Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Carol Colburn Grigor & Scottish film maker Murray Grigor. Carol Colburn Grigor, previously Carol Hogel, is an American philanthropist and former concert pianist who has donated more than $40 million by one estimate [1] and £100 million by another [2] to the arts in Britain and Ireland. Carol Grigor was raised in Chicago where she was taught ...
The Price of Salt (later republished under the title Carol) is a 1952 romance novel by Patricia Highsmith, first published under the pseudonym "Claire Morgan."Highsmith—known as a suspense writer based on her psychological thriller Strangers on a Train—used an alias as she did not want to be tagged as "a lesbian-book writer", [a] and she also used her own life references for characters and ...
William Alexander Murray Grigor OBE (born 1939) is a Scottish film-maker, writer, artist, exhibition curator and amateur architect who has served as director of the Edinburgh International Film Festival. He has made over 50 films with a focus on arts and architecture.
Keith David Watenpaugh left a favorable review of the book, stating that it draws on the work of the Workshop for Armenian/Turkish Scholarship and succeeds in "incorporating the perspective of a descendant of the genocide’s victims". [2] In International Affairs, Bill Park called the book a "painstakingly researched and highly readable work". [7]
Warning: This article contains spoilers about season 2, episode 4 of The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon — The Book of Carol, "La Paradis Pour Toi." Together again… at last.
I Alone Can Fix It: Donald J. Trump's Catastrophic Final Year is a nonfiction book written by Washington Post reporters Carol D. Leonnig and Philip Rucker.It was published by Penguin Press in 2021 and was a New York Times bestseller. [1]
Allison Holker has written a book about the loss of her husband, Stephen "tWitch" Boss, titled "This Far." Holker wrestled with the decision to write a book, she reveals within its pages.
Some troops leave the battlefield injured. Others return from war with mental wounds. Yet many of the 2 million Iraq and Afghanistan veterans suffer from a condition the Defense Department refuses to acknowledge: Moral injury.