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Beverly Marie Beaver [1] (née Inman; December 23, 1946 – April 21, 2011), [2] better known as Beverly Barton, was an American author, known for her romantic suspense novels. She wrote over thirty contemporary romance novels and created the popular The Protectors series for Harlequin Enterprises –owned Silhouette's Intimate Moments lines.
Wyndham's first published sf story, "Worlds to Barter", was published in the May 1931 issue of Wonder Stories, under his pen name John Beynon Harris. Wyndham/Harris as pictured in the May 1931 Wonder Stories Wyndham's second story, "The Lost Machine", was cover-featured on the April 1932 issue of Amazing Stories, also under his Harris pen name Wyndham's 1934 novelette "The Moon Devils" was the ...
Working on John's orders, Bart, who now believes he is a vessel for his great-grandfather's vengeful spirit, locks Cathy and Corinne in the cellar, where John plans to starve them to death. Hearing this plan, Bart realizes how much he loves his mother and grandmother, despite their actions, and he tells Chris where they are.
She has written over 35 romance novels for Harlequin Enterprises since 1991. ... (2005) (with Beverly Barton) Passionate Secrets (2006) (with Maggie Shayne)
The Sot-Weed Factor was initially intended, with Barth's previous two novels, as the concluding novel on a trilogy on nihilism, but the project took a different direction as a consequence of Barth's maturation as a writer. [1] The novel takes its title from a poem of the same name published in London in 1708 and signed Ebenezer Cooke.
The books were written by Julie Campbell Tatham, writing as Julie Campbell. Margaret Jervis was the illustrator. Margaret Jervis was the illustrator. In 1947 the Whitman Publishing Company was seeking juvenile mystery and adventure book series, and Tatham sent them an outline and sample chapters of The Swap Shop Mystery , with Ginny Gordon as ...
Beverly Gray is a series of mystery stories comprising 26 novels, and published between 1934 and 1955, by Clair Blank, the pen name of Clarissa Mabel Blank Moyer. [1] The novels began as a series of school stories, following the progress of Beverly, its main character, through college, various romances, and a career as a reporter, before ...
The first issue of the Abbott and Costello comic book, published in February 1948 by St. John Publishing, was an adaptation of the film. Out of the forty issues published between 1948 and 1956, this was the only one that was based on one of their films.