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As of 2022, Smith has published 11 novels, including nine young adult novels, one adult novel, and one novel aimed at middle graders. [5] Her first picture book, The Creature of Habit, illustrated by Leo Espinosa, was released in 2021. [6] Her first novel for adults, The Unsinkable Greta James, was released in 2022. [7]
On Book Marks, the book received a "rave" consensus, based on twelve critic reviews: nine "rave", two "positive", and one "mixed". [3] The book received an 83% from The Lit Review based on twenty-three critic reviews and the consensus of the reviews being, "A memoir-slash-love letter to Robert Mapplethorpe, Smith has created lyrical and intimate prose.
Air Trails; All-Around Magazine; Bill Barnes Air Adventures [1]; Do and Dare Weekly; Movie Action Magazine; New Story Magazine; Pete Rice Magazine [2]; Red Raven Library [3]; Sea Stories Magazine
Richard and Judy Book Club display at W.H. Smith, Enfield. The following is a list of books from the Richard & Judy Book Club, featured on the television chat show. The show was cancelled in 2009, but since 2010 the lists have been continued by the Richard and Judy Book Club, a website run in conjunction with retailer W. H. Smith.
Emma Smith (21 August 1923 – 24 April 2018) was an English novelist, who also wrote for children and published two volumes of autobiography. She gave encouragement to Laurie Lee while he was writing his bestselling memoir of his childhood, Cider with Rosie .
The original publication was part of a series of small (approximately 3 inch by 4 inch) books published by Hanuman Books from New York's Hotel Chelsea. [4] The slim book consists of eleven semi-autobiographical prose poems , and was written while Smith was living in Michigan, largely out of the public eye. [ 4 ]
The book grew out of Conditions magazine's November 1979 issue, "Conditions 5: the Black Women's Issue", originally edited by Barbara Smith and Lorraine Bethel. Conditions 5 was "the first widely distributed collection of Black feminist writing in the U.S." [4] The anthology was first published in 1983 by Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press, and was reissued by Rutgers University Press in 2000 ...
The Family D'Alembert series is a set of science fiction novels by Stephen Goldin, the first of which was expanded from the 1964 novella The Imperial Stars by E. E. "Doc" Smith. [1] The series later served as the basis for Goldin's series Agents of ISIS .