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Duncan Macmillan (born 1980) [1] is an English playwright and director. He is most noted for his plays Lungs , People, Places and Things , Every Brilliant Thing, and the stage adaptation of the George Orwell novel Nineteen Eighty-Four , which he co-adapted and co-directed with Robert Icke .
Macmillan Publishers (occasionally known as the Macmillan Group; formally Macmillan Publishers Ltd in the UK and Macmillan Publishing Group, LLC in the US) is a British publishing company traditionally considered to be one of the "Big Five" English language publishers (along with Penguin Random House, Hachette, HarperCollins and Simon & Schuster).
Macmillan Inc. was an American book publishing company originally established as the American division of the British Macmillan Publishers.The two were later separated and acquired by other companies, with the remnants of the original American division of Macmillan present in McGraw-Hill Education's Macmillan/McGraw-Hill textbooks, Gale's Macmillan Reference USA division, and some trade ...
Macmillan Education was created as an imprint and division of the broader Macmillan publishing business in the UK in the early 1970s. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] In 1994 it became legally framed within Macmillan Education Ltd, a company in the Macmillan group. [ 3 ]
Liberty Hyde Bailey [1] Francis Marion Crawford’s Saracinesca [2] [3] [4] Margaret Mitchell's Gone With the Wind in 1936 [5] Rachel Field's All This, and Heaven Too in 1938; Kathleen Winsor's Forever Amber in 1944 [6] C. S. Lewis; Marianne Moore [7] Ayn Rand's book We the Living in 1936 [8] Cathy Scott's The Murder of Biggie Smalls in 2001 [9]
Wilson's work has won the Hugo Award for Best Novel (for Spin), [2] the John W. Campbell Memorial Award (for the novel The Chronoliths), [3] the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award (for the novelette "The Cartesian Theater"), three Prix Aurora Awards (for the novels Blind Lake and Darwinia, and the short work "The Perseids"), and the Philip K. Dick Award (for the novel Mysterium). [4]
[1] In 1998, Macmillan Canada, as it was then known, became an imprint of CDG Books, which was formed as a joint venture of Gage and US publisher Hungry Minds. CDG was purchased in 2002 by John Wiley & Sons, who had acquired Hungry Minds the year before. At this time Macmillan Canada ceased to exist either as an imprint or a publishing house. [2]
[2] February 2 – A largely rewritten version of Roi Cooper Megrue and Walter C. Hackett's 1914 farce It Pays to Advertise opens in a production by actor-manager Tom Walls, at the Aldwych Theatre in London. It runs until 10 July 1925, a total of 598 performances, as the first in a sequence of twelve Aldwych farces. [3] [4] [5]