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Suspicion is a 1941 American romantic psychological thriller film noir directed by Alfred Hitchcock, and starring Cary Grant and Joan Fontaine as a married couple. It also features Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Nigel Bruce, Dame May Whitty, Isabel Jeans, Heather Angel, and Leo G. Carroll. Suspicion is based on Francis Iles's 1932 novel Before the Fact.
Suspicion (Ce qui était perdu), a 1930 novel by François Mauriac "Suspicion", a 1939 short story by Dorothy L. Sayers; Suspicion (Der Verdacht), a 1951 novel by Friedrich Dürrenmatt; Suspicion, a 1982 manga by Osamu Tezuka; Isaac Asimov's Robot City: Suspicion, a 1987 novel by Mike McQuay
David Richard Gibson (born 1969) is an American sociologist and associate professor of sociology at the University of Notre Dame. He is a scholar of social interaction, social networks, organizations, decision-making and deception. In a review article, Eviatar Zerubavel described him "as one of sociology's leading conversational analysts". [1]
Police in Pittston charged David Nelson, 52, of West Street, with stalking the woman at her Mill Street residence, which he attempted to enter with keys and a knife just before 5 a.m., according ...
William Nigel Ernle Bruce (4 February 1895 – 8 October 1953) was an English character actor on stage and screen. [1] He was best known for his portrayal of Dr. Watson in a series of films and in the radio series The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, starring with Basil Rathbone as Sherlock Holmes in both.
Suspicion (German: Der Verdacht) is a detective novel by the Swiss writer Friedrich Dürrenmatt in 1950 featuring the Inspector Bärlach. It has also been published as The Quarry . It is the sequel to Dürrenmatt's The Judge and His Hangman .
Mark Tuxford Nelson was born in 1954 [1] in New York City [2] and grew up in River Edge, New Jersey.His father Arthur Tuxford Nelson was a World War II veteran who worked for Union Carbide as a journalist for their technical literature, and his mother Gloria Anson Nelson was an art teacher at a public school.
Idoru is the second book in William Gibson's Bridge trilogy. Idoru is a science-fiction novel set in a postmodern, dystopian, cyberpunk future. One of the main characters, Colin Laney, has a talent for identifying nodal points, analogous to Gibson's own: Laney's node-spotter function is some sort of metaphor for whatever it is that I actually do.