to ]. | |||
* ], a book that ] published after the events covered in the movie ]. There is an article about Philomena Lee, and one about her son, but none about this book.) () | |||
* ''{{ill|Navalny: Putin’s Nemesis, Russia’s Future?|ru}}'' | |||
* ] - autobiography by ] | |||
* ] - autobiography of ] | |||
* ] - 2020 non-fiction novel by Shaun D’Souza. The is a compendium of the author's Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence learnings and contains a collection of Software and AI/ML manuscripts. A is maintained for the book’s reader. is available in author's . | |||
* '']'' by ] | |||
* '']'' by ] | |||
* '']'' - book on the Bible by ] (who could also use a page). , | |||
* '']'' - Biography of St. Paul by ]. , | |||
* '']'' - Non-fiction book on women in journalism | |||
* '']'' - history of ]. , | |||
* '']'' - Biography of ] by ]. , , | |||
* '']'' - Historical non-fiction book on Early Christianity and Rome by ] | |||
* '']'' - Non-fiction book on early American historic homes | |||
=== Comics === | |||
* '']'' - see ] - French comic of alternative stories | |||
* ] - Three comic books, published by ], originally given away free at the ], featuring ] teaming up with DC characters such as ] and ]. Titles are '''The Colonel of Two Worlds''', '''Colonel Corps: Crisis of Infinite Colonels''', and '''Across the Universe'''. - , , , , , , , | |||
* ] by ] - historical fiction, about the ] released 2019 by ] and ], Penguin Website , Amazon , GoodReads , Bleeding Cool , Official Site , The National Herald | |||
* ] | |||
=== Novels === | |||
{{div col|colwidth=30em}} | |||
*], a dystopian novel by ], published by One World ] and a finalist for the ] () | |||
* ], an Eighteenth-century novel by ], published by Penguin Classics () | |||
* {{ill|Assisted Living (novel)|sv|Äldreomsorgen i Övre Kågedalen}} from 1992, by Swedish author Niclas Lundkvist under the pseudonym ]. Infamous for its ''very'' transgressive content (see author's article for specifics). Two English sources: and | |||
* ] - inexpensive erotic novels sold at camps during the American Civil War; see ] | |||
* ] by ] - the novelization of the ] | |||
* '']'' - 2017 novel by ] | |||
* ] - novel by ], part of his ] | |||
* '']'' - novel by Michel Sauret about a young man who loses faith in God, but is then chosen to deliver a message; printed by ] | |||
* '']'' - novel by ] | |||
* '']'' - 2003 novel by ] () | |||
* '']'' - novel by ]; fourth in the ] | |||
* ''] (])'' (1905-06) by ] - inspired by ]'s ''L'Agonie'' (1888); fictional novel based on the story of ] | |||
* '']'' - series by novels by ] | |||
* '']'' - 2017 novel by ] | |||
* '']'' - historical novel by ], creator of the '']'' series | |||
* ] by ] - first book in the ''Vega Jane'' series ({{URL|davidbaldacci.com/book/the-finisher}}) | |||
* ] - 2010 novel by ] | |||
* ] by Nora Fares () | |||
* '']'' by ] NPR: Kirkus: SLJ PW | |||
* '']'' - Science fiction novel series written by various authors, inspired by ]'s ] of novels. Pages exist for the individual book titles, as well as the follow-up series ] & ], but no page exists for the first series in general. | |||
* '']'' - by ]: first novel by an indigenous French Polynesian author, publication "polarising" | |||
* ] - novel by ] () | |||
* '']'' (1888) by ]<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://archive.org/details/lagoniel00lomb|title=L'agonie|first=Jean|last=Lombard|date=27 June 1902|publisher=Paris : P. Ollendorff|access-date=27 June 2022|via=Internet Archive}}</ref> - fictional novel based on the story of ], and the inspiration for ]'s ''De berg van licht'' (''The Mountain of Light'') in 1905–06. Illustrations from the novel are already on Misplaced Pages, found | |||
* ] - 2005 novel by Andrea Hirata ( - ]) | |||
* '']'' - ]: first published literary work by a Pacific Islander woman author. | |||
* ] - 1917 novel by ] | |||
* '']'' by Seth Dickinson (2019) - sequel to '']'' () | |||
*'']'', the first novel by ], author of ]. ( | |||
* {{icon|redirect}} '']'' - sequel to '']'' | |||
* '']'' by Vladimir Jankovic (2018) | |||
* ] - 1981 novel by ], writing as Sheila Holland | |||
* ] - 1990 novel by ] | |||
* ] - 2002 novel by ] | |||
* ] - 2008 novel by ] | |||
* ] - 2013 novel by ] | |||
* ] - 2015 novel by ] | |||
* ] - 2017 novel by ] | |||
* ] - novel by ] | |||
* ] - novel by ] | |||
* ] - novel by ] | |||
* ] - novel by ] | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* '']'' by Ethan Pettus - released April 2017 | |||
* '']'' by Ethan Pettus - released November 2020 | |||
* '']'' - ]'s fifteenth novel, and a sequel to '']'', published August 25, 2015 (, , ) | |||
* ] by ] - historical fiction, about the ] released 2019 by ] and ], Penguin Website , Amazon , GoodReads , Bleeding Cool , Official Site , The National Herald | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] a novel by ] published in July 2021, link: | |||
* '']'' by Jeyna Grace - published May 2018 | |||
* '']'' - by ] | |||
* '']'' - vampire novel by Daria Finica that offers a new explanation for the myth of the ] () | |||
* ] - see ] | |||
* '']'' by Nora Fares () | |||
* ] - series of novels by Abigail and Sasheena Kurfman | |||
* '']'' - novel by ] | |||
* '']'' - children's novel by ] | |||
* ] - 1985 novel ] by ] (winner of ]) | |||
* '']'' by ], book in the Chicago Stars series. | |||
* '']'' - ]' third novel, published in 1954 and inspired by the ].<ref name=":15">{{Cite book|last=Comyns|first=Barbara|title=The Vet's Daughter|publisher=Virago|year=1981|pages=xv}}</ref> | |||
* '']'' - 2019 novel by Adam Hayes () | |||
* '']'' by ], third out of five books in '']'' series, sequel to '']'', prequel to '''', published by ], released on May 6, 2014 | |||
* ] by ] - a novel about a dystopian world where humans have been eradicated, and all that exist are clones, except for one human. | |||
==== ''Defense Command'' series ==== | |||
* '']'' ({{ISBN|0-9780916-1-2}}) - science-fiction novel by ]; July 2006, ] ({{URL|icebergpublishing.com}}); second novel in the ''Defense Command'' series ({{URL|defensecommand.net}}); preceded by ''The Rouge Commodore''; succeeded by ''The Hawke Mission'' | |||
* '']'' - third novel in the ''Defense Command'' series; preceded by ''The Almost Coup'' | |||
* '']'' - first novel in the ''Defense Command'' series; succeeded by ''The Almost Coup'' | |||
==== ''Duckett & Dyer'' series ==== | |||
* '']'' by ] (2019) () | |||
* '']'' by G.M. Nair (2020) - Sequel to Duckett & Dyer: Dicks For Hire () | |||
==== ''The Equations'' series ==== | |||
* '']'' - science-fiction novel by ]; May 2005, ] ({{URL|icebergpublishing.com}}); second novel in ''The Equations'' series (preceded by ''The Human Equation'' and succeeded by ''The Renegade Equation'') ({{ISBN|0-9731362-5-1}}) | |||
* ] - first novel in ''The Equations'' series; succeeded by ''The Alien Equation'' | |||
* '']'' - third novel in ''The Equations'' series; preceded by ''The Alien Equation'' | |||
====]==== | |||
* '']'' | |||
====Wilder Good series==== | |||
* '']'' (2013) | |||
* '']'' (2014) | |||
* '']'' (2015) | |||
* '']'' (2016) | |||
* '']'' (2018) | |||
* '']'' (2020) | |||
* '']'' (2021) | |||
====Wuxia==== | |||
* '']'' by Chris Vines | |||
* '']'' by Will Wight | |||
* '']'' by Cocooned Cow (or Martial World). | |||
==== ''Sal Kilkenny'' Series ==== | |||
* ] (1994) Published in French under the title ''Black Nights in Manchester'' , Paris, Librairie des Champs-Élysées, Le Masque <abbr>#</abbr> 2465, 2002 | |||
* '']'' (1997) | |||
* ] (1998) Published in French under the title ''Tout l'accusait'' , Paris, Librairie des Champs-Élysées, The Mask <abbr>#</abbr> 2481, 2003 | |||
* '']'' (2001) | |||
* ] (2002) | |||
* ] (2003) | |||
* ] (2007) | |||
* ] (2011) | |||
==== ''Janine Lewis series'' ==== | |||
* ] (2004) - inspiration for ] | |||
* ] (2005) | |||
==== ''Polar Bear Explorers' Club series'' ==== | |||
* '']'' (2019) | |||
* '']'' (2019) | |||
* '']'' (2020) | |||
==== ''Wraeththu'' ==== | |||
* '']'' (1987) | |||
* '']'' (1988) | |||
* '']'' (1989) | |||
** Other editions: | |||
*** ''Wraeththu'' (omnibus) (1993) | |||
*** Revised editions of all three published by in 2003-2004 | |||
* '']'' (2003) | |||
* '']'' (2004) | |||
* '']'' (2005) | |||
==== ''Scott & Bailey'' Series ==== | |||
* ] (2012) | |||
* ] (2013) | |||
==== ''Max Einstein'' Series ==== | |||
* ] (2019) | |||
* ] (2019) | |||
* ] (2020) | |||
* ] (2021) | |||
==== Other detective novels ==== | |||
* '']'' (2009) | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==== Autobiographical novels ==== | |||
* ] (2002) | |||
{{div col end}} | |||
==== "Will Wilder" series (by Raymond Arroyo) ==== | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
Here is a links to some info about the books: , , | |||
===Novellas=== | |||
* ] - an anthology series of short fiction by ] published in 2021-2022. Links: , | |||
* ] - significant short story, available on | |||
* ] - A science fiction story with a plot centered around the ], one of the main characters is ]. ({{ISBN|9781080354719}}) <ref>{{cite web|title=KEVEIN BOOKS AND REVIEWS|url=http://www.keveinbooksnreviews.in/2019/10/book-review-10k-bug-by-abhay-adil.html}}</ref> | |||
===Religious literature=== | |||
* ''{{ill|Flos Sanctorum|es|Flos sanctorum|ca|Flos Sanctorum}}'', perhaps just a redirect to (a subsection of?) ] or perhaps something in its own right, I'm not sure. | |||
* The ], a model used by some biblical scholars to explain the origins and ] (or Pentateuch, the first five books of the Bible: ], ], ], ], and ]). The hypothesis criticizes and revises the ] and the ]. The new article would provide much-needed context to those other articles as well as replace the stub it currently has on the ] page. | |||
* The ], a category of the ] which groups the ]s and ]. They tell the history of Christianity's earliest days, focusing on the life of Jesus and the creation of the Church respectively. The article about the ] of the ] should be kept in mind (and probably renamed) if this article is created. Sources: (by ]), and (by ]) | |||
* ], a word-for-word merged synopsis of the four ] ] texts based on the FIVE COLUMN Four Gospel Harmony, compiled by Daniel John and published in 2009 by Smart Publishing Ltd. Sources: | |||
=== Web serials === | |||
* '']'' by Pirateaba (2016-) | |||
* The '']'', a fantasy romance novel by KIM Suji, originally published in Korean by a content company named ]. The digital comic version has been adapted, currently being published by ]. | |||
=== Other/unknown === | |||
* '']'' by Ian Lahey - WWII historical fiction set in Italy | |||
* '']'' (''অভিনীতের আরম্ভ'') (''The Beginning of Acting'') by Sudipto Halder () | |||
* ] by ] - see ] | |||
* ] by Ian Lahey - illustrated tale for children | |||
* ] by ] - see ] | |||
* '']'' ('']'') by ] (1934), depicting the life of ] and combining essay, biography, and fiction<ref>{{cite journal |last=Boldt-Irons |first=Leslie Anne |date=1996 |title=Anarchy and Androgyny in Artaud's "Héliogabale ou L'Anarchiste Couronné" |journal=The Modern Language Review |publisher=] |location=Cambridge, UK |volume=91 |issue=4 |pages=866–877 |jstor=3733514 |doi=10.2307/3733514}}</ref> | |||
* '']'' by Sudipto Halder () | |||
* '']'' - 2012 book by ] | |||
* ] - part of the ] cycle | |||
* '']'' - part of the ] cycle | |||
* '']'' - 2011 book by ] | |||
* ] - cited on many articles as ] | |||
* '']'' - part of the ] cycle; currently a redirect | |||
* '']'' (''স্বপ্ন দর্শন'') (''Dream Vision'') by Sudipto Halder () | |||
* ] by ] - first published in Glasgow in 1755 - see ] | |||
* '']'' by Zeb Haradon - modern retelling of the ] about an alternate reality where ] becomes president in 2016 | |||
* '']'' - anthology | |||
==Authors (other than poets, dramatists and fiction writers)== | ==Authors (other than poets, dramatists and fiction writers)== | ||
Line 830: | Line 874: | ||
| type = delete | | type = delete | ||
| textstyle = text-align: center; | | textstyle = text-align: center; | ||
| text = Please request articles about non-fiction writers at ''']''', ''not'' here. | | text = Please request articles about non-fiction writers at ''']''', ''not'' here. | ||
}} | }} | ||
* ] - UK author of scores of books for children including Blue Peter Book Club "How to get what you want, by Peony Pinker", Red House Highly Commended "Car-mad Jack' and amazon bestseller "Bullies, Bigmouths and So-called Friends" - most recently three books for adults about writing - "Writing in the House of Dreams: Unlock the power of your unconscious mind", "Happy Writing: Beat your blocks, be published and find your flow" and "Free-Range Writing: 75 forays for the wild writer's soul" Articles for writers in Mslexia, Writers' Forum, Writing Magazine and The Author - monthly column in Writing Magazine. Teaches for organisations including Society of Authors, Scattered Authors' Society, the Arvon Foundation, Lapidus, Mantle Arts, Writing magazine. https://jennyalexander.co.uk/ | |||
* ]- author and illustrator of "How to bag a Jabberwock: a practical guide to monster hunting"(under the pen name ]), the Benjamin Gaul Adventures "The Monster Hunter""Smoke and Mirrors",The Dr Tripps' chronicles "Kaiju cocktail""Moon monster""Time terror"and the cold war fantasy drama "Morningwood" | |||
* ] - author of ''Brodsky Translating Brodsky & Viktor Shklovsky: A Reader''; she is mentioned in a couple of articles on translation (the books are not biographies, hence I am not listing her at ] | |||
* ] (]) - author | |||
* ] (Author, Photographer and Broadcaster) (, , , , ) | |||
==Fictional elements== | |||
==Books== | |||
*Georgina Hammick, British short-story writer, born in Hampshire, educated in Kenya and England; she later attended the Academie Julian, Paris, and the Salisbury School of Art. Her first collection of stories, People for Lunch (1987), was acclaimed for its wit, irony, and compassion. The stories in Spoilt (1992), her second collection, return to the affectionately depicted parochial and suburban landscapes of the earlier work, and are characterized by Hammick's customary elegance of style; here, however, her skill with satirical dialogue and her narrative dexterity often conceal tragic depths, as in the superb ‘The Dying Room’. Widely anthologized herself, Hammick has also edited an anthology, The Virago Book of Love and Loss (1992), which includes a number of influences and affinities—Elizabeth Bowen, Sylvia Townsend Warner, Elizabeth Taylor, Alice Munro. | |||
===Fictional character=== | |||
Read more: Georgina Hammick Biography - (1939– ), People for Lunch, Spoilt, The Virago Book of Love and Loss http://www.jrank.org/literature/pages/4277/Georgina-Hammick.html#ixzz10m6pJU6W | |||
{{div col|colwidth=30em}} | |||
* ] - a former professional hero and current U.A. High School teacher in '']''. Usually characters in fictional manga and anime should not have independent articles, yet ] has plenty of articles remarking All Might (), and the list that does mention him actually does not cover him adequately (e.g. lacking his parts in the Dark Deku Arc and the Second Great War one and reception in the real world). Now redirects to ] | |||
* ] and ] - both characters in ]'s classic novel '']''. Pages to go with the article for Merricat Blackwood that has already been made. Especially necessary with the impending release of a film adaptation, and a possible revival of the stage musical. | |||
* ] - child character featured in ]' classic ] novel, ]. One of the most notable literary characters of the 1960s. | |||
* ] - a fictional character by ] | |||
* ]- Page was deleted due to lack of citations 2 years ago, important cthulhu mythos entity. | |||
* ] - fictional character in the Wilder Good middle-grade book series by S.J. Dahlstrom, published by Paul Dry Books, Philadelphia, PA. | |||
* ] - a fictional character in ]´s novels, including ] and ]. A ranger/marchwarden of Doriath, important in the First Age. Also a name of a ranger of Ithilien, in ] | |||
* ] - first cousin of ] | |||
* ] - cousin of ] | |||
* ] - a professional hero in the ''MHA'' who has been quite controversial among MHA fans, and CBR has many articles commenting him (, , , etc.). Now redirects to ] | |||
* ] - a fictional villain that is regarded one of the best ones by many Westerners, and CBR has many articles commenting him (). Now redirects to ] | |||
===Fictional locations=== | |||
* ] Copyright © 2010 by S. B. Newman. All rights reserved. Published by Tate Publishing & Enterprises, LLC 127 E. Trade Center Terrace, Mustang, Oklahoma 73064 USA ISBN: 978-1-61663-616-6 Book design copyright © 2010 by Tate Publishing, LLC. All rights reserved.Cover design by Stefanie Rooney Interior design by Stephanie Woloszyn | |||
* ] - fictional Balearic island in the ] series | |||
1. Fiction / War & Military 2. Fiction / Action & Adventure 10.07.08 | |||
* ] - fictional continent in the ''Wings of Fire'' novels | |||
* ] - fictional country in the ] | |||
{{div col end}} | |||
==Literature-related awards== | |||
* ] - ] - novel about advertising business | |||
{{div col|colwidth=30em}} | |||
* ] - ] - A science fantasy novella. | |||
* ] - Author Elite Awards are bestowed for literary merit and publishing excellence in the writing and publishing industry. They are conferred annually by Author Academy Elite (AAE) and presented at the Author Elite Awards Ceremony. The various category winners are bestowed a special award, officially called the "Elite Boon of Merit." The winner in each category will have an opportunity to have a 90-second book synopsis video shared to a global audience. Authors of all kinds—indie (self-published), traditional, or collaborative published—may be considered for this prestigious award. The top ten finalists in each category are invited to present their book synopsis at the Author Elite Awards Red Carpet Sessions.{{URL|authoreliteawards.com}} | |||
* ] by ] (Contributor) and ] (Editor) | |||
* ] - annual juried award, not a contest; given to the best story of under 1,000 words published in English during a calendar year; private money funds the award; editors nominate work just as they do for the ] and similar honors | |||
* ] by Mark Whistler. Published: March, 2009. Novel Description: 1984 Updated to modern times. Though the book is fiction the work is heavily footnoted with actual articles, events, reports and legislation happening in 2008, 2009 and 2010. | |||
{{div col end}} | |||
*] | |||
* ] - by ] | |||
*] - Presented by the ]. The award, established in 2016, "honors a work of fiction from the previous calendar year that speaks with an “American Voice” about American experiences. The award carries a $25,000 cash prize underwritten by bestselling author and former trustee of the Mark Twain House and Museum, ]." | |||
* ]- by ] | |||
* ]- a book explaining what every song The Beatles ever wrote means. | |||
==Literature-related events== | |||
* ] by Zana Muhsen | |||
* ] by ] and photographer ]. A photo book documenting the rise of the band over the period of being unsigned to their triumph at the Brit Awards prior to their 2nd album release. Published August 2006 and ISBN-13: 9781841882680. | |||
* '']'' - monthly story competition in Chicago | |||
* ]- by ] | |||
* '']'' - annual weeks-long writing workshops taught by highly regarded authors and hosted by the University of Iowa, home to the top-ranked graduate writing programs in the U.S. | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* '']'' - ongoing, decade-old conversation series based in Los Angeles (http://www.livetalkslosangeles.org)] (]) 02:24, 23 November 2020 (UTC) | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] The missing extra ] | |||
==Literature-related lists== | |||
* ]- by ] | |||
{{div col|colwidth=30em}} | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] - ], ], ], and others already exist. I believe a similar article about languages used in books and other print media would be highly informative and useful. dis also applies when expanded to other media, such as radio, television, movies, songs, software, video games, etc. | |||
* ] - ] - A book written by Marie Osmond to help women with Postpartum Depression. | |||
* ] - there is ], why not poetry? | |||
* ] - ] - A book of informal magic tricks, his first published book | |||
* ] or ] - Misplaced Pages TEMP has some of these poems, but finding them is a chore<ref>As to the notability of American poet and writer John Lars Zwerenz, he is referred to by name in many third party online and offline sites. For example, you may examine the following link: https://pin.it/5hxsyqR</ref> Rachael D. Canter 22:51, 27 July 2020 (UTC)Avid Reader | |||
* ] by ] An adult suspense novella written in a unique style. The story revolves around a shadowy character only known as the collector. Released December 2008. ISBN:1-60813-109-2. | |||
* ] (A list of publisher codes for (979) International Standard Book Numbers with a group code of 8, similar to 978-0 ] and 978-1 ].) (Data from published items by these publishers.) One book as an example: ] (]) 00:52, 7 July 2023 (UTC) | |||
* ] - A future novel by ]. | |||
{{div col end}} | |||
* ] by Dr. ] | |||
* ] by James Patterson also known under the name of Black Friday | |||
==Literature-related organizations== | |||
* ] by F. E. Higgins | |||
{{div col|colwidth=30em}} | |||
* ] - A fictional creature that was involved in a series of short stories. | |||
* ] (Literary arts center based out of UNLV. Publisher of The Believer magazine and host of The Believer Festival.) | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] ({{URL|boondi.lk}}); online magazine; | |||
* ] by Holly Bennett | |||
* ] - ; . This is encyclopaedic because it is a widely used scholarly resource that offers a database of factual information about English Renaissance drama, including that of Shakespeare. It is already cited by several articles in Misplaced Pages and because of these citations, the database itself ought to be in Misplaced Pages. | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] - A novelette written by J. A. George. | |||
* ] ({{URL|ogre.red}}) - a journal of contemporary short fiction, verse, and visual art founded in October 2021 by graduates of ]'s Creative Writing Masters program. Red Ogre Review is a member of ], the ]. | |||
* ], 1782 by M R Lovric | |||
* ] ({{URL|sawriters.org.uk}}) - a ]; of great importance to writers and writer groups; ; | |||
* ] - A murder mystery by Blair Underwood, Steven Barnes, Tananarive Due. | |||
* ] ({{URL|http://womensfictionwriters.org/}}) - an international non-profit writing association. It provides networking and support to individuals interested in pursuing a career in women’s fiction. | |||
* ] -A series of children's novels by Random House | |||
* ] | |||
* ] by ]. | |||
{{div col end}} | |||
* ] based on the warriors series by ]. | |||
* ] - to date, a series of 12 books written and illustrated by ] | |||
===Publishing companies=== | |||
* ] - Anne McCaffrey & S.M. Stirling | |||
{{div col|colwidth=30em}} | |||
* ] - by David Benioff. | |||
* ] ({{URL|https://atmospherepress.com/}})- Atmosphere Press is an Austin, TX. based publisher of books founded in 2015, by Nick Courtright. Genres include fiction, non-fiction, children's books, and poetry. Atmosphere Press is an "author friendly" publishing company that uses a hybrid approach to publishing. Their services include publishing, marketing/promotions, web development, editorial services, illustration, and audiobook distribution. | |||
* ] - an acclaimed samurai novel by ] | |||
* ] ({{URL|https://brokensleepbooks.com/}})- An award-winning indie working-class publishing press. Authors include: ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and more. | |||
* ], a novel about Ancient Mewar region in India, By kiran nagarkar. Published by Harper Collins | |||
{{div col end}} | |||
* ] | |||
* ] - An American independent book publishing company founded in 2004 and headquartered in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania. Some of its authors include former Pennsylvania Congressman Jason Altmire; Pat LaMarche, a former two-time Maine gubernatorial candidate and ex-vice presidential candidate on the Green Party presidential ticket for the 2004 U.S. presidential election; former Pennsylvania Lieutenant Governor Mark Singel; Duquesne University President Ken Gormley; singer/songwriter Calvin Richardson; and actor/playwright Laurence Luckinbill. | |||
* ] by Jonathan Kaelin. A series of three books, the first of which was released in April 2008. | |||
* ] by: ] | |||
===Websites=== | |||
* ] by ], sequel to Shrimp. | |||
* ] ({{URL|bangla-kobita.com}}) - literature website on ] | |||
* ] by ], series of books called The Dark Chronicles | |||
* ] - collaborative website/pseudo-television show by ], ], ], ], ] and ] | |||
* ], by Anita Burgh; 1992 (I - The Azure Bowl; II - The Golden Butterfly; III - The Stone Mistress). Publishers: Chatto & Windus; Trafalgar Square. | |||
* ] ({{URL|pdfnbooks.blogspot.com}}) - an ebook marketplace to download and publish ebooks for free. | |||
* ]- by J. L. Bourne, a post apocalyptic zombie novel. | |||
*] ({{URL|ektuananda.com}}) - Cultural website on ] | |||
* ] - (Mar 2010, ], publ. Damnage Publishing, 978-0-557-31070-8, 274pp) | |||
* ] ({{URL|manta.net}}) - Manta is a South Korean digital comics platform owned and operated by ]<ref>https://www.forbes.com/sites/catherinewang/2022/03/02/korean-webcomic-platform-ridi-hits-unicorn-status-with-gic-led-round/?sh=2097b06924b7</ref>. It has been heavily focusing on romance storytelling, having created and published wildly popular comics series such as Under the Oak Tree, Finding Camellia, and Disobey the Duke if You Dare.<ref>https://bleedingcool.com/comics/manta-comics-announces-3-new-romance-series/</ref> The Manta app is free to download on Android and iOS devices and all content are accessible via its website. Also, per Manta Misplaced Pages search page, it shows that the item is already shown under App & Website section, indicating that there are demands for more information of the item. <ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/Manta</ref> | |||
* ]- By ], a light novel that is a spinoff on the series ] | |||
* ] ({{URL|https://wdl.mcdaniel.edu/}}) - An ongoing collection of American detective fiction from before 1891 run by Dr. Mary Bendel-Simso, English professor at ] <ref name="freepressWDL">{{cite web |last1=Slater |first1=Amber |title=Dr. Panek Publishes Tenth Book on Detective Fiction |url=http://www.mcdanielfreepress.com/2011/11/24/dr-panek-publishes-tenth-book-on-detective-fiction/ |website=McDaniel Free Press |access-date=4 June 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Mary Bendel-Simso, McDaniel College - The New History of Detective Fiction |url=https://academicminute.org/2017/05/mary-bendel-simso-mcdaniel-college-the-new-history-of-detective-fiction/ |website=The Academic Minute |access-date=4 June 2024 |date=22 May 2017}}</ref><ref name="PUPN">{{cite web |last1=Clevenger |first1=Rachel James |title=Exploring the Roots of Detective Fiction at McDaniel College |url=https://pupnmag.com/article/exploring-roots-detective-fiction-mcdaniel-college/ |website=Private University Products and News |access-date=4 June 2024}}</ref><ref name="bswdl">{{cite web |last1=George |first1=Alisha |title=Faculty, students work on compiling The Westminster Detective Library database |url=https://www.baltimoresun.com/2012/07/08/faculty-students-work-on-compiling-the-westminster-detective-library-database/ |website=The Baltimore Sun |access-date=5 June 2024}}</ref> | |||
* ] by Roderick Gordon and Brian Williams | |||
*], by ] - alternate history/sci-fi | |||
* ]-] bestsellers. | |||
* ] | |||
* ], by Gabrielle Charbonnet, a children's series printed by Disney Press in the 90's | |||
* ]-- by Dan Jenkins | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* Dragons In Our Midst by Bryan Davis | |||
* ] by ] which chronicles a young black woman attending a predominately white high school. | |||
* ] by ] acclaimed 1969 publication collecting 385 poems from two previous volumes, the Pulitzer Prize-winning ] and National Book Award-winning ] | |||
* ] - a young adult novel written by ] | |||
* ] by ],a book converted into a motion picture in 1997 by the same name. | |||
* ] by ], a book inspired by the murder of ] | |||
* ] by ], an autobiography | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ], a book series by author ]. The first book in the series was published in 2007. | |||
* ]- written by ] | |||
* ]- written by ] with ] | |||
* ] a book predicting the future by | |||
* ] a book on the existential meaning of life by ], author of ] and ], and son of ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] written by ] | |||
* ] written in 2009 by Janet Evanovich | |||
* ] highly acclaimed non-fiction book by Anthony J. Badger | |||
* ] by Javier Escudero () | |||
* ] -- novel by ]. | |||
* ], the main character of a series of spy novels by Daniel Silva. | |||
* ] by Anne Gutman and Georg Hallensleben | |||
* ], a book about a girl named Maddy Starr who moves in with her unicorn-obsessed grandmother after her parent's divorcing and immediately becomes the laughing stock when her grandmother makes her wear a unicorn sweatshirt on the first day of school. When she gets a game called Fields of Fantasy from her father for her birthday, she thinks she finally found a place where she can be herself. By Mari Mancusi. | |||
* ] by Daniel Henry; A supernatually gifted musician has the power to hypnotize his audience with his music. | |||
* ] by ]; A thriller that is similar to ]. | |||
* ] by ] Short Story | |||
* ] by ], very popular book, see , | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] by Elvire, Lorris and | |||
* ], a graphic novel trilogy written by ] and illustrated by ] | |||
* ] by ]. The debut book by this author, a "semi-autobiographical" book about a girl named Grace and her struggles with acting. | |||
* ] by ]. An important 1927 novel by the author of ]. | |||
* ] by ]. The first book published by this author. Publishing date December 18, 2009 by Authorhouse Publishing LLC. | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] (55-volume Physics compendium) | |||
* ] by ]. This contemporary philosophical novel by Oxford University dropout is being made into a Hollywood film and yet not many people know about the original work or author. | |||
* ] - ] - A book describing the experiences of Michael Arroyo. | |||
* ]- written by ] | |||
* ] by ] A book chronicling Iversen's experience as an undercover high school student documenting the lives of his fellow peers. | |||
* ] - James Ford Rhodes - This well-known series documents the history of the United States in the latter half of the 19th century. | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] by ] The capture of Adolf Eichmann. | |||
* ] - ] - A scathing religious satire laid out in the from of a how-to book. | |||
* ] - iACTUATE: 100 days of inspiration is the first volume of a series of motivational books by author Olusegun "SHEG" Aranmolate. | |||
