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Michael Grumley (July 6, 1942 – April 28, 1988) was an American writer and artist.. Grumley was born in Bettendorf, Iowa.He attended the University of Denver, the City College of New York and the Iowa Writers' Workshop. [1]
The White Knight is a biography of the author Lewis Carroll by Alexander L. Taylor, first published in 1952. [1] References This page was last edited on 8 ...
The collection was reviewed by Gary K. Wolfe in Locus #748, May 2023, [2] by Andrew Mather in The Quill To Live, September 2023, [3] by Jeroen Admiraal in A Sky of Books and Movies, January 2024, [4] [unreliable source?] and by Teresa Edgerton in Chronicles, May 2024. [5]
White Knight: The Rise of Spiro Agnew, Random House (1972) The Resurrection of Richard Nixon, Putnam (1970) 85 Days: The Last Campaign of Robert Kennedy, Putnam (1969) (A 20th-anniversary edition was printed by Quill in 1988 with a new introduction by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and epilogue by the author)
The White Knight is a fictional character in Lewis Carroll's 1871 book Through the Looking-Glass. He represents the chess piece of the same name. As imagined in John Tenniel 's illustrations for the Alice stories, he is inspired by Albrecht Dürer 's 1513 engraving " Knight, Death and the Devil ."
He was a member of The Violet Quill, a gay writer's group that met in 1980 and 1981 and included Christopher Cox, Robert Ferro, Michael Grumley, Felice Picano, Edmund White, and George Whitmore. [2] [3] [4] Historically protective of his privacy, the author continues to use the pseudonym Andrew Holleran as a writer and public speaker.
Batman: Curse of the White Knight is an American comic book published by DC Comics under its Black Label imprint. The eight-issue limited series, written and illustrated by Sean Murphy, began publication on July 24, 2019 and concluded on March 25, 2020.
The Violet Quill (or the Violet Quill Club) was a group of seven gay male writers that met in 1980 and 1981 [1] in New York City to read from their writings to each other and to critique them. [2] This group and the writers epitomize the years between the Stonewall Riots and the beginning of the AIDS pandemic.