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Catherine Webb (born 1986) is a British author. Under the pseudonym Kate Griffin , she writes fantasy novels for adults. [ 1 ] As Claire North , she writes science fiction and novels based upon the work of Homer .
This is a list of mystery writers This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources .
Betty Webb; Martha G. Webb (pseudonym of Anne Wingate) (1943–2021) Patricia Wentworth (1878–1961) Valerie Wilson Wesley (born 1947) Ethel Lina White (1846–1944) Phyllis A. Whitney (1903–2008) Kate Wilhelm (1928–2018) Margaret Wetherby Williams (writing as Margaret Erskine) (1901–1984) Laura Wilson (born 1964) Anne Wingate (1943–2021)
Katherine Webb-McCarron took to her Instagram page earlier this month to look back on her time with Sports Illustrated Swimsuit. The former University of Auburn student, who went viral in the ...
27. The Mystery of the Ghostly Galleon (1979) While visiting at an inn owned by Miss Trask's brother, Trixie and the others attempt to solve an old mystery about a ship's captain who vanished in an unknown manner. They also help Mr. Trask, who is supposed to pay off a major loan that weekend. 28. The Hudson River Mystery (1979)
Catherine Webb (born 1986), English author; Kate Webb (1943–2007), Catherine Webb, New Zealand-born Australian foreign correspondent; Catherine Webb (co-operative activist) (1859–1947), British co-operative activist; Catherine Berndt, née Webb (1918–1994), Australian anthropologist; Katherine Webb (born 1977), English author
Former Auburn University student Katherine Webb went viral during the 2013 BCS National Championship Game. Webb, then dating her now husband in AJ McCarron, was there to support the Alabama ...
Stories in the locked-room mystery subgenre of detective fiction. In this subgenre, a crime (almost always murder ) is committed in circumstances under which it was seemingly impossible for the perpetrator to commit the crime or evade detection in the course of getting in and out of the crime scene.