* ] by ] - The third book in the Darkglass Mountain Trilogy, released in 2009. Follows The Twisted Citadel and The Serpent Bride, as well as the Wayfarer Redemption and the Axis Trilogy. | |||
* ] - A mature and muscular novel by ]. Story about a black community and the former life of the local reverend and civil rights leader. | |||
* ] very well known book, can be translated from: | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] by ]- Bestselling Book On How To Invest and Create Wealth In A Fun, Simple and Interesting Way Through The Indian Stock Markets | |||
* ] by ]. This is a collection of poetry that is a prequel to ] due for release in January 2009. | |||
* ] by ] which chronicles the lives of black students attending an elite performing arts academy. | |||
* ] By ] | |||
* ] - ] - 1989 children's book by English author Jenny Oldfield. | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] by ] - A childrens series about a boy named Artie and his friends. | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] - ] | |||
* ] a novel by ] | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] - To go with the ] page. | |||
* ] by Thomas Berger (there's only an article on the film) | |||
* ] by Carolyn Meyer | |||
* ] by Vasily Peskov, Russian family who’s live isolated in the Russian Taiga for over thirty years. | |||
* ] by William Seabrook, a sensationalized account of the author's travels in Haiti, 1929 | |||
* ] - ] | |||
* ] - a book by Mirjam Pressler | |||
* ] - a children's spy novel written by ] | |||
* ] by John Nichols- There's a page for the movie, but not the book. | |||
* ] by B. Mitchell Kerr (pen name) Mitchell Kjrr (author). Published by iUniverse, 2007 | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] by .] - A life changing book that readers will never want to put down. Can be found on lulu.com. | |||
* ] by ] Published by PublishAmerica, 2009. | |||
* ] by ], a life-changing book about a miraculous transformation of a business man. | |||
* ] - ] | |||
* ] - ] - A memoir of Clearly's life. | |||
* ] - by ] | |||
* ] - an Australian book by Dr ] (who also needs an article) | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] by Ashcroft, Bill, Gareth Griffiths & Helen Tiffin - Important book on postcolonialism | |||
* ], the author of the Xmas Files | |||
* ] - ] | |||
* ] - by ] | |||
* ] - by ] | |||
* ], a sci-fi novel for a while in the 1960s, there was talk about making etheir this or ] as a movie starring ] | |||
* ], on alternative education, by ] | |||
* ], by ] | |||
* ], by ] | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] by Craig Hickman, Roger Connors and Tom Smith (ISBN-13: 978-1591840244) | |||
* ]- by ] | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] by Meg Alexander | |||
* ]- A notable novel by ] | |||
* ]-by ] | |||
* ] - ] | |||
* ] by ] contains ], ], ] and ]. | |||
* ] by ] and edited by ] 1987 posthumous collection of music criticism named after article originally published in ] | |||
* ] -- by ] | |||
* ] -- by ] | |||
* ] by ] Third book in the serpentwar saga | |||
* ] by ] Fourth book in In Death series. | |||
* ] by ]. | |||
* ] by ] A book based on the court case of Pam and Bob Bulit to be released this fall. | |||
* ] by ]. About The life of a foster parent. | |||
* ] by ]. The upcoming installment in the ] series. | |||
* ] by Enid Blyton. A series of five books, starting in 1938, which preceded all her other series'. | |||
* ] by ] - follow up novel to ]. | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] - A series of books about a New York Times best seller. | |||
* Selected Works of Nigel Tomm (2006/2007) (Shakespeare's Sonnets Remixed 2006 / Shakespeare's Hamlet Remixed 2007 / Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet Remixed 2007 / Including Previously Unpublished Elvis Presley's Love Me Tender Remix 2007) Nigel Tomm is The Winner of The Anonymous Writers Club Award 2006 for The Best Anonymous Writer / Deconstructed Poetry Award 2006 for Innovations and Teamwork in Poetry / Decadence Prize 2007 for The Lifestyle / Flashy Rococo Coco Award 2006 for Flashy Thoughts / Baby Boomers Award 2006 for The Best Marketing / Anonymous Artists Prize 2007 for The Best Anonymous Artist / Life Academy Award 2006 for Ignorance of Some Aspects of Life / Graphomania Award 2007 for Writing / Formal English Institute Award 2006 for English Grammar Improvements / House of Original Remixes Award 2006 for Creativity / WordKillers Award 2006 for Killing Some Words Sometimes in Some Books / iStyle Award 2006 for Being Unnamed Style Icon / Librarians Under Sixty Award 2007 for Staying Young / Comedy Association Award 2007 for The Best Drama / Happy Dramatists Award 2006 for The Realest Reality Show / New Forms Award 2006 for Rediscovering Something Old / Best of The Best Award 2007 for Being The Best of The Bests / Alaska Lifetime Achievement Prize 2006 for Bringing The Sun to Canada / Flaming Unisex Award 2007 for Coming to Flaming Unisex Awards / Random Books Award 2006 for Random Words Which Sometimes Sell / Happy Housekeepers Award 2007 for Being an Example to Follow / Wild Foresters Award 2006 for Saving Trees from Book Lovers / Writing Bodybuilders Award 2007 for Keeping Nice Forms / Life Coaching Without Words Award 2006 for Bringing New Life to Some Words / Writing for Writing Foundation Award 2007 for Rewriting Some Writings / Speaking Parrots Award 2007 for Some Fresh Phrases / CopyPasters Award 2007 for Recopying Shakespeare / Silent People Award 2006 for Talking about Silence / Strange Books Award 2006 for The Best Back Cover Text / I Don't Care Award 2006 for Something We All Don't Care / Happy Clowns Award 2006 for The Biggest Sad Smile / Nonexistence Award 2007 for Trying to Believe in Existence / MTV eBooks Award 2007 for The Best Male Reader / Bicycle Fans Award 2006 for not Writing About Bicycles / Cool Firemen Award 2006 for New Flames in Literature / Penguin Lovers Prize 2007 for Being Vegetarian / Green Grass Award 2006 for Frustrated Ecology in Hamlet Remixed / Vintage Love Award 2006 for Writing About Old School Love / New Letters Award 2006 for Some Useless Innovations / Retired Encyclopedists Award 2007 for Universality in Rewriting / Nice Web Developers Award 2007 for Fresh Look / Space Lovers Award 2006 for Exploration of Literary Cosmos / Monotony Award 2006 for The Best Performance / Homemade Video Award 2007 for The Best Home Interior / Illusory Zoo Committee Prize 2007 for The Best Animal Character / Degenerated Politicians Award 2006 for Belief in Moral Norms / F***ing Teenagers Award 2007 for The Best Kiss / Tomorrow Morning's Fragrances Association Award 2006 for Smelling Words / London Punks Foundation Award 2007 for Ultra Cool Book with Hip Ending / Pessimistic Bankers Prize 2007 for Fresh Ideas on Pessimism / Soft-Hardcore Erotica Award 2006 for Remixed Feelings / Slow Talking Runners Award 2007 for Some Sweet Chats about Nothing / Honest Jet-Setters Prize 2006 for Being Honest to Honest People / Good Looking Pop Stars Award 2006 for The Best Interview Act / Disorientated Literary Agents Award 2006 for Trusting Nobody / Archaic Victorian Baroque Award 2007 for Crossing Borders Between Borders / Multicultural Context Prize 2006 for Multiculturalism in Books / Two Happy People Award 2007 for Mixed Palette of Happiness / Fragile Machines Prize 2007 for The Best Text on Robotic Psychology / Passionate Red Cherries Award 2006 for Dynamic Use of The Word 'Cool' / Late 1950s Award 2007 for Neutrality on Some Remixed Questions / Classical Counterculture Award 2006 for Development of Remix Cult by ], collection of stories, novels, and other works of literature. | |||
* ] by author ], first in a trilogy called the Cronus Chronicles | |||
* ] by ]Published by All Things That Matter Press on August 31st 2009 | |||
* ] by by ] Fourth book in the Serpentwar Saga | |||
* ] by ] An autobiography ] tenements | |||
* ] by ], sequel to Gingerbread. | |||
* ], the sophomore novel from ] | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ], The third in the ] series. | |||
* ] - Tracy Akers | |||
* ] - Tony Abbott | |||
* ] - Shannon Greenland | |||
* ] - A really interesting series by Heather Vogel Frederick involving mice in the roles of secret agents, | |||
*] by ] - A science fiction lesbian novel about an advanced human civilization living in a polluted world dominated by a monopolistic megacorporation, and the actions they take when they find a new world (apparently supposed to be Earth millions of years ago) | |||
* ] - ] - ] | |||
* ] by ]. Pseudoscience, very popular in the 1970s. . | |||
* ] - ] | |||
* ] by ]: The stories of Wilson the Tao Pug. | |||
* ] by ] Book two in The Chronicles of Dyflygon series. Published by Publish America. | |||
* ] - The book by ], '''NOT''' the film Michael Jackson was to star in. | |||
* ] - A ] by ]. | |||
* ] - We have the movie; we need the original novel. | |||
* ] By ], - lulu.com says 'A 12-year-old's introspective monologue on his life with Asperger's Syndrome, a form of autism. "Through My Eyes" will enlighten readers to the challenges faced by Aspie kids, and on an individual level, the writer's perspective on his world.' | |||
* ] - ] | |||
* ] - A series by ] | |||
* ] by ], sequel to Time Travellers in the Gideon Trilogy | |||
* ] - by Declan P. Cleary | |||
* ] - ] - Published by Shambhala Publications, 1975 and Muse Publications, 1992 ISBN: 0-9631750-0-9 | |||
* ] - ] - The third book in the troll saga which includes ] ISBN: 13 978-0-00-721488-4 | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] by ] - The second book in the Darkglass Mountain series, follows the axis trilogy and the wayfarer redemption. | |||
* ] by ] and Brian Williams | |||
* ] by ]. | |||
* ] by ]. There are 7 editions. | |||
* ] by Pierdomenico Baccalario | |||
* ]-by ] | |||
* ]- by ] | |||
* ] by | |||
* ] by Barry Reed. made into movie. | |||
* ] - A fiction novel by ] | |||
* ]- by ] | |||
* ]-by ] | |||
* ] by ]. An amazing book that covers all aspects of warfare. | |||
* ], 15th book of Guardians of Ga'Hoole, redirect it to ] (] is locked). | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ] by ] | |||
* ], a.k.a. ''Burt'', by Howard Buten. Unusual and significant that it is an English-language novel, written by an American, that nevertheless became a cultural landmark in France. | |||
* ] by ], containing ] and ]. | |||
* ]- ]. The soundtrack CD for this book is listed in Misplaced Pages, but information on the book is not. It is about the band, ]. It consists of polaroids taken on the road that were then mailed to there fans. The book is a collection of shots across America, with writings from members of ], ], and ], and a soundtrack CD. This is the CD: ]. | |||
* ], a comedy novel by | |||
* ] - written by ] | |||
* ] A classic of Chinese. | |||
* ] - written by ], a native of Northern California. His writings are influenced by ancient sacred texts as well as a variety of esoteric works. ] also holds an important place in these collections, which presents the balance of the religious content with science, or more specifically, Psychology. His writings were previously published in England, India, Canada and the United States of America. ZENU U ATU is a collection of writings compiled between 1991 to 1993. From Rosicrucian to Theological systems, based on the merging of symbols, numbers and letters, the purpose of this collection is to demonstrate balance through the union of opposites (Unio Mystica). Science and Religion, Male and Female, Light and Darkness are perceived as completions of their polarity, not in opposition. Through this union of opposites a third is established, which C.G. Jung appropriately termed as Synergy. For fifteen years Brett has worked in the Mental Health field at a variety of private and state institutions. He received a Graduate of Theology degree (Th.G) in 1990 and Master of Science - Psychology (M.S.Psy) in 2007. Brett is currently working towards a Ph.D in Psychology - publication. ].<ref>lulu.com/zenuuatu</ref> | |||
* ] - by ], originally published in German as ], is one of the only books written by a WWI veteran from any culture that actually discusses the real and serious conditions of shell shock. Out of print for many decades, it has recently been republished as part of the ] Joseph M. Brucolli Great War Series. | |||
* ] - written by Dan Callahan. written about a future apoclypse. there is also "ZOMBIE2, ZOMBIE3, and DIARY OF MADNESS" they are available worldwide but i got mine on amazon. I just want to know more about the author and conditions he wrote the books in. in the books it says he is around the world but his picture is in camofauge and it says navy. please help! | |||
* ] - written by an anonymous.For many centuries the shelves of a library in South America held a terrible secret. Sitting on these shelves was a book with no name, written by an anonymous author. Everyone who ever read it ended up dead, yet the book always found it's way back to the library. In 2005 a special government investigator uncovered the truth about the book and it's link to the murders. Now available in paperback, you can discover for yourself the reason why no one ever read the book and lived, until now...This Book is available at Amazon.com : ISBN-10: 1843172836 ISBN-13: 978-1843172833 | |||
Add any details you know about this book which would help flee a lot of mysteries surrounding this title. | |||
* ] - Russell Celyn Jones is the author of four other highly acclaimed novels. He is a regular book reviewer for THE TIMES and has written features for numerous national papers. He lives with his wife and three children in London. He was the recipient of a Society of Authors Award in 1996. | |||
* ], 1985 novel ] by ] (winner of ]) | |||
* ] - written by ] | |||
* ] - Written by ] . The sequel to The Enemy. About a group of children who are forced to survive when all the Adults turn to "Zombies" | |||
==Literary movements and styles== | ==Literary movements and styles== | ||
===A–F=== | |||
*] – fiction (''eg'' Safran Foer, DeLillo), drama and poetry about September 11 | |||
{{div col|colwidth=30em}} | |||
*] A fiction book published November 5th 2010. Author Jack george Edmunson. Also wrote The Sun Sharer which went to number one in the UK romance hardback charts 8th September 2010. http://www.thesunsharer.com | |||
*] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] - history of literature in the territory of twhat is oday Bosnia and Herzegovina ,focusing on the medieval period.There already exists such an article,in Bosnian and,apparently,Russian, but no translations to either English or any other languages. ] | |||
*] | |||
*] | * ] | ||
* ] - literary style mentioned in Misplaced Pages article about the Yellow Emperor involving assembling writing from fragments of various sources (I think) - unable to find any wiki or other search engine articles on it, nor any online books a bout it - even trying different spelling variants and combinations, though I realise this can subtly change meaning in the translation from Chinese to English. | |||
*] | |||
* ] - {{URL|gourmetmysteries.com}} | |||
*] | |||
* ] - term; (on the cranium) quoted by David Foster Wallace in ''Although Of Course You End Up Becoming Yourself: A Road Trip with David Foster Wallace'' by David Lipsky. Pg. 295. "'And she said that there were these various chakras and one of the big ones was what she called the spout hole, at the very top of your cranium' ". | |||
*] | |||
** Maybe we can add a note about in on the page for the ] / crown chakra? --] (]) 23:47, 20 June 2023 (UTC) | |||
*] | |||
{{div col end}} | |||
*] | |||
*] e.g. The Oulipo | |||
*] | |||
*] 2nd novel in the Cassandra Palmer Series by the author Karen Chance | |||
*] 3rd novel in the Cassandra Palmer Series by the author Karen Chance | |||
*] 4th novel in the Cassandra Palmer Series by the author Karen Chance | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] (The bias in which writing is privileged over speech) | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] e.g. Ern Malley etc. | |||
*] | |||
*] Short, morbid, rhyming verses concerning a boy named Willy. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] Ukraine | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
* {{req|Poetic forms- Plain Style}} (maybe ] | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] (the 19th century Galician literary movement; consult ]) | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] early- to mid-twentieth century African American writers group in Chicago, IL, USA, founded by Richard Wright and including, I believe, Lorraine Hansberry and Gwendolyn Brooks, among others. | |||
*] | |||
*] The article ] exists, but it is about music. See ]. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
===G–Z=== | |||
==Literary terms==<!-- This header is referenced from ]--> | |||
{{div col|colwidth=30em}} | |||
*] | |||
* ] - now redirects to ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
*] | * ] | ||
* ] - short, morbid, rhyming verses concerning a boy named Willy; | |||
*] | |||
*] | * '']'' | ||
* ] (]) - | |||
*] (]) | |||
*] | * ] | ||
*] | * ] | ||
* ] - like open-educational resources, people started to publish fiction also under open license; examples include ] (with Hoborg), ] (with Imanofutu), ] (with Timeless) and ] (with ideonexus.com) | |||
*] (auto/biographical term for religious conversion and other types of conversions as well) Similar to ]? | |||
* ] ] - outline needed as a parent of ]; see ] and look under Recreation and Entertainment, outline of spy fiction is red | |||
*] | |||
* ] - | |||
*] | |||
* ] - first-person poems with a speaker other than the poet; often in the form of a ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] - authors who wrote with a phenomenological perspective and what their books tend to be about | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*] (term invented by Paul Krassner to describe "disinformation in the guise of entertainment.") | |||
* ] - a piece by ] what the cultural and social significance was and the impact it had at the time | |||
*] | |||
*] | * ] | ||
* ] (]) (]) - ] and ] already exist but not this/ or rename pulp magazine to pulp fiction?; ] 16:09, 15 February 2007 (UTC) | |||
*] | |||
*] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] - a form of letter-writing | |||
*] | |||
* ] - ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] or ]. Notable for the difficulty of such an endeavor and for the fact that such translations, as a result, often make the news and are subjects of scholarship in themselves: | |||
*] | |||
** Mark Greaves (2014), , ''Channel Four News''. | |||
*] expand beyond dictionary definition. | |||
** Bernard Hœpffner (2017), , ''The Paris Review''. | |||
*] | |||
** Ida Klitgård (2005), | |||
*] | |||
** Cait Murphy (1995), , ''The Atlantic''. | |||
*] | |||
** Akram Pedramnia (2017), , ''Dublin James Joyce Journal''. | |||
*] | |||
* ] - The article ] exists and refers to this; ] is a disambiguation page; see ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*] / ] | |||
*] | * ] | ||
{{div col end}} | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*]- British Slang, Merging the words of Geek and Nerd, widespread through London | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*](What does it mean?) | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] (a form of digression) | |||
*] (in children's literature) | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] (slang term) | |||
*] or ] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
==Poetry== | |||
==Theatre and stage== | |||
* ] - poem attributed to ] () | |||
*] New Zealand/Australian musical theatre performer. Most famous for her portrayal of Elphaba in the Australian production of ]. Currently role shares the role of Elphaba with ] in the Sydney production of ] at the ]. | |||
* "]" ("]") - see ] - poem by ] | |||
*] Oldest professional theatre company in Vermont. Producing a summer season of seven shows on two stages. Committed to year-round education and outreach programs. LORT D. | |||
* '']'' by John Lars Zwerenz ({{ISBN|1483616681|978-1483616681}}) | |||
*], ], ], ], etc.--articles focused on the literature (as opposed to something like ], which is performance-oriented) | |||
* '']'' & '']'', 4th century poems by ] | |||
*], actor, starred as ] in '']''. | |||
* '']'' - poetry collection by ] | |||
*] Known Theatre and TV Actor WorldWide | |||
* "]" - poem by ] () | |||
*Cariad Productions London/Melbourne | |||
* ] - Very influential poem by the wonderful ] written in 1996 for her collection ''The Thing in the Gap-Stone-Stile''. Acclaim from ] and ]. Often studied. More poems by her also need adding, just like by other modern poets like Fenton, Duffy, Armitage, Paterson and Olds. | |||
*] A group launched in November last year set to change the face of Welsh culture over the coming months | |||
*] a Belfast, Northern Ireland based physical theatre company supported by funding from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland. Most recently produced The Weein at the Old Museum Arts Centre and reviewed on ]. | |||
*] - A New York-based theater ensemble, founded in 2006, dedicated to "developing and presenting new and unique works of theatre." Links: | |||
; ; ; - Winner of 2009 NYIT Award for Best New Short Play; ; ; ; | |||
*] - a 2009 science fiction film infamous for it's low budget props and confusing plot. | |||
* Cariad Productions | |||
*] acted as ] in ] | |||
*] a non-profit LGBT theatre company in New York City producing gay themed Off Broadway plays. Their current play I saw last weekend is "The Gayest Christmas Pageant Ever!" playing at The Actors' Playhouse in NYC. Info at . | |||
*] traveling theater group that teaches local kids to act in productions | |||
*] Canadian stage and film performer | |||
*] - professional theater in the Berkshire mountains (Western Massachusetts) founded in 1995. Referenced in a number of Misplaced Pages articles. | |||
*] - British theatre company | |||
*] - (req. 2007-01-27) lyric play written by M. Ragasa Avena, a Philippine writer in English | |||
*] - A new musical adaptation of Shakespeare's ] written by ], Randy Weiner, and ]. | |||
*] - a play by ] about the ] | |||
* ] - by ] - ] and often revived | |||
*] a Philadelphia Actor and Barrymore award winner | |||
*], an award-winning indie theater in Williamsburg, Brooklyn | |||
*] by Don Zoildis (and some of his other works) | |||
*] Canadian stage director of opera | |||
*], seventeenth-century Latin phrase concerning comedy's alleged power to correct morals; the motto of the Comedie-Italienne, often attributed to Moliere or to Horace but believed to be by Jean de Santeuil | |||
*] —A NYC based not-for-profit theatre company. | |||
*] — | |||
*] (born 1930), British theatre producer and manager | |||
*] Founder and first director of the San Francisco Mime Troupe | |||
*] an American stage and film performer for more information go to bebo and look for HilaryD026 | |||
*] | |||
*] - A play by ]. | |||
*] - A musical by ]. | |||
*] - Alignment work established by Margaret Eginton | |||
*] - | |||
*] - | |||
*] -London based Theatre and Cabaret company. Notable for their role in the cabaret and burlesque revival in London and recent Total Theatre Award nominated production of 'Sweeney Todd: His Life, Times and Execution' | |||
*] Young actor; currently performing in | |||
*] Artist-led Edinburgh Festival initiative, founded by Deborah Pearson and Andrew Field. Winner of a Herald Angel, The Peter Brooke Award Special Mention for site specific work, and the Arches Brick Award (for Paper Cinema's show The Night Flyer.) http://www.forestfringe.co.uk | |||
*] | |||
*], director, actor, punk theatre pioneer | |||
*], singer actor dancer, http://www.jonadamfreeman.co.uk | |||
*] | |||
*], (1938-2002) Composer (You're a Good Man Charlie Brown), songwriter and author, educated at Princeton University (Bachelor of Arts). He wrote three Triangle shows, and songs for the Julius Monk revues "Baker's Dozen" and "Bits and Pieces". Joining ASCAP in 1962, his popular-song compositions included "14 Hours and 37 Minutes", "A Funny Way to Spend the Day", "The Peanut Butter Affair", "Societus Magnificat" and "Ode to a Park" (New York Park Association award).--IMDB Also involved with Captain Kangaroo and Sesame Street. | |||
*], American playwright and filmmaker | |||
* ], a professional Canadian theatre for Young Audiences founded in 1982, http://geordie.ca | |||
*'']'', a play written by ] | |||
*] (1922—2007) <sup> </sup> | |||
*] | |||
*] Sussex-born playwright of the early 1900s - excelled in the one-act curtain-raiser. | |||
*] | |||
*] award winning theatre and tv actor | |||
*] a former student and colleague of ] and a Professor at the Moscow Institute of Theatre Arts. A Professor to ] from 1966 to 1971. | |||
*] - Founder of the Little Theatre of the Rockies, Greeley, CO. | |||
*] - Hawaii's first home, and currently only home, for long-form improv in the bustling arts disctric of downtown Honolulu in Chinatown. | |||
*] - ] - Playwright, Director, Producer. He's currently the Producing Director/Dramaturg with ] in Los Angeles, CA - | |||
*]:Sarted the award winning theater "the magic theater" in san-fransico CA, Helped launch careers of Sam Shepard, Peter Coyote and Ed Harris among others, recipient of receive the highest honor given by the Dramatists Guild, appeared in the right stuff. Links http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1999/08/04/DD37398.DTL&type=performance, http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0513321/bio, http://www.filmreference.com/film/18/John-Lion.html,http://www.magictheatre.org/pages/highlights.shtml | |||
*]- ]'s only theater company committed to only performing musicals | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] — a long-standing, non-profit, group-authored theatre publication covering the performing arts in London and beyond. Edited by Andrew Eglinton. Principal contributors: Stephe Harrop, Matt Bootman, Jens Peters, Diana Damian. | |||
*], American scenic designer. Avenue Q, High Fidelity. | |||
*], a theatre group based in Cardiff, Wales that create theatre through improvised playfulness. | |||
*] - written by Lanford Wilson. Was first produced at the Café Cino in Greenwich Village in May 1964 at Caffe Cino, is seen as a breakthrough in gay theatre as it portrayed homosexuals as human. | |||
* ] - actor and author of ] | |||
*] - Irish actor-manager, employed ] early in the dramatists career | |||
*] | |||
*] A theatre associated with the Owen Williams (calligrapher) | |||
*] UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Site [http://www.ntj.jac.go.jp/english/index.ht | |||
*], Actor, and Arts Educator for children of all ages, founder and owner of Sunset Theatre Company L.L.C. | |||
*] An exciting new British theatre company producing original comedy for the stage | |||
*] a youth theatre in Mountain View California; | |||
*'']'', a Broadway production starring ], running at the ] | |||
*], musical arranger and keyboardist for ]'s '']]'' | |||
*] Locally run, not for profit theatre company in Saint John, NB, Canada. | |||
*], the new theatre of the ] which opened in 2009. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] An article on the local theatres and local professional theatre companies | |||
*], briefly mentioned in the ] section as a precursor to the ] | |||
*], Latino International Theater Festival of New York, Inc. | |||
*], cult American playwright | |||
*] — | |||
*]: | |||
*]: A comedy written by Molière in the 1600's. Also the name of a book by Wendy Holden | |||
*] American theater director and scholar/translator | |||
*], Beijing Opera performer who passed away recently ], widower of playright ]. | |||
** “the protagonist of three of ]'s plays and a Havel stand-in.” | |||
** “A number of Havel's friends then wrote their own plays with Ferdinand Vanӗk. Stoppard continues in that tradition.” (]) | |||
colonial theater | |||
*] - theater in Western Springs,IL | |||
*] a nonprofit youth theatre in Mountain View, CA | |||
*] | |||
*] - A play by the playwrite, Mark Wheeler. | |||
*] - A Canadian theatre | |||
*] - A modern youth musical based on virtual reality. possible link with ] | |||
*] -- A Noh play about ] as an old woman. It's mentioned in a lot of articles but is yet to have one of its own. | |||
==Works and publications== | |||
==Translators== | |||
{{see also|Misplaced Pages:Requested articles/Culture and fine arts/Speculative fiction}} | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] - (req. prior 2008-02-16) - ]’s English language translator - disambig page updated 2008-02-23 | |||
*] - (req. prior 2008-02-16) a translator of the ] of the ], author of Our Father Abraham, professor of Biblical and Theological Studies at ] | |||
===Books=== | |||
==Works and publications (poetry, drama and fiction)== | |||
{{requested articles subpage|books|/Books}} | |||
===A-C=== | |||
* ] by ] - released 2019 by ] and ], Penguin Website , Amazon , GoodReads , Bleeding Cool , Official Site , The National Herald | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] - apparently complete anthology not listed in the John W. Campbell, Jr. Misplaced Pages article for this author. No editor listed but last page has this imprint, "Sleipnir 06/08/2012". Maybe only exists as an epub? ( ) | |||
*] ISBN 0972301917 by Bonnie Gillespie and Blake Robbins | |||
*]. Written by Indian author Ajatshatru Parmar. It is a non-fiction book that contains real life examples and statistical data on the violence and cases against doctors in India at the workplace and demonstrate the diminishing bond between a doctor and his patient. The book is the first published in India by Manjul Publications. It also contain interviews of many health expert of India with the author on the burning issues. Book gives an insight of Indian medical scenario and replies to questions, like why doctors don't want their children to become a doctor? This is the first title of its kind which introduces a few superstitious scenarios prevailing in India. | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] - 2006 poetry collection by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] |
*] by ] | ||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ]. May 2005 science-fiction novel from Iceberg Publishing. Second novel in the ''Equations'' series. Preceeded by ''The Human Equation'' and succeeded by ''The Renegade Equation''. ISBN 0-9731362-5-1 http://www.icebergpublishing.com | |||
* ] by ] | |||
*] by ]. July 2006 science-fiction novel from Iceberg Publishing. Second novel in the ''Defense Command'' series. Preceeded by ''The Rouge Commodore'', succeeded by ''The Hawke Mission''. ISBN 0-9780916-1-2 http://www.defensecommand.net | |||
*"]" | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] and ] | |||
*] by Daniel Putkowski (2008) ISBN 978-0-9815959-0-0 http://www.danielputkowski.com | |||
*] by ] - one of the "key" works of ]. | |||
*] Zeek | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] by ] | |||
* At First Sight by ]; The second book in the Jeremy Marsh series, preceded by True Believer | |||
