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John Henry Noyes Collier (3 May 1901 – 6 April 1980) was a British-born writer and screenwriter best known for his short stories, many of which appeared in The New Yorker from the 1930s to the '50s.
Fancies and Goodnights is a collection of fantasies and murder stories by John Collier, first published by Doubleday Books in hardcover in 1951. A paperback edition followed from Bantam Books in 1953, and it has been repeatedly reprinted over more than five decades, most recently in the New York Review Books Classics line, with an introduction by Ray Bradbury.
John Collier (fiction writer) (1901–1980), British-born author and screenplay writer John Collier (sculptor) (born 1948), American sculptor and artist Basil Collier (John Basil Collier, 1908–1983), British author of books on military history
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Steve Coll – writer, 2005–2022; John Collier – short story writer, 1933–1934, 1937–1942, 1951, 1955–1956, 1958; Nate Collier – cartoonist, 1925 [19] Patricia Collinge – writer, 1925–1926; Billy Collins – poet, 2013–2019, 2021; James Collins – reporter, 2013; Lauren Collins – staff writer and editor, 2004–2023
John Collier (fiction writer) (1901–1980), British author and screenplay writer; John Collier (sociologist) (1884-1968), American sociologist, head of the Bureau of Indian Affairs; John Payne Collier (1789–1883), British Shakespearean critic and forger; Jonathan Collier, American television writer; L. J. Collier (born 1995), American ...
H. H. Rider Haggard; Stacey Halls; Greg Hamerton; Charles James Hankinson; Frances Hardinge; Joanne Harris; M. John Harrison; Michael Harrison (writer) Michelle ...
John Collier (May 4, 1884 – May 8, 1968), a sociologist and writer, was an American social reformer and Native American advocate. He served as Commissioner for the Bureau of Indian Affairs in the President Franklin D. Roosevelt administration, from 1933 to 1945.