*] by Wendy Mass | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] (children's series by ]) | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] Alfred A. Knopf, New York 1933. ISBN 1-56025-408-4 | |||
*] (author unknown) | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by Nathan Albright | |||
*] about the journey of Andrew Meier through ] after the fall of ]. | |||
*] | |||
*] (October 2007 novel by Matthew LeDrew). Horror. First novel in the ''Black Womb'' series. Succeeded by ''Transformations in Pain''. http://www.engenbooks.com http://blackwomb.engenbooks.com ISBN 978-0-9784342-0-5 | |||
*] by ], second novel of ] | |||
*] <small>by ]</small> | |||
*] novel by Michel Sauret Abouta young man who loses faith in God but is then chosen to deliver a message.Printed by Publish America | |||
*] An Adventure novel by Robyn Young about the Knights Templar | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] (author unknown) Submitted as plagiarised work | |||
*] by Jeff Davidson (Over 180,000 copies sold) | |||
*] by Jeff Davidson (Over 50,000 copies sold) | |||
*] (yearbook for the ]) | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ]. July 2006 science-fiction novel from Iceberg Publishing. First book in the spin-off series from the ''Equations'' series. Entire series takes place between books four and five of the ''Equations'' series. ISBN 0-9780916-2-0 http://www.icebergpublishing.com | |||
*] ISBN 0972301933 by Bonnie Gillespie | |||
*] by Shahriar Mandanipour | |||
*] by Wong Jing (Chinese Drama) | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] ISBN 0670018708 Published by Viking, NY Times bestseller | |||
*] play cycle by ] | |||
*] - We have lists of fiction and of plays set in Chicago; why not poetry? | |||
*] | |||
*] by Robin Wasserman. | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] | |||
*] by ], one of the most important Arabic novels of the twentieth century; rated by Daniel Burt as one of the top 100 novels of all time | |||
*] by Joel Barlow | |||
*] (the first Australian recipe book) by Edward Abbott | |||
*] by ] | |||
*], a fictional character by ] | |||
*] | |||
=== |
===Periodicals=== | ||
{{div col|colwidth=30em}} | |||
* ] by (a Science fiction net novel which originated as an fanfiction for the Tenchi Muyou series ,an unnoficial spinoff from the series telling the story of Tenchi's lost cousin who happens also to be Kagatto's reincarnation the story is set in the same universe but has its own storyline and plotline and its own unique world covers the afterlife theme though some regular elements from the Tenchi Muyou anime make an appearance too. The Story is set in Poland and in other unique locations. The story struggles with many issues itself is an spinoff and parody of Tenchi Muyou and other anime shows, its also an sequel to the now in work novel "Blaze Master" which features the earlier incarnation of the character both sories fature the same character as the protagonist and the after life theme, The Blaze Master novel is still in the draft stage) | |||
* '']'' ({{ISSN|2379-4593}})({{URL|805lit.org}}) - Online, quarterly literary and art journal featuring emegering artists and authors worldwide; published by the Manatee County Public Library System; article requested so that the magazine can appear in the ];<ref>{{cite journal|title=Nine New Lit Mags You Need to Read|journal=Poets & Writers|date=2016-10-12 |volume=2016 |issue=November/December |page=68 |url=http://www.pw.org/content/nine_new_lit_mags_you_need_to_read|accessdate=February 8, 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Katz|first1=Stephanie|title=Library as Publisher: 805 Lit + Art Journal|journal=Florida Libraries|date=Spring 2016|volume=59|issue=1|page=19 |url=https://fla.memberclicks.net/assets/Publications/spring_2016.pdf |accessdate=February 7, 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Katz|first1=Stephanie|title=Library + Publishing = 805 Lit + Art|journal=Strategic Library|date=August 15, 2016|issue=31|page=1|quote=5 pages |url=https://user-94545020520.cld.bz/SL-Aug16}}</ref> | |||
:http://knol.google.com/k/stanisaw-giers/galaxia-the-stories-of-illusion/eh4i89ehy5v5/1# (authors knol) | |||
http://sites.google.com/site/megacivilisation/ (the site with the story) | |||
*]by ] | |||
*] by ]. December 2007 science-fiction novel from Iceberg Publishing. Eigth novel in the ''Defense Command'' series. Preceeded by ''The Sinope Affair'' ISBN 978-0-9784902-0-1 http://www.defensecommand.net | |||
*] by ] | |||
*The ] series by ] http://www.defensecommand.net | |||
] | |||
*], a novel by Annemarie Selinko | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*]- ] bestsellers by ]. | |||
*] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] series by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*"]" (note the capitalization and quotation marks) — one of several titles used for an anonymously written commentary using drug abuse as an analogy for another meaning of "drug": the past participle of "drag" meaning. The commentary itself advocates values such as respect for authority and elders, hard work without expectations of being rewarded, and doing acts of kindness. The "drug" term is used to tell how the narrator's parents instilled said values in him by literally dragging him to various events (e.g., "I was drug to church on Sunday morning ... ") and dragging him to the woodshed when he did wrong. A good article on this statement would attempt to trace its origins and explain the rationale behind the poem, plus explain its use in popular culture — for instance, the Bellamy Brothers once recorded a song called "Drug Problem," based on this commentary. | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ]. July 2005 science-fiction novel from Iceberg Publishing. Forth novel in the ''Equations'' series. Preceeded by ''The Renegade Equation'', succeeded by ''The Campaign Equation'' and ''The Genesis Equation''. ISBN 0-9731362-7-8 http://www.icebergpublishing.com | |||
*] by ] - shortlisted for the Booker Prize. | |||
*] by ] | |||
*], see ] | |||
*], see ] | |||
*] by Nathan Albright | |||
*The ] series by Canadian author ]. Series of novels published by Iceberg Publishing. | |||
*] by ] | |||
*]Short story by D.H.Lawrence from England my England. | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] July 2007 science-fiction novel from Iceberg Publishing. Fifth novel in the ''Defense Command'' series. Preceeded by ''The Independant Squadron'' and succeeded by ''The Jupiter Patrol''. ISBN 978-0-9780916-6-8 http://www.defensecommand.net | |||
*] by ], July 2008 novel about a superhero and a supervillain - and the granddaughter the two women have in common. Released by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] (children's series by ]) | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ]. July 2006 science-fiction novel from Iceberg Publishing. Fifth novel in the ''Equations'' series. Preceeded by both ''The Earther Equation'' and ''The Campaign Equation''. Succeeded by ''The Vengence Equation''. ISBN 0-9731362-9-4 http://www.icebergpublishing.com | |||
*] by ] | |||
*], by ]. Considered a classic; author is notable, ] already has page. | |||
*], by ], is a fantasy trilogy of which two books (] and ]) are written so far. | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] | |||
*] by Tom Jones | |||
*] by ]. November 2006 science-fiction novel from Iceberg Publsihing. Third novel in the ''Defense Command'' series. Preceeded by ''The Almost Coup'', succeeded by ''The Independant Squadron''. ISBN 0-9780916-3-9 http://www.defensecommand.net | |||
*] by ]. May 2007 non-fiction novel from Iceberg Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9780916-5-1. http://www.icebergpublishing.com | |||
*] by ]. Upcoming April 2008 science-fiction novel from Iceberg Publishing. http://www.icebergpublishing.com | |||
*] by ] Historian David talks about ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by Choo Thomas | |||
http://heavenissorealbook.blogspot.com/ | |||
*] by Victor Pelevin | |||
*] by James A. Owen | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by Narayan pandit is about thousand years old , indian story book | |||
*] (Patrick Ryan, probably 1964) | |||
*] by ]. 2005 science-fiction novel from Iceberg Publishing. First novel in the ''Equations'' series. Succeeded by ''The Alien Equation''. ISBN 0-9731362-4-3 http://www.icebergpublishing.com | |||
* '']'' - bi-annual print and e-journal with character-focused writing and photography | |||
===I-M=== | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ]. November 2006 science-fiction novel from Iceberg Publishing. Fourth novel in the ''Defense Command'' series. Preceeded by ''The Hawke Mission'', succeeded by ''The Gallant Few''. ISBN 0-9780916-4-7 http://www.defensecommand.net | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] ISBN: 978-1-906588-32-8 | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by Rabbi ] | |||
*] by Jeff Davidson (over 75,000 copies sold) | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ]. July 2007 science-fiction novel from Iceberg Publishing. Sixth novel in the ''Defense Command'' series. Preceeded by ''The Gallant Few'', succeeded by ''The Sinope Affair''. ISBN 978-0-9780916-7-5 http://www.defensecommand.net | |||
*] by ](house name). Series of stories published from 1938-1954 in the ] magazine. | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ], Newly published author.The book is a mystery/sci-fi theme.Can be found by doing an internet search. | |||
*] by Melissa Hill. The sixth novel by Irish author Melissa Hill. Published by Poolbeg Press in 2007. http://www.amazon.co.uk/Last-Know-Melissa-Hill/dp/1842232940 ; http://www.melissahill.info/thelastoknow.htm | |||
*] by Thomas Klise | |||
*], a four-part ]-winning Christian fiction/fantasy book series by ]. Contains the books ''The Light of Eidon'' (2003), ''The Shadow Within'' (2004), ''Shadow Over Kiriath'' (2005), and ''Return of the Guardian-King'' (2007). | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] - by Sean Vincent Lehosit | |||
*] by ] | |||
*"] by Unknown | |||
*] | |||
*] by Judy Azar LeBlanc | |||
*] a novel by ] | |||
*] a short story (novelette) by ] about the aftermath of ] and the beginning of the ] | |||
*] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] ("]") | |||
*] by Eric Frank Russell | |||
*], is more than a hundred years old, dating back to the ] of 1906. also see: ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] | |||
*] by ] (requesting basic literary criticism of said work) | |||
*] by ] | |||
*], see ] | |||
*], by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*], by ] | |||
*], by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
* ] - The world’s leading journal of quality flash fiction and reviews of up to 360 words. It is based at the University of Chester in the UK and is edited by ] and ]. () - also see ] and ] | |||
===N-R=== | |||
*] - c. 1850s abolitionist periodical out of Washington, DC. First to publish ]. | |||
*] by Marc Blizzurd | |||
*] (only one rd-lk, but "52 of about 64" hits w/in WP) | |||
*] by ] | |||
*], an analysis by | |||
*] - article exists at ] | |||
*] - play by ] | |||
*], 1993 National Book Award finalist (fiction) by ] (ISBN 0-688-11548-9) | |||
*], children's book by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*]by Sinthyia Darkness (ISBN 1-4241-2523-5) | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] a short story by ] | |||
*] a poetry collection by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by Nathan Albright | |||
*] A series of children's books by ] | |||
*] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] --- ] and ] already exist but not this/ or rename pulp magazine to pulp fiction? ] 16:09, 15 February 2007 (UTC) | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by Richard Foltz. It's already cited as a reference by at least 13 Misplaced Pages articles on religion, sometimes cited as "Religions and the Silk Road". | |||
*] by ]. May 2005 science-fiction novel from Iceberg Publishing. Third novel in the ''Equations'' series. Preceeded by ''The Alien Equation'' and succeeded by ''The Earther Equation''. ISBN 0-9731362-6-X http://www.icebergpublishing.com | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] | |||
*] by ] July 2006 science-fiction novel from Iceberg Publishing. First novel in the ''Defense Command'' series. Succeeded by ''The Almost Coup''. ISBN 0-9780916-0-4 http://www.defensecommand.net | |||
*]by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
* ] - A weekly magazine featuring editorial satire, cartoons, pop culture, lists and humor fiction. The magazine is edited by Marty Dundics. () | |||
===S=== | |||
*] by ]. Peom can be found: | |||
* '']'' ({{ISSN|1522-3868}}) ({{URL|msupress.org/journals/fg/}}) ({{URL|fourthgenre.msu.edu/}}) -a literary journal of ] , published twice annually by ] since spring 1999; offers an annual contest called the Steinberg Essay Prize, named after the journal's founding editor. article requested so journal appears on the ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
* '']'' ({{URL|hippocampusmagazine.com}}) - monthly journal of creative non-fiction; offers an annual contest and writer's conference | |||
*] by Carol Plum-Ucci | |||
*] by ] | |||
* '']'' ({{ISSN|1077-5315}} ({{URL|joe.org}}) - peer-reviewed journal; official refereed journal of the ] | |||
*] by Horace | |||
*] ISBN 0972301992 (third edition) ISBN 0972301984 (second edition) ISBN 0972301976 (first edition) by Bonnie Gillespie | |||
* '']'' - journal of the ], founded at the ] in 1972 or 1973, helped build South Pacific literature and arts. | |||
*] by ] | |||
*], a collaborative website/pseudo-TV show by ], ], ], ], ] and ] | |||
* '']'' (]) ({{ISSN|2282-1120}}) - Italian sword and sorcery series, published every day since January 11, 2008 | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
* '']'' ({{URL|rockandsling.com}}) - Christian literary magazine; staffed by ] in ], Washington; emphasis on poetry and prose that speaks to an experience that is compellingly true in some way; article requested so that the magazine can appear in the ]; ; ; | |||
*] co-authoured by six Pakistani teenagers: ], ], ], ], ] and ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
* '']'' ({{URL|cardiffreview.com}}) - A literary magazine founded in 2015 that publishes fiction, non-fiction, poetry, book reviews, and interviews. The magazine was originally founded in partnership with ]. ; ; | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] ASIN: B0000EDW3A | |||
*'']'' (req. 2013-12-13) - magazine that republished, in English, contemporary short stories from various countries; ; | |||
*] by ]. December 2007 science-fiction novel from Iceberg Publishing. Seventh novel in the ''Defense Command'' series. Preceeded by ''The Jupiter Patrol'', succeeded by ''The Dark Cruise''. ISBN 978-0-9780916-9-9 http://www.defensecommand.net | |||
* '']'' ({{URL|standmagazine.org}}) - British literary magazine; founded 1952; now published at ]; (British Literary Magazines, Volume 4, ed. Alvin Sullivan Greenwood Press, 1986) | |||
*] by ] | |||
* '']'' ({{URL|storgy.com}}) - STORGY was founded in 2013 by Tomek Dzido and Anthony Self as a means by which to explore the short story form and engage with readers and artists alike. | |||
*] (children's series by ]) | |||
{{div col end}} | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
==Stage and theatre== | |||
*] or ], epic of the ] about the founder of the ] | |||
*] a Japanese novel by ] | |||
===People (playwrights and others)=== | |||
*] by ] | |||
{{div col|colwidth=30em}} | |||
*] by ] | |||
* ] - Canadian stage and film performer | |||
*] by Catherine Blackledge | |||
* ] - Philadelphia actor; Barrymore award winner | |||
*] by Stephen MR Covey | |||
* ] - actor and arts manager in Auckland, ]. (she/her Māori) ], ] | |||
*] by ]. January 2006 non-fiction novel published by Iceberg Publishing. http://www.icebergpublishing.com ISBN: 0-9731362-8-6 | |||
* ] - American stage and film performer; for more information go to bebo and look for HilaryD026 | |||
*] by ] | |||
* ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
* ] - {{URL|fitzmauricevoice.com}} | |||
*] by ] | |||
* ] - young actor; currently performing in '''' | |||
*] by ] | |||
* ] - singer, actor, dancer; {{URL|jonadamfreeman.co.uk}} | |||
*] by Toni Rey | |||
* ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
* ] (American playwright, author of ) | |||
*] by ] prokofiev opera based on this | |||
* ] - playwright, screenwriter and author of The Writer’s Toolkit, published by ]; ; ; | |||
*] by ], ], and ] | |||
* ] - award-winning theatre and television actor | |||
*] by Patrick Cave | |||
* ] - dramatist of '']'' | |||
*] by William Joyce | |||
* ] - founder, ], Greeley, Colorado | |||
*'']'' by ] ISBN 0-812-53603-7 | |||
* ] - started the award-winning theater ] in San Fransico, Caliornia; helped launch careers of Sam Shepard, Peter Coyote and Ed Harris among others; recipient, the highest honor given by the ]; appeared in '']''; ; ; ; | |||
*] by ]. A beautiful collection of poems/journal entries. One african american womans experiences of love and life exposed through spoken and written word. http://www.geocities.com/sjbm@sbcglobal.net/sibyls_place | |||
* ] - theatre and television actor | |||
* ] - musical arranger and keyboardist for ]'s '']]'' | |||
* ] | |||
* ] - director, actor; punk-theatre pioneer | |||
* ] - theatre designer and theatrec consultant, Theatre Projects and Arup | |||
* ] - cult American playwright | |||
* ] | |||
* ], character like ].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://as.com/epik/2020/09/20/portada/1600589365_345374.html |title=El curioso caso de Denis Vashurin: el ruso de 32 años con un cuerpo de 13 |website=] |language=es}} | |||
</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.telecinco.es/informativos/sociedad/denis-vashurin-hombre-dejo-envejecer_18_3013245344.html |title=Denis Vashurin, el hombre que dejó de envejecer: con 32 años, vive en el cuerpo de un niño de 13 |publisher=] |language=es}} | |||
</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://elcaso.elnacional.cat/ca/successos/video-home-cos-nen-no-envellir-atrapat-denis-vashurin-viral_37910_102.html |title=VÍDEO: Denís, l'home de 32 anys atrapat en el cos d'un nen: "No envelliré mai" |website=El Caso – ] |language=ca}} | |||
</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://noticieros.televisa.com/historia/denis-vashurin-hombre-de-rusia-vive-en-cuerpo-de-nino/ |title=Conoce a Denis Vashurin, el hombre ruso que vive en un cuerpo de niño |publisher=] |language=es}} | |||
</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.lasexta.com/programas/arusitys/mejores-momentos/la-increible-historia-de-denis-vashurin-un-hombre-de-32-anos-que-dejo-de-envejecer-hace-20_202009185f645729a90642000100d1a0.html |title=La increíble historia de Denís Vashurin, un hombre de 32 años que dejó de envejecer hace 20 |publisher=] |language=es}} | |||
</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.antena3.com/noticias/deportes/curioso-caso-denis-vashurin-benjamin-button-ruso-anos-cuerpo-nino_202009215f68a32dd0cd8700011e9538.html |title=El curioso caso de Denis Vashurin, el 'Benjamin Button' ruso de 32 años en el cuerpo de un niño de 13 |publisher=] |language=es}} | |||
</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.americadigital.com/mundo/extrano-caso-de-denis-vashurin-el-hombre-de-32-anos-que-dejo-de-envejecer-a-los-13-106837 |title=Como Benjamin Button: extraño caso de Denis Vashurin, el hombre de 32 años que dejó de envejecer a los 13 |website=americadigital.com |language=es}} | |||
</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.meganoticias.cl/mundo/314086-denis-vashurin-ruso-no-envejece-tiene-32-y-parece-de-13-sindrome-de-highlander-rpx04.html |title=Vive "atrapado" en el cuerpo de un niño: Denís Vashurin tiene 32 años y parece de 13 |website=] |language=es}} | |||
</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.eluniverso.com/larevista/2020/09/18/nota/7981645/denis-vashurin-ruso-dejo-envejecer-13-anos-caso-insolito |website=eluniverso.com |title=El insólito y extraño caso de Denis Vashurin, un hombre ruso de 32 años que dejó de envejecer a los 13 años |language=es}} | |||
</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://lleidadiari.cat/societat/denis-home-deixa-envellir-sorpresa-metges |title=Denis, l'home de 32 anys que va deixar d'envellir als 13 sota la incredulitat dels metges |website=lleidadiari.cat |language=ca}}</ref> | |||
* ] - American theater director and scholar/translator | |||
* ] - musician and arts manager in New Zealand, (he/him, Māori), currently director of ] | |||
{{div col end}} | |||
=== |
===Non-people=== | ||
====A–K==== | |||
*] by ] | |||
{{div col|colwidth=30em}} | |||
*] - ]'s 1974 ethics parable of nine cases of slavery. | |||
* ] - books and musical created by Mark Frank | |||
*] by ] preceded by ] illistrated by david roberts | |||
* ] - non-profit LGBT theatre company in New York City; produces gay-themed Off Broadway plays; production '']'' playing (played?) at ]; {{URL|alternativetheatreco.org}} | |||
*] | |||
* ] - {{URL|boysfilmshow.jp/pc}} | |||
*] by ] | |||
* ] - theater in Providence, RI. Known as the America's oldest little theater, founded 1909 | |||
*] Elspeth Campbell Murphy | |||
*] | * ] | ||
* '']'' (req. 2007-01-27) - lyric play written by ], a Philippine writer in English | |||
*] by stuart mcdonald, it has been published in at least five languages and was selected for the federation of children's book's pick of the year. | |||
* ] - British theatre company | |||
*] and ] | |||
* ] - techniques of ]; there is already ]; an article on the same would be useful | |||
*] by Thomas Hardy | |||
* '']'' - play written by ]; ]; a "mundane drama"; produced in July 1911; often revived | |||
*] by Andrew JH Sharp | |||
* '']'' - play written by ] (and some of his other works) | |||
*] by ] | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] - NYC-based not-for-profit theatre company; {{URL|theclockworktheatre.org}} | |||
*] by Ethan Shedley, mentioned at the bottom of | |||
* ] - | |||
*] by ] | |||
* ] - New York-based theater ensemble; founded in 2006; dedicated to "developing and presenting new and unique works of theatre"; ; ; ; ; winner, 2009 ]; ; ; ; | |||
*] - anonymous (circa 1353) | |||
* ] - alignment work established by ]; {{URL|egintonalignment.com}} | |||
*] by ] | |||
* '']'' - Spanish play; about fictional murders; often used for Spanish projects in schools | |||
*] by ] | |||
* ] - avant-garde Soviet theatre group in the 1920s | |||
*] by ] | |||
* ] - {{URL|fitzmauricevoice.com}} | |||
*] by ] | |||
* ] - London-based theatre and cabaret company; notable for its role in the cabaret and burlesque revival in London and recent ]-nominated production of '']''; {{URL|fingerinthepie.com}} | |||
*] by Ngugi | |||
* ] - acting school of ]; see ], ], ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
* ] - artist-led ] initiative; founded by ] and ]; winner of a ], ] for site-specific work, and the ] (for ]'s show ''The Night Flyer''); {{URL|forestfringe.co.uk}} | |||
*] by Jane Sutton | |||
* ] | |||
*] - self-published book | |||
* ] - professional Canadian theatre for young audiences; founded 1982; {{URL|geordie.ca}}; ; | |||
*] by ] presents a nightmare vision of Britain in 2035, which seems more recognisable and likely with every year that passes. | |||
* ] - play written by ] | |||
*] (2008 horror novel by Matthew LeDrew). Second novel in the ''Black Womb'' series. Preceeded by ''Black Womb'', succeeded by ''Smoke and Mirrors'' (forthcoming). http://www.engenbooks.com ISBN 978-0-9784342-1-2 | |||
* '']'' - play by ] () | |||
*] by Judith Herman; seminal book on Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder | |||
* ] - play by ] with Tim Supple and David Tushingham | |||
*True Believer by ]; first novel in the Jeremy Marsh series followed by At First Sight | |||
* ] - | |||
*] by ] | |||
{{div col end}} | |||
*] series of books. | |||
*], first book of poetry by beatnik ] | |||
*], A Sci Fi text about a fully automated house, whose inhabitants have long ceased to live in it, but the house continues to function as it is automated. | |||
*] by ]. July 2007 science-fiction novel. Sixth novel in the ''Equations'' series. Preceeded by ''The Genesis Equation''. ISBN 978-0-9780916-8-2 http://www.icebergpublishing.com | |||
*] by Jacob Appel (sequel to Kafka's Metamorphosis) | |||
*] by ] succeeded by ] illistrated by david roberts http://www.talesofterror.co.uk | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ]? | |||
*] by Gabriel King | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] A monthly story competition in Chicago | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] Character in "The Westing Game" | |||
*] by Patrick K. O'Donnell | |||
*] by Mack Maloney | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*] by ] | |||
*"]" by ] | |||
*], Vice President of Chinese Juvenile literature Committee, president of the Zhejiang Branch | |||
Born in 1991 in a small city in southeast of China,she is one of the main representatives of the Chinese young writers born after the 90s. After arising the critics and the public's attention in 2005 by publishing the short fiction collection ''My Stunt And I'', she has been around the focus of the media and juvenile literature circle. | |||
May, 2009, her second and third book was published by the Shanghai Children's Literature Publisher. | |||
view her blog at http://blog.sina.com.cn/liarstory | |||
== |
====L–Z==== | ||
{{div col|colwidth=30em}} | |||
*] or similar (for e.g. ]) | |||
* ] - Hawaii's first home, and currently only home, for long-form improv in the arts disctrict of downtown Honolulu in Chinatown; {{URL|laughtracktheater.com}} | |||
*], the first book in the Song of the Lioness series by Tamora Pierce | |||
* ] - ]'s only theater company committed to only performing musicals | |||
*] - ''The '''moral''' of a '''fable''''' . Perhaps, redirect to ], or ]? | |||
* ] | |||
*] | |||
* '']'' - {{URL|londontheatreblog.co.uk}}; long-standing, non-profit, group-authored theatre publication covering the performing arts in London and beyond; edited by Andrew Eglinton; principal contributors: Stephe Harrop, Matt Bootman, Jens Peters, Diana Damian | |||
*] By Charlotte, Branwell, Emily (later Gondal) and Anne (later Gondal) Bronte. | |||
* ] - theatre group based in Cardiff, Wales; creates theatre through improvised playfulness; {{URL|ludusludius.co.uk}} | |||
*], a German literature and journal publisher, based at Würzburg. ] does not know at this time whether this publisher would better fit RA in Business and Economics, due insufficient data about this publisher. | |||
* ] - play by ] with Tim Supple and Simon Reade | |||
*], writing group about ] | |||
* ] | |||
*], a character in science fiction | |||
* ] - theatre associated with the ] | |||
*] meme originating from DailyWTF.com, arguably worthy enough to have a wikipedia article | |||
* '']'' - play written by ] | |||
*] | |||
* ] - nonprofit youth theatre in Mountain View, California; {{URL|pytnet.org}} | |||
*] fiction market listings. | |||
* ] - theatre company in Milwaukee, Wisconsin | |||
*] | |||
* ] - term used in many medieval English literature classes to describe today's attempts at medieval-like works | |||
*], used in the initiatiation of the ] for UK Crime Writers. | |||
* ] - Belfast, Northern Ireland-based physical theatre company; supported by funding from the ]; most recently produced ''The Weein'' at the ] and reviewed on ]; {{URL|redlemonproductions.co.uk}} | |||
*] ( – examples also by Auden & Betjeman.) | |||
* ] - modern youth musical; based on virtual reality; ; ; possible link with '']'' | |||
*] By Emily (earlier Angria) and Anne (earlier Angria) Bronte. | |||
* ] - locally run, not-for-profit theatre company in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada; {{URL|saintjohntheatrecompany.com}} | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
*The ] (]) ( http://gadetection.pbwiki.com/ ) | |||
* ] - the new theatre of the ]; opened 2009 | |||
*] (하소서체) | |||
* ] - Atlanta's version of the Tony Awards for professional theatre; similar in scope and prestige as The Helen Hayes Awards, The Joseph Jefferson Awards and The Carbonelles | |||
*] | |||
* ] - longest running ] theatre company also know as Te Rākau led by ] and ] based in Wellington, ] | |||
*] (해라체) | |||
* ] - ] | |||
*] (해요체) | |||
* ] - Canadian theatre | |||
*]] | |||
* ] - an article on the local theatres and local professional theatre companies | |||
*] | |||
* ] - theater in Western Springs, Illinois | |||
*] | |||
* '']'' - play written by ] | |||
*] Appeared in The Barbary Coast : An Informal History of the San Francisco Underworld Alfred A. Knopf, New York 1933. ISBN 1-56025-408-4, Also Referenced in Neil Gaiman's book American Gods and http://www.sfgenealogy.com/sf/history/hbtbcidx.htm | |||
{{div col end}} | |||
http://www.neilgaiman.com/p/FAQs/Sandman#q1 don't know if that will help. ] (]) 22:02, 5 March 2009 (UTC) | |||
*] - "Like the proverbial cheese, I stand alone." | |||
*] controversial and shocking novel by Jack George Edmunson. Went to no.1 in the official UK hardback romance charts on 8th September 2010. Sequel 'A Path too Long' published 5th November 2010. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] a children's book about a Christmas elf, written by Rosina Diva | |||
*] a nationally celebrated day where people keep poems in their pocket to share with their friends, families, or people they meet | |||
*] | |||
*] a letter by IMAM JAFARE SADIQ to khalif haroon rasheed]] | |||
*] - Fictional archaeologist of the journals ] et al. who disappears in 1927 | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*], a fictional location in Steven King's "Dark Tower" Series | |||
*] | |||
*] North Andover, MA, the final home of Anne Dudley Bradstreet (first published poet of the New World). In the neighboring city of Lawrence, MA America's favourite poet, Robert Frost, grew up, graduated from high school and married. John Greenleaf Whittier, the author of "Snowbound" was born in Haverhill, MA | |||
*], Popular online roleplay site for fans of vampires and lycans () | |||
*] | |||
*] - food name, by Frank Herbert | |||
*] by Peter Burstin | |||
*] , mentioned in The Historic Plaza Theatre entry and the Bluff gameshow entry | |||
*] - Collaborative storytelling that pays everyone for new chapters (http://storymash.com/) | |||
*]: (Description underneath the title) Stopping Obama's Attack on our Borders, Economy, and Security, by ]; top-selling political book released on October 5th, 2010 | |||
== |
==References== | ||
{{ |
{{reflist|30em}} | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
http://www.thesunsharer.com |
Latest revision as of 15:19, 3 January 2025
Add your request in the most appropriate place below. |
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- ], British novelist, author of Gents — see his blog at http://www.publicpoems.com.
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Authors (poets, novelists and fiction writers)
See also: Misplaced Pages:Requested articles/Biography/By profession § Entertainers; and Misplaced Pages:Requested articles/Arts and entertainment/Film, radio and television § People Contents:
A
- Sara Amir is a Pakistani novelist and poet. She wrote the book "The Sinking Wedding". Her book got featured in 6xmagazine in the 47 Wedding volume.(https://www.meraqissa.com/book/1923) (https://daastan.com/blog/the-sinking-wedding-by-sara-amir/)(https://www.magcloud.com/browse/issue/2479663)
- Jonathan A. Abrams is an American television writer/producer and theatrical book writer. He wrote the book and story for the Broadway musical "The Heart of Rock and Roll." His original screenplay, "Juror #2," directed by Clint Eastwood, is finishing production and will be released by Warner Brothers Pictures. He is also the creator/writer/executive producer of the television series “American Hiro” for FX, about the life of Benihana founder Hiroaki Aoki. Raised in San Francisco, he is a graduate of the USC school of Cinema-Television. (https://heartofrocknrollbway.com/cast-creative/) (https://www.goldderby.com/feature/jonathan-abrams-the-heart-of-rock-and-roll-broadway-video-interview-1205805257/) (https://pro.imdb.com/name/nm3524942/) (https://deadline.com/2023/12/clint-eastwood-juror-no-2-j-k-simmons-1235658892/)
- Maree Agland - co-author of The Adventures of Mystics & Merrymakers
- Sinan Alili, (born May 26, 1984 in Oslo, Norway) is a Norwegian writer, actor, producer and founder of StarReel Entertainment. He's best known for his work on Arrow, Seventh Son, Lego The Movie and Need For Speed. Links: , , , , , , ,
- Hasan Alizadeh Iranian poet; Born 1947 in Mashhad, Iran; Author of Diary of House Arrest (Rūznama-yi tabʿīd, 2003) and Blue Bicycle (Ducharkha-yi ābī, 2015). Links: , , , ,
- Robert T. Anderson (poet), Canadian poet, firefighter, soldier, and historian. Lived August 2, 1880-April 3,1960. Born in Rapid City, Manitoba, died in Edmonton, Alberta. Was regarded as the Kipling of the Kooteneays, or the Bard of Lemon Creek. Subject matter mostly the places, people, heritage, and experience of Western Canada and the First World War. In 1906, became the fourth member of the Edmonton fire department. Served for the entire duration of WWI, receiving the Military Medal in 1916. Later, a bard and historian of the Highland Games Association. Published three books of poetry: The Old Timer and Other Poems (1909), Canadian Born and Other Western Verse (1913), Troopers in France (1932). These represent the first books of poetry to actually be published in Alberta, and are of a more northern character in contrast to other contemporary Alberta poets. Many of his poems were also published in newspapers in Slocan and Edmonton, but at least one ("The Message of Grief", 1901) reached Toronto and Vancouver papers and other poems reached the Caledonian Society of Melbourne. "Comrades of the War Years" has also been presented as a response to McCrae's "In Flanders Fields", including by Jonathan F. Vance the military historian. Also wrote at least two articles for Edinburgh-based Scotia: The Journal of the St. Andrews Society, of which he was an honorary member. , , , , , , , (pg.328), , , , , (pg.82-83), , , (pg.271), (pgs. 18-23, 49-50, 65-70, 118), ,
- Ajith Antony Dr. Ajith Antony is an Indian author from Kerala, India. He also works as a resident in the Department of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology in Goa Medical College, Bambolim, Goa . He mostly writes Indian crime as well as fantasy under his real name. He is known for his crime thriller titled ‘Police Surgeon’ and he currently resides in the coastal state of Goa. He writes western fantasy under the pen name of A.J. Antony.
- H.F. Arnold Henry Ferris Arnold (1902-1963) was a writer of weird fiction, best known for the short story The Night Wire. , , .
- M.R. Attar M.R. Attar is the author of the Elisha Davidson Trilogy which includes 1)"Elisha Davidson and the letters of fire" 2)"Elisha Davidson and the Ispaklaria" 3)"Elisha Davidson and the Shamir". The reviews (on Amazon) have compared it to a Jewish Harry Potter.
- Huda Ayaz - author of Angie Moon and the Legends: The Speedster
- Marchel Alverson Marchel Alverson is a versatile writer/editor with over 20 years of experience in newspapers, magazines, marketing, public relations, creative writing, social media and website development. She is the author of Kissed by Madness, Painted on Souls, and Savor the Sweetness. Link: , , , ,
B
- Lenke Bajza
- Lizzy Barber, is a UK author and winner of the Daily Mail Random House First Novel Prize () for My Name is Anna, published January 2019 by Penguin Random House. Her second novel, Out of Her Depth, will be published by Pan MacMillan in 2022 (). Barber is an alumnus of North London Collegiate School and read English at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. She is lives in Islington, North London, with her husband and son, and is the younger sister of restaurateur Jamie Barber
- Baroja, José, chilean author, based in Guadalajara, Mexico. Gonzalo Rojas Pizarro Prize, Tierras Poéticas Prize y Fundación del Centro Oeste Argentino (References:
- Sydney S. Baron, is the author of One Whirl, a 1944 satire
- Matthew M. Bartlett, American horror and weird fiction author. Born in 1970 in Hartford, CT. ,
- Katherine Battersby, Australian Canadian author and illustrator of more than ten children’s books, including Squish Rabbit and Perfect Pigeons — see her website. Her publishers’ websites: , .
- Cooper S. Beckett, is the author of novels A Life Less Monogamous and Approaching the Swingularity: Tales of Swinging & Polyamory in Paradise, and his memoir My Life on the Swingset: Adventures in Swinging & Polyamory. He is the co-founder of Life on the Swingset, a website about swinging and polyamory and is the host of the website's podcast, Life On The Swingset.
- Alex Bell (author), fantasy author. Author of the Polar Bear Explorers Club series of fiction targeted at middle schoolers.
- Greg Bem, US poet based in Spokane, formerly in Seattle, Phnom Penh, Philadelphia, and New England; publisher, performance artist, and librarian; author of Pushing Through Glass (2023), Of Spray and Mist (2019), Green Axis (2019), and more — see website at http://www.gregbem.com
- Kasim Bikkulov - Tatar poet
- Blackgoose, Moniquill, fantasy author. Her debut book, "To Shape a Dragon's Breath", was cited by the Washington Post as "an early contender for the best fantasy novel of 2023". (https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2023/05/08/nick-harkaway-bina-shah-moniquill-blackgoose/ , https://www.tor.com/2023/05/25/book-review-to-shape-a-dragons-breath-by-moniquill-blackgoose/ , https://locusmag.com/2023/06/liz-bourke-reviews-to-shape-a-dragons-breath-by-moniquill-blackgoose/).
- Jo Bloom, British writer. Author of the historical novel Ridley Road (novel).
- Alaric Bond, English novelist and author of the Fighting Sail series of nautical fiction books. . Mentioned at Napoleonic Wars in fiction. Draft here: Draft:Alaric Bond (needs some work)
- Charles Bouleau, The Painter's Secret Geometry: A Study of Composition in Art, shows how the great masters employed the "golden mean" and other geometrical patterns to compose their paintings. (Dover Publications; First Edition, First (August 20, 2014))
- Grace Burrowes, author of over 75 historical romance novels. Noted for premiering with a trilogy instead of a single book. Many of the books center around the fictional Westhaven family and their friends. ()
C
- Heather Clark (author), American author, literary critic and academic. Finalist for the 2020 Pulitzer Prize in Biography for her book “Red Comet: The Short Life and Blazing Art of Sylvia Plath,” published by Knopf in 2020. Red Comet was a New York Times Top 10 Book of 2021, and won the Truman Capote Prize for Literary Criticism and the Slightly Foxed Prize for Best First Biography. Clark was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award and the LA Times Book Prize in Biography. Red Comet was a Book of the Year in many publications. Clark is a 2022 Guggenheim Fellow and Professor of Contemporary Poetry at the University of Huddersfield. She has a BA from Harvard and a PhD in English from Oxford. Her two other prize-winning books are The Ulster Renaissance: Poetry in Belfast 1962-1972 and The Grief of Influence: Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes. Both are published by Oxford University Press. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, Harvard Review, Time, Times Literary Supplement, Air Mail, Lit Hub, and elsewhere. Her website is www.heatherclarkauthor.com with links to awards and articles.
- Kara Lee Corthron, American screenwriter, novelist and playwright. Author of "Daughters of Jubilation," "The Truth of Right Now," and many plays. She is a TV writer and producer and has written for "YOU," "Servant," and "The Flight Attendant" .
- Camille Cabrera, author, entrepreneur, and writer. Born in California, she has written over three mystery and suspense novels centered around holidays. She currently has six novels either released or set for release and has had her work mentioned in renown news outlets. You can reference her works at and
- Elise van Calcar Elise van Calcar 19th century Dutch author, to be translated to English from Dutch Misplaced Pages.
- Carmen Capuano, author, screenwriter and playwright. Born in Glasgow in 1966, she lives in Worcestershire and is the author of multiple genre books and screenplays.
- Amanda Carlson, author,
- Simon Chapple, British author, public speaker and sobriety coach. Author of The Sober Survival Guide — has featured in national press, radio and TV, see his blog at
- Roy Christopher, American author, artist, poet, Ph.D., and public speaker. Author of Dead Precedents: How Hip-Hop Defines the Future, Escape Philosophy: Journeys Beyond the Human Body, and The Medium Picture ; editor of Boogie Down Predictions: Hip-Hop, Time, and Afrofuturism, and Follow for Now: Interviews with Friends and Heroes:
- Grae Cleugh, British actor, and playwright. Studied at RSAMD. Won an olivier award in 2002 for his debut play f*cking Games, directed by Dominic Cooke, for the Royal Court.
- Gabriele Clima, Italian writer.
- John Corr (born November 23, 1977) author, professor, martial artist. Author of Eight Times Up (Orca Book Publishers, 2019), short-listed for Hamilton Literary Awards 2020. Professor at Mohawk College. Served as academic faculty at Wilfrid Laurier University, Laurier Brantford (WLU), McMaster University, University of Guelph, and St. Jerome's University (UWaterloo). Held Writing Centre positions at Laurier Brantford (WLU)and McMaster University School of Graduate Studies. Holds rank of Sandan (3rd degree black belt) with Aikido Yoshinkai Canada.
- Rachel Crance - co-author of The Adventures of Mystics & Merrymakers
- Sergeant Daniel G. Crotty (December 27, 1841 - December 25, 1921), American Civil War sergeant and author of Four years Campaigning in the Army of the Potomac.
- Bruce Crown, Award-Winning Canadian author of How Dim the Promised Land and The Romantic and The Vile and Editor of The Hart Review.
D
- S. J. Dahlstrom, American writer of fiction and poetry, five-time winner of Will Rogers Medallion, National Cowboy Hall of Fame Wrangler three-time winner, Western Writers of America Spur winner, three-time Lamplighter Finalist for his series "The Adventures of Wilder Good." Links: , , , , ,
- Taylor Dibbert, American journalist, writer and poet, author of five books. Links: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , .
- Julian Darius, founder of Sequart Organization, comic-book and movie scholar, producer of several documentaries, and comic-book author.
- K. DaWayne, born March 13, 1967, an American fiction and preadolescent fiction writer, author of Me and My Alter Ego series and other books including My Alter Ego Gone Wild, Me and My Alter Ego: Love-N-Business, It's Not About The Ego, Me and My Alter Ego II: Here Comes Jack, Bitter Fruit, April and Jackson's Emotional Rollercoaster, One Step Ahead, and Malinda's Milk and Honey. Link:, , , , , , ,
- Colette Davenat, contemporary French novelist, who writes historical fiction. Many of her numerous works have been translated into German and English. Requested 6 August 2021.
- Hajim S. Davičo, Serbian Jewish author who lived from 1854-1918. Held diplomatic positions representing Serbia as well as wrote short stories about Jewish life in Belgrade. Stories are of ethnographic interest as they describe Belgrade's Sephardic community at a time when more of the community was beginning to assimilate into wider Serbian society. Links: , , . Mentioned in Misplaced Pages articles Dorćol and Serbia–Spain relations.
- Divyansh Mishra DM, Indian fiction writer who by age 14 had written over 10 books. According to the Google knowledge panel, he has been invited by Harvard University for his books. Links: , , , , ,
- Marjorie Darke, British fiction writer, children's historical novelist, author of A Question of Courage, First of Midnight, A Long Way to Go, Comeback, and others. , , , , ,
- Max Davine, Australian author. Links: , , , , ,
- Robert Kendall DeArment, August 29th 1925-January 16th 2021. American Non-Fiction Writer of around 20 books on The American Old West and a World War II veteran. A contemporary of Joseph G. Rosa and Leon Claire Metz. Still being published a few years ago. His bio of Bat Masterson is considered definitive and many of his works are the basis of Wiki articles on the Gunmen and Lawmen of the Old West. https://www.tributearchive.com/obituaries/19699707/Robert-Bob-Kendall-DeArment
- Sarah Deming, American writer and journalist, married to jazz pianist Ethan Iverson. Journalist, former staff writer for Stiff Jab and author of three YA books. Sarah is a former New York State Golden Gloves Champion and currently coaches boxing in New York City. Sarah has been awarded MacDowell Fellowship and Pushcart Prize. Links: , , , ,
- Ryan Dennis, American writer, author of the novel The Beasts They Turned Away, Links: , , , , , ,,, , ,
- Faye Rapoport DesPres, American memoirist, children’s book author, fiction writer and essayist, author of the memoir-in-essays Message From a Blue Jay (Buddhapuss Ink, 2014), the Stray Cat Stories Children’s Book series (Writer’s Coffee Bar Press), and publications in a wide variety of literary journals. Faye is also an animal and wildlife advocate who donates a portion of the proceeds from her children’s books to animal rescue organizations. Links: , , , , ,
- Diabolical Plots, science fiction and fantasy publication, edited by David Steffen. Founded in 2008, has been publishing original short fiction since 2015. Fiction published in Diabolical Plots has been been reprinted in Best Science Fiction of the Year, and The Best of British Fantasy, finalist for the Hugo Award For Best Short Story, The Locus Award for Best Short Story, and winner of the Nebula Award for Best Short Story. The same people who run it also publish the annual Long List Anthology as well as running The Submission Grinder tool for writers to find publishers for their work. Links: , , , , ,
- Marcel M. du Plessis, South African author of The Silent Symphony and The Bright Report series. Links: , , , , , , ,
- Emily A. Duncan , American author of Wicked Saints
- Jorge Luis Diaz Granados Lugo - Colombian artist who has worked in several areas of art including, poet, voice actor who gave his voice to a character in a short film that won several international awards, writer, video game developer, painter, among other arts. The article has been published several times but no administrator, librarian has a clear consensus with it, they only delete the article without verifying the sources, quality controls, Wikimedia data, or identifiers. It is only deleted without verifying anything. According to a Misplaced Pages user, the article is being censored, hidden, or prevented from being created. What is known as a hate attack. wikidata:Q110863311 - Identifier ID Author in biblioeteca.com https://www.biblioeteca.com/biblioeteca.web/escritor/jorge-luis-diaz-granados-lugo - Newspaper note where it is reported that he won first place in developing a video game https://www.elinformador.com.co/index.php/component/content/article?id=42639:sena-regional-magdalena-ganador-en-tecnobot-2012- According to a source where it is reported that he won the first place in developing a video game http://senamagdalena.blogspot.com/2012/10/regional-magdalena-ganador-en-tecnobot.html - Google Knowledge Graph ID - Knowledge panel showing your date of birth, name, and movie where you participated as a voice actor: https://www.google.com/search?q=jorge+luis+diaz+granados+lugo+nacimiento - Goodreads author ID - IMDb ID - Open Library ID - Amazon author ID - Identifier Id of the author verified in AutoresEditores - Artistic works, paintings, graphic designs, etc. - Movie or short film where I participate as a voice actor - National and international film awards where he participates as a voice actor: Proimagenes - Author ID aladin.co.kr
- Kumbhan Das, (1468-1583) Famous poet born in Ashtachhap (hi:कुम्भनदास)
- Carrie Dunn , British sports writer. Author of 'Unsuitable for Females: The Rise of the Lionesses and Women's Football in England' (2022), shortlisted for Football Book of the Year at the 2023 Sports Book Awards, and 'Woman Up: Pitches, Pay and Periods - The Progress and Potential of Women's Football' (2023), shortlisted for the Vikki Orvice Award at the 2024 Sports Book Awards.
E
- Alison Entrekin, is an Australian literary translator from Portuguese. Her work includes Spilt Milk, My German Brother, and Budapest by Chico Buarque, shortlisted for the 2005 Independent Foreign Fiction Prize (https://en.wikipedia.org/Independent_Foreign_Fiction_Prize); City of God by Paulo Lins; My Sweet Orange Tree by José Mauro de Vasconcelos; The Eternal Son by Cristóvão Tezza, shortlisted for the 2012 IMPAC Dublin Literary Award (https://en.wikipedia.org/International_Dublin_Literary_Award); and Near to the Wild Heart by Clarice Lispector, shortlisted for the 2013 PEN America Translation Prize (https://pen.org/2013-pen-translation-prize/), among others. Entrekin won the 2019 New South Wales Premier’s Translation Prize and PEN Medallion (https://www.sl.nsw.gov.au/awards/nsw-premiers-translation-prize/2019-winner-alison-entrekin), having been shortlisted three times previously; and the 2022 AAWP Translators' Prize for an excerpt of Great Sertão: Meanderings by João Guimarães Rosa. Her work has appeared in Words without Borders (https://wordswithoutborders.org/search/?search=Entrekin); Granta (https://granta.com/that-year-in-rishikesh/); Modern Poetry in Translation (https://modernpoetryintranslation.com/poem/soul-washing/); Wasafiri (https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/02690055.2015.1011406); and The White Review (https://www.thewhitereview.org/fiction/the-urban-cyclist/), among others. She has been interviewed and/or profiled in The Common (https://www.thecommononline.org/playing-frankenstein-an-interview-with-alison-entrekin/); Asymptote (https://www.asymptotejournal.com/blog/2015/02/18/interviewing-portuguese-translator-alison-entrekin/); Bomb Magazine (https://bombmagazine.org/articles/dilated-heart-alison-entrekin-and-clarice-lispector/); and AALITRA (https://aalitra.org.au/interviews/). Also see Amazon.com: (https://www.amazon.com/s?k=alison+entrekin&crid=2ME3NWNK319N2&sprefix=alison+entrekin%2Caps%2C419&ref=nb_sb_noss_1).
- Dara Yen Elerath is an American poet. She is the author of Dark Braid, which won the 2019 John Ciardi Prize for Poetry and was published by BkMk Press in 2020. Her work has appeared in the Atlantic , the American Poetry Review , AGNI , Poet Lore , Poetry Magazine , High Country News and elsewhere. Her debut collection was featured in Oprah Winfrey’s magazine Oprah Daily as one of the 29 best poetry books as recommended by acclaimed writers. She is a graduate of the Institute of American Indian Arts MFA in Creative Writing program and received a degree in visual art from the University of New Mexico . Additional links here: ,.
- Ben Egginton, English novelist, author of historical fiction novels and textbooks, including The Chronicles of Ascension series (2019) and Shorthand SOS (2019) — see his author page at
- Joshua Emlen - Author, Technology Enthusiast, Developer; born in Colorado. Author of The Secret Of Bright Inn . His website is reachable at joshuaemlen.com
- Scott Elliott, (born September 12, 1970) American fiction writer, author of the novels Coiled in the Heart (Putnam 2004) and Temple Grove (University of Washington Press 2013). Links: , , , , , , , , , , ,
- Robert Elwes, English Irish Musical Travel Diarist; born in Scunthorpe England. Author of Die Schokiberg Chronik (2003) and 52 Love Letters from the Lake (2020). Links:
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- Latorial Faison (born April 14, 1973) American writer, poet, educator, and author of Mother to Son, Twenty-eight Days of Poetry Celebrating Black History, Love Poems, I Am Woman, Kendall's Golf Lesson, Secrets of My Soul, and Immaculate Perceptions. Military spouse and 2018 winner of the Tom Howard Poetry Prize sponsored by Winning Writers. English professor and 2018 finalist for the Furious Flower Poetry Prize, semi-finalist for the 2018 Wheeler Poetry Prize and the North Street Book Prize.
- Nora Fares - American novelist, author of Sunflowers in Bloom and In Our Bones ()
- David Faris - Roosevelt University professor and author of It's Time to Fight Dirty (Roosevelt Blogs)
- Raheel Farooq - Urdu poet (Urdu Gah) and spoken word artist (Spotify). Writer of Why I Am a Muslim: And a Christian and a Jew.
- Mesalie Feleke (born 13th December 1995) is an Australian author originally from Perth, where she also received her education at Perth College and Methodist Ladies' College. She describes her education as an extraordinary experience. Raised in a Christian environment, she chose to begin and concentrate on writing her debut novel, The Last Report (2024), at the age of 26. Her work was inspired by her own views on climate change and its catastrophic impact on the planet. She has a strong passion for the sciences and philosophy and is currently pursuing a Doctor of Philosophy in Biomedical Sciences.
- Lazlo Ferran was educated near Oxford. During the English author's extraordinary life, he has been an aeronautical engineering student, dispatch rider, graphic designer, full-time busker, guitarist and singer, recording two albums. Having grown up in rural Buckinghamshire Lazlo says: “The beautiful Chiltern Hills offered the ideal playground for a child’s mind, in contrast to the ultra-strict education system of Bucks.” Brought up as a Buddhist, he has travelled widely, surviving a student uprising in Athens and living for a while in Cairo, just after Sadat’s assassination. Later, he spent some time in Central Asia and was only a few blocks away from gunfire during an attempt to storm the government buildings of Bishkek in 2006. He has a keen interest in theologies and philosophies of the Far East, Middle East, Asia and Eastern Europe. After a long and successful career within the science industry, Lazlo Ferran left to concentrate on writing, to continue exploring the landscapes of truth. Among his books are Ordo Lupus and the Temple Gate , The Devil's Own Dice , Too Bright the Sun , The Hole Inside the Earth Volume 1: , December Radio Volume 1: and Screaming Angels -
- Bradda Field (1904-1957) Canadian-born writer, daughter of Agnes Herbert. She was author of The Earthen Lot, 1928; Small Town, 1931 (awarded Femina Vie Heureuse prize, 1932–1933); Grand Harbour, 1934; Miledi, 1942, published in America as Bride of Glory (Literary Guild choice)
- Daria Finica - Romanian author, best known for Song of the Nephilim ()
- Mackenzie Flohr (born April 14, 1982) is a TV Screenwriter and young adult fantasy author. She is author of The Rite of Wands, BHC Press , The Rite of Abnegation, The Binge Watcher’s Guide to Doctor Who: A History Of Doctor Who And The First Female Doctor, Riverdale Avenue Books, and her short stories appear in the anthology collections The Whispered Tales of Graves Grove (bestselling) and Unknown Realms, Fiction-Atlas Press. She has received awards from the Literary Classics Book Awards, the Foreword Magazine INDIES Book Awards, the Imadjinn Awards, the Royal Dragonfly Awards and finalist in the International Book Awards, and Author Elite Awards. She was one of 35 writers worldwide chosen by Authority Magazine for her expertise on writing compelling science fiction and fantasy stories. She holds a BA in Business Administration from Ashland University.
- A.J. Forget - author of "The Buslife Kitchen"
- Ele Fountain (born 1979) was a children's editor and now an author, of such books like Boy 87, 2018 (awarded the Waterstones Children's book award) and Lost, 2020.
- Seiji Fujii - author of the manga 17-sai.
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- Somrita Urni Ganguly, is a professor, and award-winning poet and literary translator. She is the editor of the first anthology of food poems "Quesadilla and Other Adventures: Food Poems" (2019), and has translated, among others, "Firesongs" (2019), "Shakuni: Master of the Game" (2019), and "The Midnight Sun: Love Lyrics and Farewell Songs" (2018). Links: , , , , , ,
- Melissa Garrett American poet; Born 1993 in Carrollton, Texas; Author of Farewell to Solitude, Of Elegance and Quintessence, Harmony, and Tabitha Tearwater: Guardian on Ellis (a YA fiction novel). Garrett is also an LGBT rights activist and beauty pageant winner
- Richard Gavin Canadian author; writer of weird fiction and horror , .
- Nael Gharzeddine, novelist, best selling author of “The Prophecies of Karma” () — see his page on Goodreads () , and his blog, writer, director, and award winning producer of short and feature films - see his page on IMDb (), he is mentioned in the list of notable science fiction authors around the world on Misplaced Pages at List of science fiction authors and at ()
- Claire Gibson, American author
- Bonnie Gillespie - author of Self-Management for Actors: Getting Down to (Show) Business, co-author of Acting Qs: Conversations with Working Actors
- Chadwick Ginther (ISNI: 0000 0003 7326 9126), author from Winnipeg, Manitoba, originally from Morden, Manitoba (). He is mentioned on Misplaced Pages without having a separate page here, here, and here. He wrote the Thunder Road trilogy (Thunder Road, Tombstone Blues, and Too Far Gone) and Graveyard Mind (published 2018). Other links: Author bio with Chizine Publications, Thompson Citizen about a Writer's Festival appearance, interview with Open Book, National Post review, bio from Thin Air Writer's Festival, CBC News article about Manitoba Book Awards that mentions him.
- Eileen Goudge - best-selling American novelist ()
- Jeyna Grace (born December 3, 1990) - Malaysian novelists with two novels: The Battle for Oz (published September 2015) and The Slave Prince (published May 2018) by Inkshares, she won the Geek & Sundry Fantasy Contest in 2016 and was nominated as a CLEO HotShot 2018 ()
- Stefano Guarnieri (1425-1493) - Italian noble, diplomat, and humanist born in Osimo. Chancellor of Perugia from 1466 to 1488. An avid collector of classical texts. In the latter half of the 15th century he compiled the Codex Aesinas which included a direct copy of the recently-discovered Codex Hersfeldensis, a 9th century manuscript containing the Opera Minora of Tacitus, including the Germania, which had been considered a lost work until that point. Eight folia from the Agricola section of the Codex Aesinas are written in Carolingian minuscule script and are thought to be originals taken from the Codex Hersfeldensis, making them the only extant remnant of that lost manuscript.
- Eryn Kendell Gunzenhauser (born December 15, 1993), Youngest South African Comic Writer. She wrote, designed and edited The Legend of Dollaretta: See https://dollaretta.com/
- Geoffrey Merrick has become legendary for his cutting edge fetish thrillers of damsels in distress, as well as their dangerous victimizers and the even more dangerous people who seek to find and free them. Starting with the pioneering publisher H.O.M. way back in the 1980s, he's now known throughout the web for his groundbreaking approach to the genre as well as his mass-market writing ability.
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- Hokanson Anthony Drake is an author, photographer, editor and educator. Author of Lincoln Highway: Main Street across America and Reflecting a Prairie Town: A Year in Peterson , coauthor of Purebred and Homegrown: America's County Fairs and coeditor of America from the Air: An Aviator’s Story . He has exhibited his photographs from coast to coast, and has contributed chapters and photographs to many books and exhibits. He is an Affiliate Fellow at the Center for Great Plains , has exhibited and lectured widely.
- Eva H. D. is a Canadian poet whose poem "Bonedog" is featured in the film I'm Thinking of Ending Things. Author of two books of poetry: "Rotten Perfect Mouth" and "Shiner". Winner of the 2015 Montreal International Poetry Prize. Awarded a MacDowell fellowship in 2017. Links: , , , , , , , , ,
- Ben Haas - American writer of western novels, often under the pseudonym John Benteen. .
- Sudipto Halder - Indian-Bengali writer, born in Kolkata, West Bengal in 1997. Sudipto is also a poet, lyricist and reviewer. Author of The Inception of Abhineet , Abhneeter Arambha (অভিনীতের আরম্ভ) (The Beginning of Acting?) , Unencumbered , Sbapna Darśana (স্বপ্ন দর্শন) (Dream Vision?) . , , , ,
- Hagood, Taylor, literary critic, teacher, biographer, and lecturer. A leading scholar of William Faulkner and Southern literary studies more broadly, he is the author of four works of literary criticism and a forthcoming biography of David "Stringbean" Akeman. He has also edited or co-edited three collections of critical essays, including Swamp Souths: Literary and Cultural Ecologies and Undead Souths: The Gothic and Beyond in Southern Literature and Culture. His book Faulkner, Writer of Disability won the C. Hugh Holman Award for Best Book in Southern Studies. He has held a Fulbright Professorship at the University of Munich and is currently Professor of English at Florida Atlantic University. Sources: , , , , , .
- Zeb Haradon - author and filmmaker who wrote The Usurper King, a modern retelling of the Epic of Gilgamesh about an alternate reality where Ted Bundy becomes president in 2016. They also directed the documentary Waiting For NESARA (2004), about the NESARA cult/conspiracy theory, the precursor to QAnon, and two feature length movies made with generative AI tools: The Epic of Gilgamesh (2024) , and The Eternal Recurrence (2024) . He has also made the first TV show made with AI, The Disposable Soma
- M.S. Harkness, American Cartoonist and writer/artist of Tinderella and Desperate Pleasure. Links: , Goodreads, Publisher Weekly, New Yorker
- Elsa Hart - novels about the 18th century https://www.elsahart.com/
- Danette Haworth - author ()
- Adam Hayes - author of The Zoltan Chronicles (2019) ()
- Jane Hemenway - co-author of The Adventures of Mystics & Merrymakers
- Madge Herron - Irish poet based in London, born December 12 1915; died June 19 2002, aged 86. Appeared on television and radio. ( )
- Faylita Hicks - American poet, queer Afro-Latinx activist, and performer. Her poetry collection HoodWitch (Acre Books, 2019) was a finalist for the 2020 Lambda Literary Award for Bisexual Poetry, the 2019 Balcones Poetry Prize, and the 2019 Julie Suk Award. She was editor-in-chief of Borderlands: Texas Poetry Review. Hicks has received several awards, including Palette Poetry’s 2020 Sappho Award, 2020 Right of Return USA Fellowship for previously incarcerated artists, the 2020 Tin House Poet-in-Residence for poets working on a second collection, the 2020 Texas Commission on the Arts Touring Roster, the 2020 Best of Net Award for Poetry, and the 2019 Lambda Literary Writer’s Retreat for Emerging Writers Nonfiction fellowship.
- As a performer, Hicks became the first black woman on the Austin Poetry Slam team when she became the 2009 Grand Slam Champion. She was also a 2009 Women of the World Poetry Slam finalist, a 2009 Famecast top three finalist, and a member of the 2008 Neo Soul Poetry Slam Team. Their work is anthologized in The Long Devotion: Poets Writing Motherhood and When There Are Nine, and has been featured in American Poetry Review, the Cincinnati Review, HuffPost, Kenyon Review, The Rumpus, Slate, Texas Observer, and others.
- She was born in Gardena, California, but raised in Central Texas. Hicks received a BA in English from Texas State University-San Marcos in 2010 and an MFA in Creative Writing from Sierra Nevada University in 2018. Since 2013, Hicks has been on the roster for hip-hop collective Grid Squid Entertainment and released their third spoken word album, ONYX in June 2019. She has toured both nationally and internationally as a solo act since 2007, performing in more than 30 states, as well as in Jamaica and Canada. Hicks has performed at venues and festivals such as the Nuyorican Poets Café, Busboys and Poets, Chicago’s The Green Mill, San Antonio’s Tobin Center, Warehouse 508, Austin’s Pecan Festival, SXSW, EXSE, Rock the Republic Festival.
- Her visual art has been on exhibition at the Texas State University’s Gallery of the Common Experience, the Insomnia Gallery in Houston, and featured in Five:2:One’s print magazine. Throughout her 16-year career, she has been billed alongside popular writers and artists such as Aaron Stephens, Airea Dee, Alesia Lani, Andrea “Vocab” Sanderson, Ashlee Haze, Barbara Youngblood Carr, Brian Turner, Brockhampton, Budd Powell Mahan, Carolyn Forché, and Camille Dungey.
- An activist and member of the Statewide Leadership Council, established by the Texas Criminal Justice Coalition, she advocates for policy changes related to pretrial incarceration, immigrant detention, and the use of cash bail. Along with Mano Amiga, she advocated for the cite-and-release ordinance in the city of San Marcos, which was passed in 2020. This legislation, which limits police discretion and lowers the potential for escalation, is the first of its kind in the state of Texas. Her pretrial incarceration story was featured in PBS’s Independent Lens Documentary Series “45 Days," and is featured in “Racially Charged,” a Brave New Films project forthcoming in early 2021 and narrated by Mahershala Ali. Hicks has been a keynote speaker, featured writer, or mentor for Adroit's 2020 Summer Mentorship Program, Writers' League of Texas 2020 Workshop and Craft Talk series, the LA Review of Books 2019 Publishing Cohort, the Writers by the River Reading series, the 2020 OutWrite Festival, the 2014 Austin International Poetry Festival, the University of Texas, and Texas State University.
- Links:
- Andrea Hintz, author of multiple acclaimed adventure book series including The Tesoro Series and Perception and Deception.
- Florin-Marian Hera, author of multiple acclaimed book series including Before INC. and Myths from Dimension Three, along many other short stories.
- Richard Raymond Haywood, British author, with over a million books downloaded. He is the creator of The Undead, a self-published series that has become a cult hit. Author of Extracted series, a best-selling time-travel series.
- Clint Hofer, American author born in St. Louis, Missouri on July 8th, 1952. Author of The One That Got Away (2019) which is a humorous novel set in St. Louis at the time of the Great Mississippi River Flood of 1993.
- River J. Hopkins, American novelist, author of the best-selling book Sometime After Midnight: A Collection of Poetry & Short Stories, and the first book in The Outcrossed Series, Into the Forgotten Forest — see her website
- Justin Hopper, American writer, poet and spoken word performer author of the The Old Weird Albion and Obsolete Spells and vocal performer and author of the spoken word and music album Chanctonbury Rings. Born in Binghamton, New York, 1972 now resident in the UK.
- Dale R. Horton (Dale Horton) - author of 109 Positive Poems and Quotes to Get You Through the Day. 5 star readers review rated author. Dale R. Horton is an author born and raised in Hollis, Queens, New York City. Owner of Valiant World Media Group and host of The Wrong Agenda podcast. Youtuber who does challenge videos Links to bio and interviews/news coverage: , , ,
- Rachel Howard (novelist), American memoirist, novelist, and dance critic born 1976. Author of The Lost Night (Dutton 2005), a memoir about her father's unsolved murder, and The Risk of Us (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2019), a novel. The New York Times called The Lost Night "enthralling," and the San Francisco Chronicle named it one of the best books of the year. The Associated Press called The Risk of Us "gorgeous."
- Tom Huddleston (writer), novelist and film critic. British author of popular childrens' novels including FloodWorld and sequel DustRoad, the Warhammer Advantures: Realm Quest series and three instalments in the official Star Wars: Adventures in Wild Space series. Film writer for The Guardian, Sight & Sound, the BFI, Little White Lies and Time Out, where he worked in-house on the film desk. Articles and reviews are referenced in several Misplaced Pages articles including Bone Tomahawk, Kill List, The Lego Movie among others. Also plays in London-based folk rock band The No Sorrows, self-titled LP available on Spotify: . Not to be confused with actor Tom Hiddleston or footballer Tom Huddlestone. Further references on personal website:
- Emily Wallis Hughes, (Born in 1985. poet and editor. Author of Sugar Factory, a collection of poems with a series of paintings by writer and artist Sarah Riggs, in conversation with Hughes's poems. An editor at Fence. Born in Napa, California, grew up in small towns of Agua Caliente and El Verano in the Sonoma Valley. Currently lives in Brooklyn, New York. Active in avant-garde poetry communities. Work influenced by and descending from Joanne Kyger, Matthew Rohrer, Rebecca Wolff, Tomaz Salamun, Charles Simic, Larry Eigner, Lorine Niedecker, Joe Wenderoth, New York School, and San Francisco Renaissance poets. Teaches creative writing at Rutgers - New Brunswick.) Links: , , , , , , , , ,
- James A. Hunter, Born May 1986, is a bestselling American Fantasy and Science Fiction author with more than thirty novels published. He is an active member of SFWA (Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America) and best known for Rogue Dungeon, the Yancy Lazarus series, Bibliomancer (the Completionist Chronicles Expanded Universe), Shadowcroft Academy for Dungeons, and his LitRPG epic Viridian Gate Online. In addition to writing, James and his wife Jeanette run Shadow Alley Press, a publishing company based out of Lexington, Kentucky that focuses on Urban Fantasy, High Fantasy, Cultivation Novels, Military Science Fiction, and Gamelit stories. James Hunter is also a former Marine Corps Sergeant, combat veteran, and pirate hunter. He served from 2005 to 2009 and deployed twice with the 13th Marine Expeditionary Unit, first to Iraq in 2007 and then in 2009 as part of CTF151 (Combined Task Force 151)—a multinational task force established to help mitigate piracy off the eastern coast of Somalia. -
- Olivia Hunter, British beginner novelist born 2004, author of Synthesis, a fictional book about an alternate victorian world with some disturbing secrets regarding a new type of slavery.
- Roger Huntman, American novelist and game designer, author of Vampire Hotel revamped, Werewolf Therapy, Jack the Ripper's Secret, Vampire Hunter 101, Ancient Steel Fantasy Steampunk 101, Space Cadet Alpha, Trick or Treat the role playing game, Vampire Hunt, Ancient Steel Healer's Handbook, zombie convention. — see his profile on Amazon can be found at
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- Emaan Zahra Ijaz (born December 8 2003), author of Fleeing From The Flames, realistic fiction writer.
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- Nash Jenkins (born January 5, 1993) is an American novelist and journalist who previously served as a correspondent for Time Magazine in Hong Kong and Washington. His debut novel Foster Dade Explores the Cosmos will be published by The Overlook Press in May 2023. In 2016, at the age of 23, Jenkins became the youngest writer in the publication's history to write a cover story for Time Magazine . Born in Red Bank, New Jersey, Jenkins grew up in Wilmington, North Carolina. He is a descendant of Mayflower passenger and Plymouth Colony governor William Bradford and second colonial governor of North Carolina Abner Nash. Jenkins attended The Lawrenceville School from 2008 until 2011 and pursued his undergraduate education at Johns Hopkins University, where he majored in the Johns Hopkins Writing Seminars. While studying abroad in New Delhi, Jenkins published freelance pieces for The Wall Street Journal and The Atlantic, and was hired after college as a staff writer in Time Magazine's Hong Kong bureau. In 2017, he was transferred to Time's Washington bureau to work as its congressional correspondent. While in Washington, Jenkins wrote profiles of such political figures as Beto O'Rourke, Roy Moore, Jeff Flake, and Matt Gaetz. Jenkins left Time in 2018 to pursue a M.A. in the University of Chicago's Division of the Humanities. He is currently a Ph.D. student in the Program in Media, Technology, and Society at Northwestern University.
- Martha Jette - co-author of The Adventures of Mystics & Merrymakers
- Peter Jinks, British author best known for Hallam Foe
- Daniel Ryan Jones (Daniel R. Jones is a writer from Indianapolis, IN. He received his Master of Fine Arts degree from Lindenwood University and a Bachelor of Arts degree in journalism from Bethel College. He currently serves as Editor-in-Chief at Bez & Co, a Christian online literary journal. Previously, he’s worked published in over a dozen journals, newspapers, and magazines, including Aphelion, Black Rabbit Quarterly, Parody Poetry, and the South Bend Tribune. He was a 2017 nominee for the Rhysling Award with the Speculative Fiction Poetry Association and won an award for best poem in the 2013 edition of Crossings, Bethel College’s Literary Journal. Daniel R. Jones’ first poetry collection, The Wrenching of the Hip That Precedes the Blessing, was published in October 2020 with Wipf and Stock.) (Amazon Author Page, showcasing his book: ) (Author Website: ) (Listing as a 2017 Nominee for the Rhysling Award by the SFPA (Publication in "In the Bend" Magazine: ) (Publication of book The Wrenching of the Hip That Precedes the Blessing with Wipf & Stock ) (Bez & Co, the online literary journal Daniel R. Jones serves as Editor-in-chief: ) (Duotrope listing of Bez & Co's literary journal: )
- Evan Jones, author of "The Bard: Or, the Towers of Morven: a Legendary Tale". Links: , ,
- Scott R. Jones (writer), Canadian writer of weird fiction and science fiction. Lives in Victoria, British Columbia. Author of When the Stars are Right, Shout Kill Revel Repeat, and Stonefish. Editor of collections including Chthonic. , .
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- Virginia Kahl (February 18, 1919 - November 4, 2004) was an American children's author and illustrator. She wrote or contributed to 16 books starting in the early 1950s.Her titles include The Duchess Bakes a Cake, The Habits of Rabbits, The Perfect Pancake, and How Many Dragons Are Behind the Door?. - , , ,
- Emmanuel Ngwainmbi, known by the pseydonym Emmanuel Kane is a Cameroonian author who has spent most of his life in the United States. He is the author of 20 books, including novels and poetry collections, among them Sim’s Poetic Column; A Bush of Voices, Whispers on My Pillow, Theaters of War and Growing Flames, Fury and Lavender. Other writings appear in Sankofa, Chapel Hill Press, Janus; La Colombe, Yaoundé University Press; The Brave-War Veterans Anthology; Washington Review; Electric Acorn, Dublin, Ireland; Lynne Reiner Publishers; Symphony of Verse; New Poets of West Africa; Malthouse Press; New Horizons by Yaoundé University Press, Howard University Magazine, Sensations Magazine, allpoetry.com, and more. Kane won the Kom-USA award for poetry. He serves on the Editorial boards of 12 peer-reviewed journals and a member of the Poets and Writers, Inc., Charlotte Writers Club, and others. Emanuel has received critical acclaim for his writings and awards in journalism and the social sciences from the Chinese Academy for Social Sciences, Family Christian Association of America, among others, for his contribution to the social sciences; cited by Nobel Laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Pulitzer Prize winner Gwendolyn Brooks, and leading African-American Social Scientists Molefi Kete Asante and Blyden Jackson.
- His writings have already caught the attention of readers and newspaper editors. Also, columnists and press reports at the Matthews Weekly, Virginia Pilot, Daily Advance, Charlotte Observer, Publishers Weekly, Lenka’s List, and Goodreads have already agreed to review the novels. His networks at LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, and other social media platforms follow his work.
- Links: , , , ,
- Abhishek Kapoor (author) (Indian author; Best known book name: The Selfish Betrayals; Born on August 8, 1987 in Kanpur, India; He has verified knowledge panel on Google and also a verified author on Goodreads. He has contributed significantly towards technical training of students and young professionals of Kanpur. He initiated the Jagruk India online campaign. The Selfish Betrayals is the first book written by him and is dedicated to his two little ones, who were unfortunately lost at different points of times. He is the only author in the world to dedicate his book to the children that were lost due to miscarriage. Links: , , , , , , , , , , ,
- Miriam Karpilove, Yiddish-language writer, her Diary of a Lonely Girl, or The Battle against Free Love was recently (2020) published in English translation by Syracuse University Press. , , , , . Plenty more easily found with Google.
- Peter Keating , (born March 22, 1964) British / Irish author. Author of Belisarius Military Master of the West Book One : Nika.
- Constantino Khalaf, (born December 18, 1979), American author and journalist. Born Constantino Díaz-Durán. Co-author of Modern Kinship: A Queer Guide to Christian Marriage (Westminster John Knox Press, 2019).
- David Khalaf, (born October 11, 1977) American author. Author of The Burdens Trilogy and co-author of Modern Kinship: A Queer Guide to Christian Marriage (Westminster John Knox Press, 2019).
- Sophia Khan ((born October 22, 1985) Pakistani-American author. Author of Dear Yasmeen and The Flight of the Arconaut ()
- sydney khoo (stylised lowercase) is a non-binary author born in Australia to Malaysian Chinese parents (). They are the author of The Spider and Her Demons (Penguin Australia, 2023) () and the recipient of the Penguin Random House Write It Fellowship 2019 (). sydney is openly aromantic and asexual ().
- Tommy Keough ((born March 15, 1985) British author. Author of The Bogsproggler and The Bogsproggler: In Balen-Town) ()
- Malavika Kannan, (born February 5, 2001) American author and activist. Author of The Bookweaver's Daughter (Tanglewood Publishing, 2020) and contributor to Teen Vogue, Huffington Post, and Refinery29. Founder of Homegirl Project, a national political organization for young women of color.
- Nicole Kiefer - author of Waiting in the Wings (nicolekiefer
.com)
- Brandan Kiely - co-author of All American Boys - he has a website at
- Jones Kimberly, American novelist, author of I'm Not Dying With You Tonight — see his article at
- Robert Kinge (born May 24, 2000) - British author of Albert Speer: The Man of Hitler’s Dreams, Hong Kong Independence: The Start, The Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, The Brief History of Macau and Hong Kong, Cipher: The Beginning, The Flensburg Government: A Brief History of a Brief Government, and Business Men (, , , , , , , )
- Lovern Kindzierski, is a Canadian comic writer and colourist living and working in Winnipeg, MB. He is best-known for his ongoing series of fantasy books based around the character Shame. As a colourist, he has won a Wizard Fan Award for his work in 1993 and 1994 as well as a Comic Buyer’s Fan Award in 1998. ( )
- Jessica Knoll, American novelist and magazine editor, better known for her 2015 NYT bestseller Luckiest Girl Alive. She has since written a second book: The Favorite Sister (2019) and her first novel is set to be premiered as a film in Netflix on Oct. 7th, 2022. You can find some more info in https://www.jessicaknoll.com
- Edgar Kunz (September 4th, 1988) is an American poet. He lives in Baltimore, Maryland, and teaches at Goucher College. His first collection, Tap Out, was published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt in 2019. (, HMH Books, Goucher, Publishers Weekly, Washington Post, The Millions, NY Times)
- Abigail Kurfman - co-author of the Tales of Estolia series
- Sasheena Kurfman (born November 24, 1968) - American author of the fantasy-romance series Tales of Estolia Estolia
Kenkou Cross - Author of the Monster Girl Encyclopedia series - His fandom link -> monstergirlencyclopedia.fandom.com
- Sumiko Kiyooka - A Japanese photographer who took nude photos of young girls in the 1970s-1990s and sold photo books.
- Ryu Kurokage - - A Japanese photographer who took nude photos of young girls and sold photo books.
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- Ian Lahey is an American author living in Italy. He writes science fiction, fantasy and historical fiction, all with a sprinkle of humor (See and ). Among his books are The 45th Nail, WWII historical fiction set in Italy; Asylum an illustrated tale for children, as well as nonfiction and various participations in short story anthologies since 2014.
- M. Pepper Langlinais is an American author of mystery, fantasy, and historical romance. Also a produced playwright and screenwriter. - , , , ,
- Brian Largo, Argentine Writer and Film Director, author of "Cursed Visions" (amazon page) and "Ciudad Z" — and Director of Zombie mockumentary "Zurviving" see his imdb page at https://www.imdb.com/name/nm6542503/. His webpage (in Spanish) and reviews of his work
- Mark A. Lathan (Mark Lathan) - author of A Betrayal in Blood
- Amanda Lees is a British author, actress, and broadcaster born in Hong Kong. She is mostly known for her Kumari book series trilogy and she resides in London. Goodreads account with published books. Her Twitter account. Her books on Amazon
- Dahlma Llanos-Figueroa is an American writer who has Afro-Puerto Rican roots. She is author of two novels. Two articles: Washington Post and latino usa
- Bjorn Leesson, American writer, author of the Outside the Thalsparr series of historical fiction fantasy novels.
- Gabriel Longo, American writer, academic and ex-priest, author of Spoiled Priest— .
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- Grant Maierhofer (born 30. June 1990 in Eau Claire, WI) is an American writer. He is the author of Flamingos (chosen as a best book of 2016 by Blake Butler for VICE Magazine), Peripatet, Drain Songs, and others. His work is available online and in print. He was previously the Hemingway Fellow at the University of Idaho. His work has earned accolades from Maggie Nelson, Kevin Killian, Sam Lipsyte, Dennis Cooper and more.
- Fred Majdalany (born of Lebanese parents in Manchester in 1913, died 1967). During the Second World War he fought in North Africa, Sicily and Italy, was wounded and was awarded the M.C. In the closing months of the war, when he was Chief Instructor of an OCTU, he wrote his first novel 'The Monastery'. Later novels include 'Cassino' and 'Patrol', the latter republished 2020 by the Imperial War Museum. He was film critic of the Daily Mail. His work has been highly praised by William Boyd.
- Nick Makoha is a Ugandan poet and playwright (, , )
- Sukanya Basu Mallik is an Indian author, social entrepreneur, multi-genre author, film and book critic, and undergraduate student researcher. She has published in various journals, magazines, and anthologies nationally and internationally, and released two books of her own. Currently, she is running an online literature festival. She has been recognized by six media houses for her initiative during the quarantine period. Her works can be seen on Reader’s Digest, Times Of India, Sahitya Akademi Bimonthly Journal, Lucidity Int. Poetry Journal, SEAL (South East Asian Literature) festival anthologies and AIPF Int. Anthology (Austin International Poetry Festival).
- Crowned with The Best Manuscript Awards for fiction & non-fiction categories (Mumbai Litofest, Literature Festival 2018), she was also appreciated for her short story ‘Healing of Wounds’ by the National Children’s Literature Festival led by Ruskin Bond. Her latest releases include Mocktail and #Metoo. Her movie reviews have been published in various newspapers and journals like 'Just film' magazine, Different truths,'Creation and Criticism' (A Quarterly International Peer-reviewed Refereed e-Journal Devoted to English Language and Literature) and many more. She has extensively worked and published her research on 'The Expression: An International Multidisciplinary e-Journal', A Peer-Reviewed Journal | and "THE AERONAUTS: AN AMALGAM OF MANY DIFFERENT SITES AND MANY DIFFERENT VOYAGES" which was based on a contemporary movie. Her upcoming projects include a poetry film and a song that she has written. To learn more visit
- JR Mahung - is a Belizean-American poet from the South Side of Chicago and one half of Poetry duo Black Plantains with Malcolm Friend. They teach, write, and study in Amherst, MA. JR is a 2016 Pushcart Prize nominee, a 2017 Emerging Poet’s Incubator Fellow, and the 2018 Individual World Poetry Slam representative for the Boston Poetry Slam. Their poetry is published or forthcoming in Moko Literary Magazine, Maps for Teeth, WusGood, Cosmonauts Avenue, Winter Tangerine, Freezeray Literary Journal, Drunk in a Midnight Choir, Cantab Anthology, Vinyl Poetry Journal and elsewhere. Their second collection of poems “Since When He Have Wings” is available on Pizza Pi Press.
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- Karla Manternach - author of middle-grade books Meena Meets her Match and Never Fear, Meena's Here, published under Simon & Schuster (Goodreads)
- Thomas March (An essayist, performer, and poet, Thomas March is the author of Aftermath (2018), his first poetry collection, which poet Joan Larkin selected for The Word Works Hilary Tham Capital Collection. OUT Magazine praised its “diamond-sharp lyricism” and hailed it as “a stimulating, if sober, tonic for our times.” His work has appeared in The Account, The Adroit Journal, The Believer, Bellevue Literary Review, Glass: A Journal of Poetry, The Good Men Project, The Huffington Post, New Letters, OUT, Pleiades, RHINO, and Verse Daily, among others. Since 2018, he has been the host and curator of Poetry/Cabaret, a bi-monthly “variety salon” performance series. Nominated for four Broadway World Cabaret Awards (including “Best Variety Show or Recurring Series” and “Best Host or Emcee”), the show brings together the city’s top poets, comedians, and cabaret performers to share their responses to a common theme. Broadway World has called Poetry/Cabaret “a daring, edgy, and divinely human way of looking at art and artists.” He has performed his tragicomic monologues at venues across New York City, including Ars Nova, The Duplex, The Green Room 42, Joe’s Pub, and Sid Gold’s Request Room. With painter Valerie Mendelson, he is the co-creator of A Good Mixer, a character-based dramatic poetry and visual art hybrid project based on an obscure 1933 bartender’s guide of the same name—consider it a boozier, more urbane Spoon River Anthology. Excerpts from the project have already been included in curated shows at The Westbeth Gallery in New York City and at The Delaware Valley Arts Alliance in Narrowsburg, NY. Selections from the series were also featured as part of the S.T.E.P. (“Saunter, Trek, Escort, Parade”) project’s Fall 2018 exhibit at the Queens Museum and Flux Factory. With PEN America’s Prison Writing Program, he has served as a judge for the Prison Writing Contest’s poetry panel and for the inaugural L’Engle-Rahman Award for Mentorship. He has recently become a Contributing Editor to GRAND, a literary journal launched in 2021 and founded by Aaron Hicklin, Editorial Director of Document and proprietor of One Grand Books. He is a founding member of The Theaterists, a New York City collective of writers and performers informally affiliated with The Public Theater. A past recipient of the Norma Millay Ellis Fellowship in Poetry, from the Millay Colony for the Arts, he has also received an Artist/Writer grant from The Vermont Studio Center.)( )
- T. J. Martinson (A fiction writer and novelist. His notable works are "The Reign of the Kingfisher" novel (2019), “Chickenshit.” published in JMWW (2022), “Miss May Piecework.” published in Magazine (2015), “How to Tell Your Wife You’re Not Presbyterian.” published in Midwestern Gothic (2015), “The Street and the Stutter.” published in Petrichor Machine (2015), “Cursed Rain.” published in Pithead Chapel (2014), “Fallout.” published in Bartleby Snopes (2014), and “Tornado Alley.” published in Heavy Feather Review (2013) He is currently a Creative Writing professor at Murray State University (KY). He holds a PhD in English from Indiana University and a MFA in Literary Studies from Eastern Illinois University. His studies investigates metafiction.) ( )
- Roberto Masello - author of The Medusa Amulet - see Benvenuto Cellini
- Yenta Mash - Yiddish language writer, short story collection translated into English by Ellen Cassedy as On the Landing (2018) information and references at Yiddish Book Center article in The Forward
- Nenny May (is a teenage Nigerian author who independently published her debut novel MISSING at the age of 18 while studying law at Baze University. She didn't stop there, she went ahead to release a second book months after the first and has gained the attention of an international audience.)
- Melissa McCarter (born 27. February 1975 in Houston, TX) is an American writer. She is the author of the memoir Insanity: A Love Story. She writes about her struggles with bipolar disorder and infertility. She has also written fiction, including the novel What Moves Her. She is the editor of Joy, Interrupted: An Anthology on Motherhood and Loss. She is a graduate of Scripps College. Her PhD focused on feminism and composition studies. Mccarter is married to author William Matthew McCarter.
- Stuart McDonald (author) - author of The Adventures of Endill Swift, published in at least five languages, selected for the federation of children's book's pick of the year
- Jaron McFall (born November 9, 1989) - American writer. He is the author of The Living Saga. Currently, book one, Surviving, is the only book of the series published. It is a post-apocalyptic fiction story that is based in East Tennessee. Personal life: He is currently employed as a teacher at East Ridge Middle School in Whitesburg, TN. He was the president of the Alpha Beta Iota chapter of Phi Theta Kappa while he attended Walters State Community College. He graduated with an Honors Degree in History, Magna Cum Laude. While attending Walters State, Jaron also was the recipient of the USA Today All Tennessee Academic Award. He is also a graduate of East Tennessee State University where he graduated Cum Laude with a B.S. in History.
- Lára Michelsen (born 2. September 1996 in Iceland) is an Icelandic fiction author and blogger. She is the author of The Adventures of Raven Darling: Lessons learned in Tokyo as well as Goodbye, Ingrim. She writes creative writing resources on her website and is a travel blogger on Travels of 2 Sisters.
- Cory Wheeler Mimms (born August 15, 1983) is an American writer. He is the author of the young adult novels Trailing Tennessee (Craigmore Creations, 2013) and Willa (Black Rose, 2019). His short fiction has appeared in Joyland Magazine, and he has reported for Oregon Business, Oregon Home, Beer West, and Pamplin Media. He studied writing and publishing at Portland State University and screenwriting at New York Film Academy.
- Michelle Moloney King (born 4 August 1980) is an Irish poet, publishing editor of Beir Bua Press, founding editor of Beir Bua Journal, and primary school teacher. She has written experimental poetry collections and visual poetry collections on motherhood, loss, and the absurd surrealism of life through the lens of the avant-garde. She is the publishing editor of Beir Bua Press, a Tipperary-based indie poetry press. Moloney King edits Beir Bua Journal which celebrates the unknown through video poetry, audio poetry, word poetry, and visual poetics. Moloney King was nominated for a Pushcart in poetry after starting to specialise in neo-postmodern poetry during Ireland's first Lockdown The movement from a mainly lyrical poetry scene in Ireland is being ushered in with passion and edge as is noted in the national newspapers by new poetry journals, like Beir Bua.
- Peter Moore (historian) is a British writer, historian, and professor. He has written the books Endeavour (2018), The Weather Experiment (2015) and Damn His Blood (2012). There are two other Peter Moore writers on Misplaced Pages but not this one. The Weather Experiment was one of the New York Times 100 Notable Books of 2015 and Endeavour was a Sunday Times History Book of the Year.
- Kelly Moran (author) is an American romance writer with multiple awards wins such as the RONE for her book "Redemption" and the Catherine for "Ghost of a Promise," plus finalist placements in the Holt Medallion for "Ghost of You," Reviewer's Choice for "The Dysfunctional Test," Reader's Favorite Silver Medal for "Bewitched," and the RITA Awards also for "Redemption." Her books have foreign translation rights in the Czech Republic, Romania, The Netherlands, and Germany where she has routinely hit Spiegel's Bestseller list . She's graced the "Top 10 Reads" & "Must Read" lists in USA Today's Lifestyle/Entertainment Section often in her career, and she was a B&N March Pick for "Return to Me." Though she has numerous titles to her name, she is probably best known for her "Redwood Ridge" series. She was born in Wisconsin, but now resides in South Carolina.
- Monica Murphy is a veterinarian and non-fiction author. Co-author, with husband Bill Wasik, of Rabid: A Cultural History of the World's Most Diabolical Virus, published by Viking in 2012, and nominated for the PEN/E.O. Wilson Literary Science Writing Award. Her work has also appeared in Outside, Wired, The San Francisco Chronicle, and The New York Times "Kids" section. , , , , .
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- Brandon Garic Notch (Born 16 April 1979, Saint Paul Minnesota, USA) American Actor and the Author of the book series 'Death is Only the Beginning' and 'Making Way For the New' He was born April 16, 1979 in the city of Saint Paul Minnesota, and currently calls the sunny California mountains his home. Brandon Notch is an independent artist, storyteller, writer, actor and tattooist.
Brandon Garic Notch is an artist, storyteller, actor, writer, tattooist, philanthropist, and member of San Bernardino Masonic Lodge: Phoenix Rising number 178, and a 32nd degree Scottish Rite Freemason. As a tattoo artist, Brandon Notch has become renowned for his exceptional skills and artistry. Each stroke of his tattoo machine is imbued with precision, creativity, and a deep understanding of his clients' desires. Notch's ability to bring their visions to life on their skin is nothing short of magical. His intricate designs, vibrant colors, and attention to detail have garnered him a dedicated following of tattoo enthusiasts who seek out his work from all corners of the globe.
Not content with being a master of one craft, Brandon Notch has also ventured into the realm of literature. As an author, he has penned several critically acclaimed books that explore the depths of human emotions and the complexities of life. Notch's writing style is captivating, with a raw honesty that resonates with readers on a profound level. Whether he is exploring themes of love, loss, or personal growth, his words have the power to transport readers to new worlds and evoke deep introspection.
Beyond his skills as a tattoo artist and author, Brandon Notch has also found success in the world of acting. His on-screen presence is magnetic, commanding attention and breathing life into every character he portrays. Notch's ability to inhabit a variety of roles with authenticity and depth is a testament to his versatility as an artist. Whether he's portraying a troubled protagonist or a charismatic villain, he brings a unique energy and intensity that captivates audiences and leaves a lasting impression.
What truly sets Brandon Notch apart is his unwavering dedication to his craft and his relentless pursuit of artistic excellence. He approaches each new endeavor with a hunger to push boundaries and challenge himself creatively. Notch's willingness to take risks and explore new avenues of self-expression has allowed him to continuously evolve as an artist, leaving an indelible mark on every medium he touches.
Notch's talent and artistry have not gone unnoticed. His work has garnered numerous accolades and recognition from both the artistic community and the public. Despite his success, Brandon Notch remains humble, constantly seeking inspiration and new ways to grow as an artist. He is known for his genuine interactions with fans and his willingness to share his knowledge and experiences with aspiring artists, making him a beloved figure in the creative world.
In an industry where specialization is often encouraged, Brandon Notch stands as a testament to the power of multidimensional creativity. His mastery of tattoo artistry, writing, and acting is a testament to his boundless imagination and his relentless pursuit of artistic expression. As he continues to leave his mark on the world, one can only imagine the new horizons he will explore and the new boundaries he will push. Brandon Garic Notch is a true artistic force, and his influence on the art world is set to endure for years to come.
Early Life: As a child Brandon Notch was a skater-kid and snowboarder. Surrounded by people covered in tattoos had sparked his curiosity as he started to pursue a career working as an artist. He eventually earned an apprenticeship at the age of 16 under Diamond Dave Rothburg of Body & Soul Tattoo in Sherman Oaks California. Brandon started out as a tattoo artist working in the Los Angeles area in the state of California. He is now an internationally recognized artist, author, and actor. Brandon continues working out of his private custom artistry workspace. Continuously cranking out unique custom art in his studio in between acting jobs while focusing on all aspects of art, from writing, to painting, and tattooing. The tattoo work you can expect to see from Brandon Notch ranges from American traditional tattoos to vibrant colored, black and gray, Japanese art and portrait tattoos to mention a few. The world-renowned workspace is commonly known as Sacred Saint Studio and has been around since 2001.
Career: Acting Brandon Garic Notch is a member of the Screen Actors Guild - American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, SAG-AFTRA. imdb.me/Brandon.Garic.Notch Brandon Notch started his acting career by playing small roles in music videos made by famous pop stars like YG Feat. A$AP Rocky: Handgun and Logic: One Day feat. Ryan Tedder. He then got his first break when he landed a role in the movie Street Dreams: Los Angeles starring Lester Speight, Vanessa Deleon, and Siya. In 2020 Brandon got cast in the movie Birds of Prey next to a cast that included Margot Robbie, Ewan McGregor, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Jurnee Smollett, Rosie Perez, and Chris Messina. Brandon played in the Last Looks TV series starring Ron Gilbert, Dakota Fanning, Rai Quartley, and Brandon Garic Notch.
Writing: He is also prominent for writing a series of entertaining and provocative books with themes of magic, psychology, metaphysics, and Kabbalah. With fascinating story telling exposing one to the dark arts, metaphorically speaking. (July 28, 2016) Death Is Only the Beginning by Brandon Notch, Publisher: AuthorHouse ISBN-10: 1524620882 ISBN-13: 978-1524620882 UNSPSC Code: 55101500 and (2023) Making Way For The New: Seven Steps to Spiritual Alchemy to name a few of his published works.
IMDb , SacredSaint , Death is Only the Beginning, Making Way For The New , Amazon Author Page, Brandon Notch ,YouTube , Facebook ,Instagram , Blog , Twitter , Press , Press 2 , Press 3 , artistic journey press 4 , News , News 2 , News 3 ,
- N.G.K. (born 28 October 1978 in Pontypool, Wales) is a British writer. He uses his initials as his pen name. He is the author of the children's picture book series 'Harry The Happy Mouse'. (). The books focus on teaching different values such as kindness, teamworking, saying thank you and 'pay it forward'. ().
- Daniela I. Norris (born 7 September 1971 in Bucharest, Romania) is a Canadian-Israeli novelist and writer. A former diplomat, she is the author of Recognitions Trilogy and several other titles, and the recipient of the John C Laurence award from the UK Society of Authors, UK. She is a member of the Quebec Writers’ Federation, Society of Women Writers and Journalists, UK and Goodwill Ambassador for the UK Charity Children of Peace. Links: , , , , , , , , ,
- Christopher Nuin (Krzysztof Ireneusz Fiszer, born 5 May 1990, Sztum, Poland. Polish author writing under a pseudonym Christopher Nuin, self-publishes as Krzysztof Fiszer. Author of fantasy short stories, as well as poems and song lyrics.) , ,
- Ali Nuri was born in Diwaniya, Iraq, in 1987. His family emigrated to the United States in 1994 as asylum-seekers. () He has authored a 2019 debut book of poetry, Rain and Embers, which focuses on the traumatizing experiences of refugees, the phenomenon of being torn between two places but being unable to call either one 'home', and the fragmentation of identity that characterizes the migrant's polarizing existence. () His work has been highlighted by Scriptable, Tweetspeak Poetry, the Erie Reader, and the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. He holds a B.A. in Urban Planning from Edinboro University of Pennsylvania. - , , , , , , , , ,
- Federico Navarrete was born in San Salvador, El Salvador, in 1990. He is the writer of the first collection of Salvadoran Folkloric books in English, Timeless Stories of El Salvador. The collection contains over 60 stories from different sectors, for example, urban, colonial and indigenous legends (mainly Cuzcatlecs, Mayas and Lencas), fairytales, and folktales from all over El Salvador.
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- Christina Olivares is a Cuban-American poet and essayist. She is the author of No Map of the Earth Includes Stars, winner of the 2014 Marsh Hawk Poetry Prize, and of Interrupt, a 2015 chaplet by Belladonna* Collaborative. She is a recipient of a 2018 BRIO Nonfiction Award , two Jerome Travel and Study Grants (2014 & 2010), and a 2015 Lower Manhattan Cultural Council Workspace Residency. Author page and bio. No Map of the Earth Includes Stars was reviewed by Jacket2 and micro-reviewed by the Poetry Foundation's Harriet. Her poetry has been anthologized in Bettering American Poetry Volume 2. Her nonfiction has been published in Makhzin and the Kenyon Review Online. Olivares received her MFA in Poetry from CUNY Brooklyn College and her BA in Interdisciplinary Studies from Amherst College.
- Deonte Osayande is an American poet and non-fiction writer. He is the author of three books of poetry: Class, Circus, and Civilian. He has been published in several journals, including Curbside Splendor, Front Porch Review, Missing Slate, and Troubadour 21. He is also a noted performance poet, with noted performances at the Toronto Poetry Slam and Last Poet Standing, among others. He was a winner of the Knight Arts Challenge in 2015.
- Robert P. Ottone (born March 5, 1984) is an American novelist and short story writer from New York. He is the author of four books in the horror genre, as well as three short story collections. He has been published in multiple fiction anthologies and online, including Even in the Grave, Unburied and In The Shadow of the Horns. His non-fiction writing has been published by Interstellar Flight Press, Weird House Magazine and many others. He is also the Bram Stoker Award-winning author of The Triangle.
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- S. K. Paisley, is a Scottish crime author and writer of Tartan Noir. Born Sian Duffy on May 8, 1981 in Glasgow, Scotland. She has an LLB, as well as degrees in English and Theatre Studies and Teaching from the University of Glasgow. Her first novel, Take a Breath, was published in 2014 and shortlisted for the Scottish New Writer's Award. The E-book went on to become a best-seller, placing in the top ten best-selling books in the Amazon Kindle Store during 2014. It was translated into Italian and published as Chiudi gli occhi (Close Your Eyes) by Rome based publisher, Fanucci Publishing, although their rights were later withdrawn due to their failure to pay the contracted royalties.
- Paisley has traveled extensively, living in Glasgow, London, Santiago, Hamburg (where she met fellow Scottish author Irvine Welsh during his tour there in 2013), Amsterdam, Montreal and Ottawa. She continued writing short stories, screenplays and finally completed her second novel in 2020 during the periodic of isolation mandated due to the coronavirus pandemic. Paisley presented the award for Best Drama Screenplay at the Monaco International Film Festival Awards 2020, alongside Italian actress Antonella Salvucci and Canadian journalist Tammi Christopher. He Grieving series of novels include Take a Breath (Celandine Books 2014) and Madness & Soil (Celandine Books 2020). Screenplays: Take a Breath (2019) - skpaisley.co.uk
- Debra Parmley (born June 7, 1962 in Columbus, Ohio), is an American author of romantic fiction. Adopted as Debra Anne Bishop when she was months old by John (Jack) Milner and Mary Maxwell Bishop, she was raised in Springfield, Ohio. Debra graduated from Shawnee High School in June, 1980 and from Springfield Joint Vocational School's merchandising program. She married Michael Parmley on Feb. 28, 1981. They have two sons. Debra has a BA in English Literature from Marywood University. Currently living in the Memphis, TN area with her husband. Her career began when her first novel A Desperate Journey was in the American Title II contest, sponsored by Romantic Times Book Lovers Magazine and Dorchester_Publishing in 2006. Ten unpublished romance novelists competed for one publishing contract with Dorchester Publishing, readers voted online and each month two authors were voted off. Debra made it to the second round and then signed with an agent who sold her book to Samhain Publishing. A Desperate Journey came out a year later in ebook in 2008 and in print in 2009. Debra went on to sign with Desert Breeze Publishing, Secret Cravings Publishing DCL Publications and Boroughs Publishing Group . In 2013 she self published Twilight Dips, an anthology of her early poetry from her college days. She hosted Book Lights Radio, for Readers Entertainment from 2016 to 2017 where she interviewed authors of fiction every Tuesday night on Blogtalk Radio. In 2017 she opened Belo Dia Publishing Inc. to publish most of her back list and became a hybrid author.
- List of standalone novels: A Desperate Journey (Samhain Publishing 2008 in eBook, 2009 in print, republished by Belo Dia Publishing Inc. 2016), Aboard the Wishing Star (Desert Breeze Publishing, republished by Belo Dia Publishing Inc. 2016), Dangerous Ties (Desert Breeze Publishing, republished by Belo Dia Publishing Inc.), Isabella (Bride of Ohio; American Brides series, Belo Dia Publishing 2016), Check Out (Belo Dia Publishing Inc. 2017), Jenna's Christmas Wish (Belo Dia Publishing Inc. 2018), The Twelve Stitches of Christmas (co-author Robert Arrow, Belo Dia Publishing Inc. 2018). Special Forces Operation Alpha World series: Protecting Pippa, (Originally Kindle Worlds, republished by Aces Press 2018), Split Screen Scream (Aces Press 2018). Brotherhood Protectors World series: Montana Marine, (originally ], republished by Twisted Pages Press, 2018), Defensive Instructor (Twisted Pages Press, 2018), Marine Protector (Twisted Pages Press, 2018). Butterflies Fly Free series series: Trapping the Butterfly (book one), Dancing Butterfly (book two). The Hunger Roads Trilogy series; A Change of Scenery (book one, Belo Dia Publishing Inc. 2018). Poetry: Twilight Dips (poetry anthology, 2013).
- Mahesh Paudyal Nepalese author and transator born in Eastern Nepal, who is an assistant professor of English in Tribhuvan University. He has written novels, short stories and poems in both Nepali and English language. He also works as Editor-in-Chief of The Gorkha Times. He currently lives in Kathmandu, Nepal. His published books in Goodreads account. His Facebook page. His translated books on Amazon. His published books in worldcat.org
- Liz Porter - Australian crime writer
- Mearle Prout American writer of weird fiction.
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- Anthony Quinn (novelist) is an English author of novels and film criticism. "Anthony Quinn was born in Liverpool in 1964. He was educated at St Francis Xavier’s College, a Catholic Grammar School, and at Pembroke College, Oxford, where he read Classics. His earliest break in journalism was to write book reviews for the recently launched Independent, whose literary editor was Sebastian Faulks. He has interviewed many writers, including Lorrie Moore, Alan Hollinghurst, William Boyd, Sarah Waters, Richard Ford, Michael Frayn, PJ O’Rourke, Ian McEwan, the Amises pere et fils. He was for fifteen years the film critic of the Independent (1998-2013). Having been a judge on the 2006 Man Booker Prize he wrote his first novel the following year: the two events may have been related. The Rescue Man (2009) won the Authors’ Club Best First Novel Award. His next book, London, Burning, will be published in March 2021. He lives in Islington." Books include: The Rescue Man (2009).Half of the HumanRace (2011).The Streets (2012).Curtain Call (2015).Freya (2016).Eureka (2017).Our Friends in Berlin (2018).Klopp: My Liverpool Romance (2020).London, Burning (2021). He grew up Catholic but doesn't consider himself a "Catholic novelist" (paywall). Other sources (ignoring reviews). GordonGlottal (talk) 21:49, 6 February 2022 (UTC)
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- Vanessa Ravencroft, American novelist, author of Eric Olafson, Space Pirate — she is easily found all over the net by googling. Since I am Vanessa I have a conflict of Interest creating the post myself. , , ,
- Diana Raymond - 20th century novelist and wife of Ernest Raymond (Independent)
- Kimberly Reyes, American poet and essayist, author of Running to Stand Still (, , )
- Sharron Renée Rhodes, Sharron Renée Rhodes is an American author. () (self edit)
- Holly Rhiannon, Holly Rhiannon (Kindzierski) is a Canadian author. Additionally, she co-founded and is acting CEO of Montreal small press "The Stygian Society" and champions AI-free works of fiction via the Society's writing challenge "The Order of the Written Word". ( )
- Brad Ricca, writer and filmmaker from Cleveland, Ohio, USA
- J. D. Richardson American Novelist/non-fiction writer. Author of "Serenity War: A Noble Series Book", "Modern Bible Companion: A guide to reading the New Testament", and "Coaching Flag Football: What to expect as a parent volunteer (and how to succeed)" He uses J.D. Richardson for his Fiction pen name and Jason Richardson for his Non-Fiction. Since I am J. D. I have a conflict of interest and am unable to create the page. The URLs below have a description of the author. - author page, Goodreads page for fiction, Goodreads page for non-fiction, Serenity War book page
- A. G. Riddle - author of The Atlantis Gene
- Greg Roensch writer of “The Guitarist in the Doorway Fiction” about San Francisco Homeless Crisis. Greg Roensch is a writer who lives in San Francisco, California. In addition to owning a writing and editing business (Six String Communications), Greg writes books for young adults, travel articles, short stories, and songs. I am not Greg Roensch and I have never met him or had contact with him.
- Don Ryan - (1889-1978) author of Angel's Flight (1927) and 3 other Los Angeles novels. Brief bio at NOT THE MONTANA POLITICIAN
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- Filéncio Salmón, 1932-1996 - Puerto Rican author of speculative fiction. What Are the Best Last Words Ever?
- Shannon Sankey, American poet, author of We Ran Rapturous (The Atlas Review 2019), winner of The Atlas Review 2019 TAR Chapbook Contest: ]. Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1993. Founder of Stranded Oak Press ].
- Jill Santopolo, America writer, author of The Light We Lost, Kirkus Starred, a Reese Witherspoon bookclub suggestion, NYTImes Bestseller.
- Michel Sauret - author of Breathing God
- Tyko Say, 1994 -, is an American writer and founder of the Prague-based non-profit performance and poetics collective revolving around the pragmatics of language, OBJECT:PARADISE, z.s.
- Erik Schubach (Author of the Techromancy Scrolls) (Film Director of Zombie Hotline), born July 28, 1966 in Lakenheath England, is a bestselling American fiction author of lgbt romance, paranormal, and scifi novels. - Goodreads, IMDB, and Amazon.
- Rob Sears (Bestselling writer of humour books The Beautiful Poetry of Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin Life Coach and Choose Your Own Apocalypse with Kim Jong-un & Friends , all published by Canongate . Written about in publications including The Guardian, The New Statesman and McSweeneys )
- Juliette Sebock (poet/writer) (author of Boleyn, How My Cat Saved My Life and Other Poems, Three Words, Mistakes Were Made, Micro, and Plight of the Pangolin). Founder of Nightingale & Sparrow. Links: , , , , , , , ,
- Norma (Feldstein) Simon (born December 24, 1927 in New York, New York, United States) is an American author.
Other Names: Norma Simon; Norma Bernice Simon Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit, MI: Gale, 2002. From Contemporary Authors Online. Full Text: COPYRIGHT 2018 Gale, a Cengage Company
- Angela Yuriko Smith (born November 21, 1968) is an American author of horror, speculative fiction and poetry. Her first poetry collection, In Favor of Pain, was nominated for a 2017 Elgin Award]. Her most recent book, Bitter Suites, was nominated for a 2018 Bram Stoker Award in the Superior Achievement in Long Fiction category]. She is also the publisher of Space and Time (magazine), a 52 year old speculative fiction publication, as of January 2019].
- Rukhsana Smith - author of Salt on the Snow
- Amber Sparks - Draft:Amber Sparks - author of the short story collection The Unfinished World and Other Stories, which has received praise from The New York Times..
- J. L. Speers - author of The Pawn Prince
- Cath Staincliffe, born in Ireland in 1956 , is a British crime author and screenwriter.
- Delancey Stewart (born April 23, 1973 American novelist; USA Today bestselling author of more than 30 novels in the romantic comedy genre, including The Mr. Match series, the Singletree series, the Kasper Ridge Series, and the Kings Grove Series. Stewart also writes with co-author Marika Ray on the No Place Like Home series and the Royals of Sailfish Banks. She has spoken at multiple conferences and also runs a successful indie editing and story coaching company call Evident Ink.) (https://www.delanceystewart.com; https://www.amazon.com/stores/Delancey-Stewart/author/B00A8OZDKU; https://www.goodreads.com/series/list/6581742.Delancey_Stewart.html; https://www.fantasticfiction.com/s/delancey-stewart/; https://www.fictiondb.com/author/delancey-stewart~214171.htm; https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/authors/2147368/delancey-stewart/; https://www.thriftbooks.com/a/delancey-stewart/782840/; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ZKYMeoO8Oo; https://www.washingtonindependentreviewofbooks.com/reviewer/delancey-stewart; https://www.evidentink.com)
- Wayne Stinnett - American novelist; author of the bestselling 17-volume Caribbean Adventure series (https://waynestinnett.com)
- J.A. Sutherland - author of The Little Ships
- Jandra Sutton (born July 16, 1989) is an American author of young adult fiction and host of The Wildest Podcast ]. Her debut novel, Fragile, was published in July 2017. ]
- Shinya Suzuki - author of Mr. Fullswing
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- Derek Tait, English author of A 1970s Childhood ()
- Ten Talents of the Dali Reign (大历十才子; pinyin: Dàlì Shí Cáizǐ) - Chinese poets during the Tang Dynasty
- R.L. Taylor, contemporary writer, not Robert Lewis Taylor; author of Champagne, Jellybeans and Chocolate
- Strong Terence, English athriller novel author ()
- Theodotus (poet) - 2nd-century BC Jewish poet; near contemporary of Ezekiel the Tragedian, Philo (poet), and Sosates
- Ida Therén, Swedish writer. Author of 2020 novel Att omfamna ett vattenfall (To Embrace a Waterfall) and a collection of her articles 2007-2017 . Editor of Swedish literary journal CONST Literary Preview . Freelance journalist for some of Sweden's most prominent newspapers and magazines.
- Dane Thomas - (b. 1989) American poet. He is the author of Black and Blue published in November 2017, and Light in the Darkness published in August 2018. He earned a bachelors degree in Business/Marketing from Huntington University. link to his website, Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook: , , ,
- Scott Thomas (Kansas writer), (b. December 22, 1975 in Coffeyville, Kansas) American writer of horror fiction, and television writer and producer. Originally from Coffeyville, Kansas, Scott attended the University of Kansas. Author of the books Kill Creek, Violet, and Midwestern Gothic. He is the co-creator/executive producer of Disney Channel’s Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade Ninja, Best Friends Whenever and Raven's Home, and Netflix’s Malibu Rescue. , , .
- Scott Thomas (Massachusetts writer), (b. 1959 in Marlborough, Massachusetts) American writer of weird fiction and fantasy. His titles include The Sea of Ash, Fellengrey, and Midnight in New England. Grew up in Westborough, Massachusetts and still resides there. Brother of weird fiction writer Jeffrey Thomas (writer). , .
- Chioma Thompson - American Writer. She is the Author of "Poems for My People", an Anthology of Poetry and for her Award Nominated work on Shine Your Eyes (2020). She is 1st Generation Nigerian American and currently resides in Los Angeles, California where she work as an Art Director.
link to her imdb, The Art Directors Guild, News Article in Variety, News Article, News Article in Cineuropa, News Article on Fandango, Published work, Misplaced Pages Article, and Bio on Amazon: , , , , , , , ,
G.R. Tomaini (G.R. Tomaini is an American poet, philosopher, and artist known for his contributions to systematic philosophy, queer theory, and interdisciplinary arts. His published works include three philosophical monographs and seven poetry collections, exploring themes of American idealism, spirituality, identity, and queer existentialism. Tomaini holds a Master’s degree in Systematic Philosophical Theology from Union Theological Seminary, where he studied under Cornel West and Gary Dorrien, and a Bachelor’s degree in Philosophy from Rutgers University–New Brunswick, where he was mentored by Drucilla Cornell. His works are cataloged in bookstores and libraries internationally, including the Harvard University Book Store, and have earned him endorsements from notable intellectuals like Slavoj Žižek and Cornel West. He is currently considering a PhD in Philosophy and Art through the European Graduate School.
Tomaini’s notable works in philosophy include Encyclopedia of American Idealism: Entries Toward a Novel Method and System of Philosophy (Manticore Press, 2022), which is prefaced by Cornel West and endorsed by Slavoj Žižek, and Tractatus Perfectio-Philosophicus: Or, Discourses On The Dharma of Civilization And Its Odyssey Toward International Harmony (Manticore Press, 2024), which examines idealism, realpolitik, and civilization’s moral trajectory. His forthcoming The Pre-Encyclopedic Journals of G.R. Tomaini (Anxiety Press, 2024) will document his early philosophical thoughts and reflections.
Tomaini’s poetry collections include Ballad of An American Ganymede: Explorations of Queeritude In Fifty-Seven Cantos (Anxiety Press, 2022), The Rainbow Cantos: Two Attempts At Queering The Canon (Pumpernickel Press, 2022)—containing the individual volumes Kiss Me, Ahab! and Gayowulf, a queer reimagining of the Beowulf epic—The Psalms of Babylon: Or, 112 Flowers of Malaise (Indigo Dragon Press, 2023), which was reviewed by Dr. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Wittgenstein 2.0: An Autobiographical Play Written In Poetry (Anxiety Press, 2024), and American Upanishads (Anxiety Press, 2024), which blends Buddhist and Christian themes. His poetry often explores LGBTQ+ identity, spirituality, and the relationship between myth and modern life, gaining him a following within literary and academic communities.
Tomaini is also a prolific visual artist, with over 100 drawings and paintings that echo the themes found in his writing. He has held five art shows in the past year, with his compositions currently valued at $250 per piece. His artwork has been exhibited in the United States and is represented by Anxiety Press, where he also contributes as a Poetry Editor. His literary works have been published in numerous journals and magazines, including Outcast Press, Selcouth Station Press, Agapanthus Collective, Roi Fainéant Press, The Incognito Press, and American Writers Review. His poetry is being adapted into stage plays and poetry albums, and he continues to build an interdisciplinary legacy in literature, philosophy, and art.) Encyclopedia of American Idealism: Entries Toward a Novel Method and System of Philosophy Union Theological Seminary faculty bio for Cornel West Outcast Press Selcouth Station Press The Incognito Press Anxiety Press
- Steven Toussaint, 1986-, is an American-New Zealand author of poetry. His book Lay Studies was shortlisted for the Mary and Peter Biggs Award for poetry at the 2020 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards. He is married to Man Booker Prize Winning novelist, Eleanor Catton. - , , , , ,
- Yoshio Toyoshima, Japanese translator and author of short stories, novels, and children's tales. Toyoshima was said to be highly respected by Osamu Dazai. There is already a detailed Japanese Misplaced Pages article on Toyoshima, so it may be best to selectively translate that as a start: .
- Jack Townsend, American author and blogger. He is the creator of "Tales from the Gas Station," an internet-based serial story and winner of the "NoSleep" subreddit's "Best Series of 2017." He is also the author of the novel "Tales from the Gas Station: Volume One," based on the internet series. His blog can be found at
- Vista Townsend - author of Age of Quintessense
- Martin Turnell - British literary critic, author of well regarded works on French literature including 'The Art of French Fiction', 'The Novel in France', 'Jean Racine, Dramatist', 'Baudelaire'. He contributed to Scrutiny, to the NY Review of Books and to the Spectator between about 1930 and the early 1960s. He worked for the BBC for about 10 years. But there is, very oddly, no biographical information anywhere about him. His books, where there is normally some brief account to be found, give nothing, not even a date of birth. I don't know how one would go about getting any information - there must still be people alive who knew him, maybe his publisher would be a way in? I don't know if he is still alive. If so, he will be of very advanced age. He was. probably still is, a significant and influential critic for a generation of English readers. He brought to the French tradition the spirit of English criticism of the day, always focused on evaluation, close reading, and a humane accurate and balanced sensibility.
- Annette Turngren, 1903-1980, was an American author of children's mystery novels. In the novel, Flaxen Braids, she wrote of her mother's childhood in Sweden, before emigrating to the United States.
- Andrew Turpin, author of the Joe Johnson series of thrillers. Originally from Grantham, Lincolnshire, now in St. Albans in Hertfordshire.
V
- Gabriel de la Concepción Valdés (18 March 1809 - 28 June 1844); Afro-Cuban poet and independence activist; executed by firing squad in Havana for conspiracy (see es:Gabriel de la Concepción Valdés). The Last Words (Real and Traditional) of Distinguished Men and Women, Frederic Rowland Marvin, pp. 170-171.
- Pae Veo, Pae Veo is a Canadian author. Additionally, he co-founded Montreal small press "The Stygian Society" and champions AI-free works of fiction via the Society's writing challenge "The Order of the Written Word". ( )
- Amber Vilate; English author of: A look into the life and love of Severus Snape : An Essay
- Vivekanand Jha; an Air Force veteran, is an Indian English poet, translator and editor. Founder and chief editor of two literary journals, VerbalArt & Phenomenal Literature published by Authorspress, New Delhi. Editor of two poetry anthologies: The Dance of the Peacock & Universal Oneness - , , ,
- Maithy Vu; a Vietnamese American author, editor, and actor. Her published works include the novella Wounded Wisteria and the novel Squid Season. - ], ], ]
W
- LynDee Walker- American crime-fiction author and former journalist. Finalist for the 2013 Agatha Award for Best First Novel. Wrote ten books in two nationally bestselling series, the Nichelle Clarke Crime Thrillers and the Faith McClellan novels. (, WRIC)
- Tarl Warwick - Vermont author of various works related to the occult and cryptids
- Adam Washington (novelist), (born March 18th, 1999) Author and screenwriter of various philosophical horror works, published by The Flenser since 2019. (Website, Feature)
- Holly Watt - British crime novelist, author of To the Lions (winner of the CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger, nominated for the Wilbur Smith Adventure Prize for Best Published Novel, winner of the Crimefest eDunnit) and The Dead Line. Previously journalist at the Sunday Times, the Daily Telegraph and the Guardian, winning Press Awards for her work on MPs' Expenses and the Panama Papers. Winner of the Laurence Stern Fellowship. (Crimefest, The CWA, National Press, Wilbur Niso Smith Foundation, )
- Weishauptdr veterinarian and writer
- Lucal C. Wesker, (born May 15, 1996) erotic author. Wrote boy love erotic novels.
- Theodore Wheeler (novelist); an American author of topical subjects set on the Plains. Author of two novels, Kings of Broken Things and In Our Other Lives, and a short fiction collection. Winner of National Endowment for the Arts creative writing fellowship, fellowship at Akademie Schloss Solitude, Nebraska Book Award. Published in Best New American Voices, Kenyon Review, Southern Review, Narrative. Official Website: theodore-wheeler.com; news coverage sample: , , , ,
- Charles Dodd White - American Writer. Author website at
- Emerson Whitney (award winning author with McSweeney's Publishing, best known for Heaven (2020) but also Daddy Boy in 2023) (https://emersonwhitney.com)
- Brian Williams (author) - co-author of the Tunnels series.
- Kimberly K. Williams (Poet) author of Sometimes a Woman https://recentworkpress.com/product/sometimes-a-woman/ and Finally, the Moon. Born: Peekskill, NY Raised: Detroit, MI Lives in Canberra, Australia
- Steven G. Williams - author of Wake of the Nightshade
- David S. Wills - author of Scientologist! William S. Burroughs and the 'Weird Cult'
- Sean Fay Wolfe - American author of the Elementia Chronicles. The series contains 4 books. He published his first book when he was 16 years old. (Harper Collins, )
- Matthew C. Woodruff (Matthew Woodruff) - American author best known for 26 Absurdities of Tragic Proportions (Goodreads, Amazon, )
- Susan May Warren American christian fiction author of over 80 novels with publishers such as Tyndale and Baker. Author website at ]. Current article redirects to List of Christian fiction authors
Y
- J. Yuvanesh, Indian novelist, who published his first book at the age of 25. Author of 'What life is all about' – ]; see his blog at ]
Z
- Carolyn Zaikowski poet, experimental novelist, hybrid writer, essayist. Has also written widely about feminism, veganism, ableism, and having Ehlers Danlos Syndrome. Author of the fragmentary/experimental novels In a Dream, I Dance by Myself, and I Collapse (winner of Civil Coping Mechanisms' Mainline Contest, 2016)and A Child Is Being Killed (Aqueous Books) which poet Eileen Myles called "a saint of a little book". Work has been published in The Washington Post, The Rumpus, Denver Quarterly, Entropy, Everyday Feminism, Nebula: Journal of Multidisciplinary Scholarship, PANK, DIAGRAM, Huffington Post, Dusie, West Branch, and elsewhere. Work on trauma and literary theory ("traumatized texts"), veganism, feminism, and ableism been cited in several academic peer reviewed articles (see google scholar), Quartz, and elsewhere. Reviews and interviews in The Rumpus, Razorcake, Big Other, Entropy, HTMLGIANT, Eileen Myles's website, interview series by Rob McLennan (see his blog), Which Side Podcast, Grab the Lapels, Rain Taxi, and elsewhere. www.carolynzaikowski.com
- Giacomo Zane (1529 - 1560); Venetian poet. The Last Words (Real and Traditional) of Distinguished Men and Women, Frederic Rowland Marvin, p. 188.
- Su Zi Poet, fiction writer, essayist, visual artist, publisher/editor of Red Mare Books, and an eco-feminist. Her work has appeared in Alien Buddha, Unlikely Stories Mark V, Red Fez, Thrice Fiction, and more. Her books include: Transgression In Motion (Breaking Rules), Tropical Depression (Outlandish Press), Solstice Epistles, Chirp (Hysterical Books), Sister Woman, Lit (Jammin), Three Days, Building Community: The Gypsy Art Show Essays, Pillar of Salt. Interviews with her: , , .
- Laura L Zimmerman (Young Adult (YA) and Middle Grade (MG) author of The Banshee Song Series, Keen, Lament, The Case of the Missing Robot. She has also contributed to anthologies such as Warriors Against the Storm, Paws, Claws, and Magic Tales, Ironwood Alchemy, and other online publications.) (
- John Lars Zwerenz is an impressionistic, post-romantic poet from the United States. I have had many requests for an official Misplaced Pages article on this man from both the student body and members of the faculty at the two Colleges where I am teaching as an English Literature Professor. Some of his works have appeared on midterm tests as well as on finals in the Universities' itineraries and there is heated interest on this person among a good sample of my students, friends and colleagues. Sources: 35,000
Works
Non-fiction
- Revenge of the Tipping Point: Overstories, Superspreaders, and the Rise of Social Engineering - Malcolm Gladwell's eighth book, and the sequel to his 2000 bestseller The Tipping Point
- Tell me who you are: A road map for cultivating racial literacy - educational and narrative book by Winona Guo and Priya Vulchi that discusses topics of race in the style of taking interviews across America, it has been mentioned in several news sites. In 2017 the authors became the youngest TED residents ever with a TED talk with over a million views on similar topics to the book. Additionally they founded ths CHOOSE foundation which has been recognized by Princeton University, Teen Vogue, and others. Multiple colleges feature this book as a common text for incoming students. , , , , ,
- 109 Positive Poems and Quotes to Get You Through the Day - motivational book by Dale R. Horton that was an Amazon #1 seller in category. Has a 5 star readers favorite review rating. Deals with the struggles of everyday life and mental health. ,
- The Best I Could - memoir written by Subhas Anandan and published in 2009. In it, he argues that his client Took Leng How should not have been sentenced to death due to his mental illness.
- But How Do It Know? - book about how computers work
- The City of Women (candomblé), by anthropologist Ruth Landes ()
- Crime Scene Asia: When Forensic Evidence Becomes the Silent Witness - book about Asian murder cases that were solved through forensic evidence; these recorded cases came from countries like Singapore, Malaysia and Hong Kong. The case of Huang Na was one of the 16 murder cases included in the book.
- FDR: The First Hundred Days - non-fiction book by Tony Badger (; )
- Hannah's Daughters - memoir by Dorothy Gallagher
- Homeless by Choice by Salman Rushdie
- In the Land of Jim Crow by journalist Ray Sprigle; similar to Black Like Me, which came out more than a decade after.
- It's Time to Fight Dirty by Roosevelt University professor David Faris (2018), ISBN 978-1-6121-9695-4 - Author argues the Republican Party has taken control of the US by fighting dirty and that the Democratic Party only can regain power by doing the same. Faris says DEMs have been left at an unfair disadvantage, but they can level the playing field by admitting new blue states (splitting California and giving statehood to DC and Puerto Rico), switching the House to IRV, and packing the Supreme Court. Some of this was discussed after the 2020 elections resulted in a DEM trifecta, but none of it was carried out. Author (listed above) might also be notable enough for an article. (MHP Books, Goodreads, Roosevelt Blogs, NY Times, The Guardian, Politico)
- Stories I Forgot to Tell You - memoir by Dorothy Gallagher that memorializes her marriage to Ben Sonnenberg.
- The Lost Child of Philomena Lee, a book that Martin Sixsmith published after the events covered in the movie Philomena. There is an article about Philomena Lee, and one about her son, but none about this book.) ()
- Navalny: Putin’s Nemesis, Russia’s Future?
- Playing with Fire (Hussain book) - autobiography by Nasser Hussain
- Pull No Punches (book) - autobiography of Judith Collins
- A Retrospective on Enabling a Connected World: The Race for the Original Primordial Soup - 2020 non-fiction novel by Shaun D’Souza. The book is a compendium of the author's Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence learnings and contains a collection of Software and AI/ML manuscripts. A github repository is maintained for the book’s reader. AI book is available in author's alma mater libraries.
- Step Across This Line: Collected Nonfiction 1992–2002 by Salman Rushdie
- Who Says You're Dead by Jacob M. Appel
- The Oxford Handbook of the Bible in America - book on the Bible by Paul C. Gutjahr (who could also use a page). ,
- St. Paul: The Apostle We Love to Hate - Biography of St. Paul by Karen Armstrong. ,
- Women of the Washington Press: Politics, Prejudice, and Persistence - Non-fiction book on women in journalism
- Mrs. Stanton's Bible - history of The Woman's Bible. ,
- Nightingales: The Extraordinary Upbringing and Curious Life of Miss Florence Nightingale - Biography of Florence Nightingale by Gillian Gill. , ,
- When Jesus Became God: The Struggle to Define Christianity during the Last Days of Rome - Historical non-fiction book on Early Christianity and Rome by Richard E. Rubenstein
- At Home: Historic Houses of Eastern Massachusetts - Non-fiction book on early American historic homes
Comics
- D-Day (comic book) - see fr:Jour J (bande dessinée) - French comic of alternative stories
- KFC One Shots - Three comic books, published by DC comics, originally given away free at the San Diego Comic Con, featuring Colonel Sanders teaming up with DC characters such as The Flash and Green Lantern. Titles are The Colonel of Two Worlds, Colonel Corps: Crisis of Infinite Colonels, and Across the Universe. - , , , , , , ,
- Sons of Chaos (graphic novel) by Chris Jaymes - historical fiction, about the Greek War of Independence released 2019 by Penguin Random House and IDW Publishing, Penguin Website , Amazon , GoodReads , Bleeding Cool , Official Site , The National Herald
- List of Rick and Morty comics
Novels
- We Cast a Shadow, a dystopian novel by Maurice Carlos Ruffin, published by One World Random House and a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction ()
- The Adventures of David Simple, an Eighteenth-century novel by Sarah Fielding, published by Penguin Classics ()
- Assisted Living (novel) from 1992, by Swedish author Niclas Lundkvist under the pseudonym Nikanor Teratologen. Infamous for its very transgressive content (see author's article for specifics). Two English sources: and
- Barracks favorites - inexpensive erotic novels sold at camps during the American Civil War; see Gender issues in the American Civil War
- Batman Forever (novel) by Peter David - the novelization of the 1995 film of the same name
- A Betrayal in Blood - 2017 novel by Mark A. Lathan
- Big Money (Dos Passos novel) - novel by John Dos Passos, part of his U.S.A. trilogy
- Breathing God - novel by Michel Sauret about a young man who loses faith in God, but is then chosen to deliver a message; printed by PublishAmerica
- Cacoethes Scribendi - novel by Catharine Sedgwick
- The Cry of Winnie Mandela - 2003 novel by Njabulo Ndebele (Goodreads)
- Curse the Dawn - novel by Karen Chance; fourth in the Cassandra Palmer series
- De berg van licht (The Mountain of Light) (1905-06) by Louis Couperus - inspired by Jean Lombard's L'Agonie (1888); fictional novel based on the story of Elagabalus
- Department 19 - series by novels by Will Hill
- A Dragon's Guide to Making Your Human Smarter - 2017 novel by Laurence Yep
- Farewell to Tara - historical novel by Roberta Wiliams, creator of the King's Quest series
- The Finisher (novel) by David Baldacci - first book in the Vega Jane series (davidbaldacci
.com /book /the-finisher) - Holy Lands (novel) - 2010 novel by Amanda Sthers
- In Our Bones (novel) by Nora Fares ()
- I Love You So Mochi by Sarah Kuhn NPR: Kirkus: SLJ PW
- Isaac Asimov's Robot City - Science fiction novel series written by various authors, inspired by Isaac Asimov's Robot series of novels. Pages exist for the individual book titles, as well as the follow-up series Isaac Asimov's Robots and Aliens & Issac Asimov's Robots in Time, but no page exists for the first series in general.
- Island of Shattered Dreams - by Chantal Spitz: first novel by an indigenous French Polynesian author, publication "polarising"
- King Sejong the Great (novel) - novel by Joe Menosky (Goodreads)
- L'Agonie (1888) by Jean Lombard - fictional novel based on the story of Elagabalus, and the inspiration for Louis Couperus's De berg van licht (The Mountain of Light) in 1905–06. Illustrations from the novel are already on Misplaced Pages, found here
- Laskar Pelangi (novel) - 2005 novel by Andrea Hirata (Goodreads - Laskar Pelangi film adaptation)
- Miss Ulysses of Puka-Puka - Johnny Frisbie: first published literary work by a Pacific Islander woman author.
- Missing (Ward novel) - 1917 novel by Mary Augusta Ward
- The Monster Baru Cormorant by Seth Dickinson (2019) - sequel to The Traitor Baru Cormorant (Goodreads)
- Nothing But the Night, the first novel by John Edward Williams, author of Stoner. (NYRB)
- Outies - sequel to The Mote in God's Eye
- Piaget's Last Fear by Vladimir Jankovic (2018)
- Playing with Fire (Lamb novel) - 1981 novel by Charlotte Lamb, writing as Sheila Holland
- Playing with Fire (Shapiro novel) - 1990 novel by Dani Shapiro
- Playing with Fire (Mankell novel) - 2002 novel by Henning Mankell
- Playing with Fire (Pascal novel) - 2008 novel by Francine Pascal
- Playing with Fire (Wilkinson novel) - 2013 novel by Kerry Wilkinson
- Playing with Fire (Graziano novel) - 2015 novel by Renee Graziano
- Playing with Fire (Price novel) - 2017 novel by Katie Price
- Playing with Fire (Carlson novel) - novel by Melody Carlson
- Playing with Fire (Friesner novel) - novel by Esther Friesner
- Playing with Fire (Gerritsen novel) - novel by Tess Gerritsen
- Playing with Fire (Showalter novel) - novel by Gena Showalter
- The Prophets (novel) by Robert Jones Jr.
- Primitive War by Ethan Pettus - released April 2017
- Primitive War 2: Animus Infernal by Ethan Pettus - released November 2020
- Secondhand Souls - Christopher Moore's fifteenth novel, and a sequel to A Dirty Job, published August 25, 2015 (Amazon, Goodreads, Harpercollins)
- Sons of Chaos (graphic novel) by Chris Jaymes - historical fiction, about the Greek War of Independence released 2019 by Penguin Random House and IDW Publishing, Penguin Website , Amazon , GoodReads , Bleeding Cool , Official Site , The National Herald
- Shanghai (New novel) by Christopher New
- The She (novel) by Carol Plum-Ucci
- The Silent Symphony a novel by Marcel M. du Plessis published in July 2021, link:
- The Slave Prince by Jeyna Grace - published May 2018
- The Snuggie Sutra - by Lex Friedman
- Song of the Nephilim - vampire novel by Daria Finica that offers a new explanation for the myth of the nephilim (Amazon)
- The Student (novel) - see Cary Fagan
- Sunflowers in Bloom by Nora Fares ()
- Tales of Estolia - series of novels by Abigail and Sasheena Kurfman
- Wake of the Nightshade - novel by Steven G. Williams
- The Weathermonger - children's novel by Peter Dickinson
- The Wedding (Queffélec novel) - 1985 novel Les Noces Barbares by Yann Queffélec (winner of Prix Goncourt)
- This Heart of Mine by Susan Elizabeth Phillips, book in the Chicago Stars series.
- Who Was Changed and Who Was Dead - Barbara Comyns' third novel, published in 1954 and inspired by the 1951 Pont-Saint-Esprit mass poisoning.
- The Zoltan Chronicles - 2019 novel by Adam Hayes ()
- The One (novel) by Kiera Cass, third out of five books in The Selection series, sequel to The Elite, prequel to The Heir, published by Harper Collins, released on May 6, 2014
- Your One and Only (Novel) by Adrianne Finley - a novel about a dystopian world where humans have been eradicated, and all that exist are clones, except for one human.
Defense Command series
- The Almost Coup (ISBN 0-9780916-1-2) - science-fiction novel by Kenneth Tam; July 2006, Iceberg Publishing (icebergpublishing
.com); second novel in the Defense Command series (defensecommand .net); preceded by The Rouge Commodore; succeeded by The Hawke Mission - The Hawke Mission - third novel in the Defense Command series; preceded by The Almost Coup
- The Rouge Commodore - first novel in the Defense Command series; succeeded by The Almost Coup
Duckett & Dyer series
- Duckett & Dyer: Dicks For Hire by G.M. Nair (2019) (Goodreads)
- The One-Hundred Percent Solution by G.M. Nair (2020) - Sequel to Duckett & Dyer: Dicks For Hire (Goodreads)
The Equations series
- The Alien Equation - science-fiction novel by Kenneth Tam; May 2005, Iceberg Publishing (icebergpublishing
.com); second novel in The Equations series (preceded by The Human Equation and succeeded by The Renegade Equation) (ISBN 0-9731362-5-1) - The Human Equation (novel) - first novel in The Equations series; succeeded by The Alien Equation
- The Renegade Equation - third novel in The Equations series; preceded by The Alien Equation
Girls of Paper and Fire series
Wilder Good series
- The Elk Hunt (2013)
- Texas Grit (2014)
- Wilder and Sunny (2015)
- The Green Colt (2016)
- Black Rock Brothers (2018)
- Silverbelly (2020)
- Cow Boyhood (2021)
Wuxia
- Azyl Academy by Chris Vines
- Unsouled by Will Wight
- Wuji Tianxia by Cocooned Cow (or Martial World).
Sal Kilkenny Series
- Looking for Trouble (book) (1994) Published in French under the title Black Nights in Manchester , Paris, Librairie des Champs-Élysées, Le Masque # 2465, 2002
- Go Not Gently (1997)
- Dead Wrong (book) (1998) Published in French under the title Tout l'accusait , Paris, Librairie des Champs-Élysées, The Mask # 2481, 2003
- Stone Cold Red Hot (2001)
- Towers of Silence (book) (2002)
- Bitter Blue (book) (2003)
- Missing (book) (2007)
- Crying Out Loud (book) (2011)
Janine Lewis series
- Blue Murder (book) (2004) - inspiration for Blue Murder (British TV series)
- Hit and Run (2005 book) (2005)
Polar Bear Explorers' Club series
- The Polar Bear Explorers' Club (2019)
- The Forbidden Expedition (2019)
- Crossing the Black Ice Bridge (2020)
Wraeththu
- The Enchantments of Flesh and Spirit (1987)
- The Bewitchments of Love and Hate (1988)
- The Fulfillments of Fate and Desire (1989)
- Other editions:
- Wraeththu (omnibus) (1993)
- Revised editions of all three published by Immanion Press in 2003-2004
- Other editions:
- The Wraiths of Will and Pleasure (2003)
- The Shades of Time and Memory (2004)
- The Ghosts of Blood and Innocence (2005)
Scott & Bailey Series
- Dead to Me (book) (2012)
- Bleed Like Me (book) (2013)
Max Einstein Series
- Max Einstein: The Genius Experiment (book) (2019)
- Max Einstein: Rebels with a Cause (book) (2019)
- Max Einstein: Saves the Future (book) (2020)
- Max Einstein: World Champions! (book) (2021)
Other detective novels
- The Kindest Thing (2009)
- Witness (2011 novel)
- Split Second (2012 novel)
- Blink of an Eye (2013 novel)
Autobiographical novels
- Threesome (novel) (2002)
"Will Wilder" series (by Raymond Arroyo)
- Will Wilder: The Relic of Perilous Falls
- Will Wilder: The Lost Staff of Wonders
- Will Wilder: The Amulet of Power
Here is a links to some info about the books: , ,
Novellas
- The Bright Report - an anthology series of short fiction by Marcel M. du Plessis published in 2021-2022. Links: ,
- Nate the Snake - significant short story, available on Natethesnake
- The 10K Bug - A science fiction story with a plot centered around the Time formatting and storage bugs, one of the main characters is based on Elon Musk. (ISBN 9781080354719)
Religious literature
- Flos Sanctorum , perhaps just a redirect to (a subsection of?) Golden Legend or perhaps something in its own right, I'm not sure.
- The Fragmentary hypothesis (Torah), a model used by some biblical scholars to explain the origins and composition of the Torah (or Pentateuch, the first five books of the Bible: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy). The hypothesis criticizes and revises the documentary hypothesis and the supplementary hypothesis. The new article would provide much-needed context to those other articles as well as replace the stub it currently has on the fragmentary hypothesis (disambiguation) page.
- The New Testament historical books, a category of the New Testament which groups the Gospels and Acts of the Apostles. They tell the history of Christianity's earliest days, focusing on the life of Jesus and the creation of the Church respectively. The article about the historical books of the Old Testament should be kept in mind (and probably renamed) if this article is created. Sources: No. 1 No. 2 No 3. No 4. (by Barrows), and No. 5 (by Paley)
- The Synoptic Gospel, a word-for-word merged synopsis of the four New Testament Gospel texts based on the FIVE COLUMN Four Gospel Harmony, compiled by Daniel John and published in 2009 by Smart Publishing Ltd. Sources: No. 1 No 2 No. 3 No. 4 No. 5
Web serials
- The Wandering Inn by Pirateaba (2016-)
- The Under the Oak Tree, a fantasy romance novel by KIM Suji, originally published in Korean by a content company named RIDI Corporation. The digital comic version has been adapted, currently being published by Manta(platform).
Other/unknown
- The 45th Nail by Ian Lahey - WWII historical fiction set in Italy
- Abhneeter Arambha (অভিনীতের আরম্ভ) (The Beginning of Acting) by Sudipto Halder (Blue Rose Publishers)
- The Art of Eating by M.F.K. Fisher - see depression cake
- Asylum by Ian Lahey - illustrated tale for children
- Essays on the Principles of Morality and Natural Religion by Lord Kames - see Scottish philosophy
- Héliogabale ou l'Anarchiste couronné (Heliogabalus or The Anarchist Crowned) by Antonin Artaud (1934), depicting the life of Elagabalus and combining essay, biography, and fiction
- The Inception of Abhineet by Sudipto Halder (Amazon)
- Krampus the Yule Lord - 2012 book by Gerald Brom
- Lancelot proper - part of the Lancelot-Grail cycle
- La mort le roi Artu - part of the Lancelot-Grail cycle
- Net Delusion: The Dark Side of Internet Freedom - 2011 book by Evgeny Morozov
- The News Media and Civic Equality: Watch Dogs, Mad Dogs or Lap Dogs? - cited on many articles as Robert A. Hackett
- Queste del Saint Graal - part of the Lancelot-Grail cycle; currently a redirect
- Sbapna Darśana (স্বপ্ন দর্শন) (Dream Vision) by Sudipto Halder (Google Play)
- A System of Moral Philosophy by Francis Hutcheson - first published in Glasgow in 1755 - see Scottish moral philosophy
- The Usurper King by Zeb Haradon - modern retelling of the Epic of Gilgamesh about an alternate reality where Ted Bundy becomes president in 2016
- The Vintage Book of Indian Writing - anthology
Authors (other than poets, dramatists and fiction writers)
Please request articles about non-fiction writers at Misplaced Pages:Requested articles/Biography/By profession#Non-fiction writers, not here. |
- Jenny Alexander - UK author of scores of books for children including Blue Peter Book Club "How to get what you want, by Peony Pinker", Red House Highly Commended "Car-mad Jack' and amazon bestseller "Bullies, Bigmouths and So-called Friends" - most recently three books for adults about writing - "Writing in the House of Dreams: Unlock the power of your unconscious mind", "Happy Writing: Beat your blocks, be published and find your flow" and "Free-Range Writing: 75 forays for the wild writer's soul" Articles for writers in Mslexia, Writers' Forum, Writing Magazine and The Author - monthly column in Writing Magazine. Teaches for organisations including Society of Authors, Scattered Authors' Society, the Arvon Foundation, Lapidus, Mantle Arts, Writing magazine. https://jennyalexander.co.uk/
- Kit Cox- author and illustrator of "How to bag a Jabberwock: a practical guide to monster hunting"(under the pen name Major Jack Union), the Benjamin Gaul Adventures "The Monster Hunter""Smoke and Mirrors",The Dr Tripps' chronicles "Kaiju cocktail""Moon monster""Time terror"and the cold war fantasy drama "Morningwood"
- Alexandra Berlina - author of Brodsky Translating Brodsky & Viktor Shklovsky: A Reader; she is mentioned in a couple of articles on translation (the books are not biographies, hence I am not listing her at Misplaced Pages:Requested articles/Biography/By profession#Non-fiction writers
- S.G.C. Middlemore (Samuel George Chetwynd Middlemore) - author
- Lara Platman (Author, Photographer and Broadcaster) (, , , , )
Fictional elements
Fictional character
- All Might - a former professional hero and current U.A. High School teacher in My Hero Academia. Usually characters in fictional manga and anime should not have independent articles, yet Comic Book Resources has plenty of articles remarking All Might (), and the list that does mention him actually does not cover him adequately (e.g. lacking his parts in the Dark Deku Arc and the Second Great War one and reception in the real world). Now redirects to List of My Hero Academia characters#Toshinori_Yagi
- Constance Blackwood and Cousin Charles - both characters in Shirley Jackson's classic novel We Have Always Lived in the Castle. Pages to go with the article for Merricat Blackwood that has already been made. Especially necessary with the impending release of a film adaptation, and a possible revival of the stage musical.
- Billy Caspar - child character featured in Barry Hines' classic Angry Young Man novel, A Kestrel for a Knave. One of the most notable literary characters of the 1960s.
- Brady Coyne - a fictional character by William Tapply
- Gla'aki- Page was deleted due to lack of citations 2 years ago, important cthulhu mythos entity.
- Wilder Good - fictional character in the Wilder Good middle-grade book series by S.J. Dahlstrom, published by Paul Dry Books, Philadelphia, PA.
- Mablung - a fictional character in J.R.R. Tolkien´s novels, including The Silmarillion and Unfinished Tales. A ranger/marchwarden of Doriath, important in the First Age. Also a name of a ranger of Ithilien, in Lord of The Rings
- Ozana (Oz) - first cousin of Princess Ozma
- Ozga (Oz) - cousin of Princess Ozma
- Enji Todoroki - a professional hero in the MHA who has been quite controversial among MHA fans, and CBR has many articles commenting him (, , , etc.). Now redirects to List of My Hero Academia characters#Enji Todoroki
- Tomura Shigaraki - a fictional villain that is regarded one of the best ones by many Westerners, and CBR has many articles commenting him (). Now redirects to List of My Hero Academia characters#Tomura Shigaraki
Fictional locations
- Estolia - fictional Balearic island in the Tales of Estolia series
- Pyrrhia (continent) - fictional continent in the Wings of Fire novels
- Teolan - fictional country in the Taulia universe
Literature-related awards
- Author Elite Awards - Author Elite Awards are bestowed for literary merit and publishing excellence in the writing and publishing industry. They are conferred annually by Author Academy Elite (AAE) and presented at the Author Elite Awards Ceremony. The various category winners are bestowed a special award, officially called the "Elite Boon of Merit." The winner in each category will have an opportunity to have a 90-second book synopsis video shared to a global audience. Authors of all kinds—indie (self-published), traditional, or collaborative published—may be considered for this prestigious award. The top ten finalists in each category are invited to present their book synopsis at the Author Elite Awards Red Carpet Sessions.authoreliteawards
.com - Micro Award - annual juried award, not a contest; given to the best story of under 1,000 words published in English during a calendar year; private money funds the award; editors nominate work just as they do for the Pushcart Prize and similar honors
- Mark Twain American Voice in Literature Award - Presented by the Mark Twain House. The award, established in 2016, "honors a work of fiction from the previous calendar year that speaks with an “American Voice” about American experiences. The award carries a $25,000 cash prize underwritten by bestselling author and former trustee of the Mark Twain House and Museum, David Baldacci."
Literature-related events
- The Windy City Story Slam - monthly story competition in Chicago
- The Iowa Summer Writing Festival - annual weeks-long writing workshops taught by highly regarded authors and hosted by the University of Iowa, home to the top-ranked graduate writing programs in the U.S.
- Live Talks Los Angeles - ongoing, decade-old conversation series based in Los Angeles (http://www.livetalkslosangeles.org)LisaJNapoli (talk) 02:24, 23 November 2020 (UTC)
Literature-related lists
- Languages used in books and other media - Languages used on the Internet, List of languages by a total number of speakers, List of languages by a number of native speakers, and others already exist. I believe a similar article about languages used in books and other print media would be highly informative and useful. dis also applies when expanded to other media, such as radio, television, movies, songs, software, video games, etc.
- List of poems set in Chicago - there is list of fiction set in Chicago, why not poetry?
- List of United States presidential inaugural poems or List of inaugural poems - Misplaced Pages TEMP has some of these poems, but finding them is a chore Rachael D. Canter 22:51, 27 July 2020 (UTC)Avid Reader
- List of Prefix Element 979 Group-8 ISBN publisher codes (A list of publisher codes for (979) International Standard Book Numbers with a group code of 8, similar to 978-0 List of group-0 ISBN publisher codes and 978-1 List of group-1 ISBN publisher codes.) (Data from published items by these publishers.) One book as an example: WesT (talk) 00:52, 7 July 2023 (UTC)
Literature-related organizations
- The Beverly Rogers, Carol C. Harter Black Mountain Institute (Literary arts center based out of UNLV. Publisher of The Believer magazine and host of The Believer Festival.)
- Boondi (magazine) (boondi
.lk); online magazine; - DEEP: Database of Early English Playbooks - google books; here. This is encyclopaedic because it is a widely used scholarly resource that offers a database of factual information about English Renaissance drama, including that of Shakespeare. It is already cited by several articles in Misplaced Pages and because of these citations, the database itself ought to be in Misplaced Pages.
- Department of Tatar Literature
- New Renaissance Writers Guild
- Red Ogre Review (ogre
.red) - a journal of contemporary short fiction, verse, and visual art founded in October 2021 by graduates of Lancaster University's Creative Writing Masters program. Red Ogre Review is a member of CLMP, the Community of Literary Magazines and Presses. - Scottish Association of Writers (sawriters
.org .uk) - a Scottish National Association; of great importance to writers and writer groups; ; - Women's Fiction Writers Association (womensfictionwriters
.org) - an international non-profit writing association. It provides networking and support to individuals interested in pursuing a career in women’s fiction. - Young Adult Books Central
Publishing companies
- Atmosphere Press (atmospherepress
.com)- Atmosphere Press is an Austin, TX. based publisher of books founded in 2015, by Nick Courtright. Genres include fiction, non-fiction, children's books, and poetry. Atmosphere Press is an "author friendly" publishing company that uses a hybrid approach to publishing. Their services include publishing, marketing/promotions, web development, editorial services, illustration, and audiobook distribution. - Broken Sleep Books (brokensleepbooks
.com)- An award-winning indie working-class publishing press. Authors include: J H Prynne, Gillian Clarke, Fiona Benson, Luke Kennard, Nicholas Hogg, Andrew McMillan, Pádraig Ó Tuama, Gunnar Garfors, Otamere Guobadia, Omar Musa, Ian Patterson, Claire Trévien, Sheila Murphy, Penelope Shuttle, Daniele Pantano, Wayne Holloway-Smith, and more.
- Sunbury Press - An American independent book publishing company founded in 2004 and headquartered in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania. Some of its authors include former Pennsylvania Congressman Jason Altmire; Pat LaMarche, a former two-time Maine gubernatorial candidate and ex-vice presidential candidate on the Green Party presidential ticket for the 2004 U.S. presidential election; former Pennsylvania Lieutenant Governor Mark Singel; Duquesne University President Ken Gormley; singer/songwriter Calvin Richardson; and actor/playwright Laurence Luckinbill.
Websites
- Bangla Kabita (bangla-kobita
.com) - literature website on Bengali poetry - Shadow Unit - collaborative website/pseudo-television show by Elizabeth Bear, Emma Bull, Amanda Downum, Sarah Monette, Will Shetterly and Stephen Shipman
- PdfnBooks (pdfnbooks
.blogspot .com) - an ebook marketplace to download and publish ebooks for free. - Bangla Kabita abritti (ektuananda
.com) - Cultural website on Bengali poetry - Manta(Comics) (manta
.net) - Manta is a South Korean digital comics platform owned and operated by Ridi Corporation. It has been heavily focusing on romance storytelling, having created and published wildly popular comics series such as Under the Oak Tree, Finding Camellia, and Disobey the Duke if You Dare. The Manta app is free to download on Android and iOS devices and all content are accessible via its website. Also, per Manta Misplaced Pages search page, it shows that the item is already shown under App & Website section, indicating that there are demands for more information of the item. - Westminster Detective Library (wdl
.mcdaniel .edu) - An ongoing collection of American detective fiction from before 1891 run by Dr. Mary Bendel-Simso, English professor at McDaniel College
Literary movements and styles
A–F
- agricultural theory
- bibliomystery
- Bosnian Mmeieval literature - history of literature in the territory of twhat is oday Bosnia and Herzegovina ,focusing on the medieval period.There already exists such an article,in Bosnian and,apparently,Russian, but no translations to either English or any other languages. bs:Bosanska srednjovjekovna književnost
- Chechen literature
- chi-chu - literary style mentioned in Misplaced Pages article about the Yellow Emperor involving assembling writing from fragments of various sources (I think) - unable to find any wiki or other search engine articles on it, nor any online books a bout it - even trying different spelling variants and combinations, though I realise this can subtly change meaning in the translation from Chinese to English.
- culinary mystery - gourmetmysteries
.com - dolphin and whale spot - term; (on the cranium) quoted by David Foster Wallace in Although Of Course You End Up Becoming Yourself: A Road Trip with David Foster Wallace by David Lipsky. Pg. 295. "'And she said that there were these various chakras and one of the big ones was what she called the spout hole, at the very top of your cranium' ".
- Maybe we can add a note about in on the page for the Sahasrara / crown chakra? --Vaporwaveboyfriend (talk) 23:47, 20 June 2023 (UTC)
G–Z
- Georgian literature - now redirects to Culture of Georgia (country)#Literary and other written works
- indigenous current
- Irish-American poetry
- List of English expressions loaned from Shakespeare
- List of English expressions loaned from the King James Bible
- list poetry
- Little Willy-style poetry - short, morbid, rhyming verses concerning a boy named Willy;
- locus dramaticus
- magepunk (mage-punk) -
- metametafiction
- online-dating novels
- open fiction - like open-educational resources, people started to publish fiction also under open license; examples include Juan Julián Merelo Guervós (with Hoborg), P. Anil Prasad (with Imanofutu), Cheryl Ives (with Timeless) and Ryan Somma (with ideonexus.com)
- outline of spy fiction spy fiction - outline needed as a parent of outline of James Bond; see Portal:Contents/Outlines and look under Recreation and Entertainment, outline of spy fiction is red
- outsider writers - Example
- persona poems - first-person poems with a speaker other than the poet; often in the form of a dramatic monologue
- phenomenology (literature) - authors who wrote with a phenomenological perspective and what their books tend to be about
- philosophical autobiography
- Pia Desideria - a piece by Philipp Spener what the cultural and social significance was and the impact it had at the time
- positive imagery
- pulp-fiction novel (pulp fiction novel) (pulp novel) - pulp magazine and lesbian pulp fiction already exist but not this/ or rename pulp magazine to pulp fiction?; High Heels on Wet Pavement 16:09, 15 February 2007 (UTC)
- Rabelais Club
- Ring Cycle theory
- rude letter - a form of letter-writing
- Splat Pack (horror fiction) - Splat Pack
- Translations of Ulysses or Translations of James Joyce's Ulysses. Notable for the difficulty of such an endeavor and for the fact that such translations, as a result, often make the news and are subjects of scholarship in themselves:
- Mark Greaves (2014), "How one Iraqi poet translated Joyce’s Ulysses into Arabic", Channel Four News.
- Bernard Hœpffner (2017), Straightening out Ulysses, The Paris Review.
- Ida Klitgård (2005), Taking the pun by the horns: The translation of wordplay in James Joyce’s Ulysses
- Cait Murphy (1995), "'Ulysses' in Chinese", The Atlantic.
- Akram Pedramnia (2017), "'Pleasure or pain, is it?': Translating Ulysses into Persian", Dublin James Joyce Journal.
- travesty (literature) - The article burlesque exists and refers to this; travesty is a disambiguation page; see Talk:Travesty
- young-adult non-fiction
- Young Trollopes
Poetry
- A Gentle Echo on Woman - poem attributed to Jonathan Swift (Bartleby)
- "Il Cinque Maggio" ("The Fifth of May") - see it:Il cinque maggio - poem by Alessandro Manzoni
- A Lady Fair & Other Poems by John Lars Zwerenz (ISBN 1483616681, 978-1483616681)
- Mosella & Ephemeris, 4th century poems by Ausonius
- The Pawn Prince - poetry collection by J. L. Speers
- "She:1" - poem by Sayeed Abubakar (Poem Hunter)
- Wedding (poem) - Very influential poem by the wonderful Alice Oswald written in 1996 for her collection The Thing in the Gap-Stone-Stile. Acclaim from Carol Ann Duffy and James Fenton. Often studied. More poems by her also need adding, just like by other modern poets like Fenton, Duffy, Armitage, Paterson and Olds.
Works and publications
See also: Misplaced Pages:Requested articles/Culture and fine arts/Speculative fictionBooks
Requests for articles about books are on a separate page, and should be added there. |
- Sons of Chaos (graphic novel) by Chris Jaymes - released 2019 by Penguin Random House and IDW Publishing, Penguin Website , Amazon , GoodReads , Bleeding Cool , Official Site , The National Herald
- The COMPLEAT Collected SFF Works of John W. Campbell, Jr. - apparently complete anthology not listed in the John W. Campbell, Jr. Misplaced Pages article for this author. No editor listed but last page has this imprint, "Sleipnir 06/08/2012". Maybe only exists as an epub? (B OK Bearlib)
- God in Peril. Written by Indian author Ajatshatru Parmar. It is a non-fiction book that contains real life examples and statistical data on the violence and cases against doctors in India at the workplace and demonstrate the diminishing bond between a doctor and his patient. The book is the first published in India by Manjul Publications. It also contain interviews of many health expert of India with the author on the burning issues. Book gives an insight of Indian medical scenario and replies to questions, like why doctors don't want their children to become a doctor? This is the first title of its kind which introduces a few superstitious scenarios prevailing in India. http://manjulindia.com/god-in-peril.html
- Playing with Fire (poetry) - 2006 poetry collection by Grevel Lindop
- Poems For All the Annettes by Al Purdy
- Declassified Verses by Euloge Ishimwe
- The City of Women by Ruth Landes
Periodicals
- 805 Lit + Art (ISSN 2379-4593)(805lit
.org) - Online, quarterly literary and art journal featuring emegering artists and authors worldwide; published by the Manatee County Public Library System; article requested so that the magazine can appear in the list of literary magazines;
- Conclave: A Journal of Character - bi-annual print and e-journal with character-focused writing and photography
- Flash: The Short-Short Story Magazine - The world’s leading journal of quality flash fiction and reviews of up to 360 words. It is based at the University of Chester in the UK and is edited by Peter Blair and Ashley Chantler. (AC Chester) - also see Flash fiction and David Gaffney
- Weekly Humorist - A weekly magazine featuring editorial satire, cartoons, pop culture, lists and humor fiction. The magazine is edited by Marty Dundics. ()
- Fourth Genre: Explorations In Nonfiction (ISSN 1522-3868) (msupress
.org /journals /fg /) (fourthgenre .msu .edu) -a literary journal of creative nonfiction , published twice annually by Michigan State University Press since spring 1999; offers an annual contest called the Steinberg Essay Prize, named after the journal's founding editor. article requested so journal appears on the list of literary magazines
- Hippocampus Magazine (hippocampusmagazine
.com) - monthly journal of creative non-fiction; offers an annual contest and writer's conference
- Journal of Extension (ISSN 1077-5315 (joe
.org) - peer-reviewed journal; official refereed journal of the U.S. Cooperative Extension System
- Mana (journal) - journal of the South Pacific Creative Arts Society, founded at the University of the South Pacific in 1972 or 1973, helped build South Pacific literature and arts.
- Midda's Chronicles (it:Midda's Chronicles) (ISSN 2282-1120) - Italian sword and sorcery series, published every day since January 11, 2008
- Rock & Sling: A Journal of Witness (rockandsling
.com) - Christian literary magazine; staffed by Whitworth University in Spokane, Washington; emphasis on poetry and prose that speaks to an experience that is compellingly true in some way; article requested so that the magazine can appear in the list of literary magazines; ; ;
- The Cardiff Review (cardiffreview
.com) - A literary magazine founded in 2015 that publishes fiction, non-fiction, poetry, book reviews, and interviews. The magazine was originally founded in partnership with Cardiff University. ; ;
- Short Story International (req. 2013-12-13) - magazine that republished, in English, contemporary short stories from various countries; ;
- Stand Magazine (standmagazine
.org) - British literary magazine; founded 1952; now published at Leeds University; (British Literary Magazines, Volume 4, ed. Alvin Sullivan Greenwood Press, 1986) - Storgy Magazine (storgy
.com) - STORGY was founded in 2013 by Tomek Dzido and Anthony Self as a means by which to explore the short story form and engage with readers and artists alike.
Stage and theatre
People (playwrights and others)
- Sharon Bakker - Canadian stage and film performer
- Antony Braithwaite - Philadelphia actor; Barrymore award winner
- Amber Cureen - actor and arts manager in Auckland, New Zealand. (she/her Māori) Te Pou Theatre, Te Rēhia Theatre Company
- Hilary Dean - American stage and film performer; for more information go to bebo and look for HilaryD026
- Nick Drake (playwright)
- Katherine Fitzmaurice - fitzmauricevoice
.com - Eamon Foley - young actor; currently performing in
- Jon Adam Freeman - singer, actor, dancer; jonadamfreeman
.co .uk - Dylan Gamblin
- Gracie Gardner (American playwright, author of Athena)
- Paul Kalburgi - playwright, screenwriter and author of The Writer’s Toolkit, published by Nick Hern Books; ; ;
- Ryan Kiggell - award-winning theatre and television actor
- Yu Zuwa Junji Kinoshita - dramatist of Twilight of a Crane
- Helen Langworthy - founder, Little Theatre of the Rockies, Greeley, Colorado
- John Lion - started the award-winning theater The Magic Theater in San Fransico, Caliornia; helped launch careers of Sam Shepard, Peter Coyote and Ed Harris among others; recipient, the highest honor given by the Dramatists Guild; appeared in The Right Stuff; ; IMDB; ;
- Jonathan M. Mellor - theatre and television actor
- Larry Pressgrove - musical arranger and keyboardist for Broadway's
- Lulu Sweigard
- Benvolio Tomaiuolo - director, actor; punk-theatre pioneer
- David I. Taylor - theatre designer and theatrec consultant, Theatre Projects and Arup
- Orl Unho - cult American playwright
- Ferdinand Vanӗk
- Denis Vashurin, character like Benjamin Button.
- Stephen Wadsworth - American theater director and scholar/translator
- Tama Waipara - musician and arts manager in New Zealand, (he/him, Māori), currently director of Te Tairāwhiti Arts Festival
Non-people
A–K
- The Adventures of Princess Atlantis - books and musical created by Mark Frank
- Alternative Theatre Company - non-profit LGBT theatre company in New York City; produces gay-themed Off Broadway plays; production The Gayest Christmas Pageant Ever! playing (played?) at The Actors' Playhouse; alternativetheatreco
.org - Amuse Presents「THE GAME 〜Boy's Film Show〜」 - boysfilmshow
.jp /pc - The Barker Playhouse (theater) - theater in Providence, RI. Known as the America's oldest little theater, founded 1909
- Baroque-period drama
- The Beads (req. 2007-01-27) - lyric play written by M. Ragasa Avena, a Philippine writer in English
- Belt Up (nothing to see/hear) - British theatre company
- Bertolt Brecht techniques - techniques of Bertolt Brecht; there is already Category:Bertolt Brecht theories and techniques; an article on the same would be useful
- The Bishop's Candlesticks - play written by Norman McKinnel; People's Theatre, Newcastle upon Tyne; a "mundane drama"; produced in July 1911; often revived
- The Brothers Grimm Spectaculathon - play written by Don Zoildis (and some of his other works)
- Cariad Productions
- The Clockwork Theatre, Inc. - NYC-based not-for-profit theatre company; theclockworktheatre
.org - Close for Comfort Theatre Company -
- EBE Ensemble - New York-based theater ensemble; founded in 2006; dedicated to "developing and presenting new and unique works of theatre"; ; ; ; ; winner, 2009 NYIT Award for Best New Short Play; ; ; ;
- Eginton Alignment - alignment work established by Margaret Eginton; egintonalignment
.com - El Concierto Siniestro - Spanish play; about fictional murders; often used for Spanish projects in schools
- Factory of the Eccentric Actor - avant-garde Soviet theatre group in the 1920s
- Fitzmaurice Voicework - fitzmauricevoice
.com - Finger in the Pie Theatre - London-based theatre and cabaret company; notable for its role in the cabaret and burlesque revival in London and recent Total Theatre Award-nominated production of Sweeney Todd: His Life, Times and Execution; fingerinthepie
.com - Flinders University Drama Centre - acting school of Flinders University; see Xavier Samuel, Noni Hazlehurst, Scott Hicks
- Forest Fringe - artist-led Edinburgh Festival initiative; founded by Deborah Pearson and Andrew Field; winner of a Herald Angel, The Peter Brooke Award Special Mention for site-specific work, and the Arches Brick Award (for Paper Cinema's show The Night Flyer); forestfringe
.co .uk - Frederic Loewe Foundation
- Geordie Productions - professional Canadian theatre for young audiences; founded 1982; geordie
.ca; ; - Get Smart (play) - play written by Christopher Sergel
- Good Boys and True - play by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa ()
- Haroun and the Sea of Stories (play) - play by Salman Rushdie with Tim Supple and David Tushingham
- Historic Asolo Theater -
L–Z
- Laughtrack Theater Company - Hawaii's first home, and currently only home, for long-form improv in the arts disctrict of downtown Honolulu in Chinatown; laughtracktheater
.com - Livingston Theatre Company - Rutgers University's only theater company committed to only performing musicals
- List of Nobel Prize winners who have been dramatists
- London Theatre Blog - londontheatreblog
.co .uk; long-standing, non-profit, group-authored theatre publication covering the performing arts in London and beyond; edited by Andrew Eglinton; principal contributors: Stephe Harrop, Matt Bootman, Jens Peters, Diana Damian - Ludus Ludius Improvisation Theatre Company - theatre group based in Cardiff, Wales; creates theatre through improvised playfulness; ludusludius
.co .uk - Midnight's Children (play) - play by Salman Rushdie with Tim Supple and Simon Reade
- Missoula Children's Theatre
- Nakai Theatre - theatre associated with the Owen Williams (calligrapher)
- A Narrow Bed - play written by Ellen McLaughlin
- Peninsula Youth Theatre - nonprofit youth theatre in Mountain View, California; pytnet
.org - Pink Banana Theatre Company - theatre company in Milwaukee, Wisconsin
- psuedomedieval - term used in many medieval English literature classes to describe today's attempts at medieval-like works
- Red Lemon Productions - Belfast, Northern Ireland-based physical theatre company; supported by funding from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland; most recently produced The Weein at the Old Museum Arts Centre and reviewed on Culture Northern Ireland; redlemonproductions
.co .uk - Retaliation (musical) - modern youth musical; based on virtual reality; ; ; possible link with Once Upon a Midnight
- Saint John Theatre Company - locally run, not-for-profit theatre company in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada; saintjohntheatrecompany
.com - Speech Choir
- Sumner Theatre - the new theatre of the Melbourne Theatre Company; opened 2009
- The Suzi Bass Awards - Atlanta's version of the Tony Awards for professional theatre; similar in scope and prestige as The Helen Hayes Awards, The Joseph Jefferson Awards and The Carbonelles
- Te Rākau Hua o te Wao Tapu - longest running Māori theatre company also know as Te Rākau led by Jim Moriarty and Helen Pearse-Otene based in Wellington, New Zealand
- TeatroStageFest - Latino International Theater Festival of New York, Inc.
- Teesri Duniya Theatre - Canadian theatre
- Theatre in Norwich, England - an article on the local theatres and local professional theatre companies
- The Theater of Western Spring - theater in Western Springs, Illinois
- Too Much Punch for Judy - play written by Mark Wheeler (writer)
References
- https://ajithantony.com/
- http://www.gmc.goa.gov.in/images/Site_Images/photos/Forensic_Medicine/2020/Jul2020/Foren_Faculty_Details_2020.pdf
- https://www.goodreads.com/ajantony
- Crown, Bruce (2017). How Dim the Promised Land. Toronto: Vintage Copenhagen Publications. ISBN 9780995849242.
- Crown, Bruce (2016). The Romantic and The Vile (1 ed.). Toronto. ISBN 0995849226.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - "Emily A. Duncan". MacMillan Publishers. MacMillan. Retrieved June 14, 2021.
- Knight, Rosie. "Emily A. Duncan on BLESSED MONSTERS' 'Super Gross' Love Story". Nerdist. Nerdist. Retrieved June 14, 2021.
- www.joshuaemlen.com
- "The 45th Nail". Amazon.com. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- "Asylum: A story by Ian Lahey". Amazon.com. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- "Search: Lucal C Wesker". Google.com. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- McFall, Jaron. Surviving. Self-Published. pp. 4–10. ISBN 1719826560.
- "Surviving (The Living Saga)". Amazon. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- "East Ridge Middle School: Jaron McFall". Hamblen County Department of Education. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- "Completion Challenge Issued to Walters State Community College". Phi Theta Kappa News. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- WSCC Commencement. YouTube. May 2013. Event occurs at 1:33:32. Retrieved September 25, 2019.
- "Apple Distinguished Program" (PDF). Walters State Community College. p. 17. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- "House Joint Resolution 23" (PDF). Tennessee General Assembly. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- "Commencement Ceremony 2016" (PDF). East Tennessee State University. p. 42. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- https://www.craigmorecreations.com/trailing-tennessee
- https://www.blackrosewriting.com/teenya/willa?rq=cory%20mimms
- https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/cory-wheeler-mimms/trailing-tennessee/
- https://www.publishersweekly.com/9781940052007
- http://www.joylandmagazine.com/regions/pnw/boat-building
- https://www.oregonbusiness.com/component/search/?searchword=cory%20mimms&searchphrase=all&Itemid=399
- https://www.imdb.com/name/nm7971297/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1
- https://ooligan.pdx.edu/tags/cory-wheeler-mimms/
- https://www.spdbooks.org/Products/9780990666905/no-map-of-the-earth-includes-stars.aspx
- https://marshhawkpress.blogspot.com/2015/02/new-from-marsh-hawk-press.html
- http://www.belladonnaseries.org/chaplets/
- http://www.bronxarts.org/brio_winners_2018.asp
- https://www.jeromefdn.org/search/node?keys=olivares
- https://dev.lmcc.net/person/christina-olivares/
- http://www.christinaolivares.com
- https://jacket2.org/reviews/field-invisible
- https://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2016/09/party-like-its-1898
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- "El curioso caso de Denis Vashurin, el 'Benjamin Button' ruso de 32 años en el cuerpo de un niño de 13" (in Spanish). Antena 3.
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