Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Andrew Neiderman (born October 26, 1940) is an American novelist. In 1987, he became the ghost writer for V. C. Andrews following her death in 1986. [ 1 ] He formerly taught English at Fallsburg Jr./Sr. High School, in upstate New York.
Pin is one of Neiderman's earlier standalone horror novels, and features themes and ideas that would later become popular in his other written works. This includes gothic romanticism, Freudian psychology, isolated properties, family dysfunction, child abuse, childhood trauma, sexual fetishism, incest and the struggle to fit in with societal social norms.
Dawn was a 1990 novel started by V. C. Andrews and finished by Andrew Neiderman after her death. It is the first of five books in the Cutler series. Plot summary
V. C. Andrews died in 1986, and her estate commissioned ghostwriter Andrew Neiderman to continue writing novels under her name developed from plot outlines originally written by Andrews. There is some dispute over whether this particular novel was written in part by Andrews before she died, or whether it was written entirely by Neiderman.
The prolific Palm Springs author will release a biography of writer V.C. Andrews on Feb. 1., 'The Woman Beyond the Attic'
Web of Dreams was written in 1990 by V. C. Andrews ghostwriter Andrew Neiderman.It is the fifth and final novel in The Casteel Series and is as a prequel to Heaven.Told primarily from the viewpoint of Heaven Casteel's mother, Leigh VanVoreen, the novel explains her secrets and circumstances as a 13-year-old girl who was forced to flee her wealthy Boston home, resulting in her dying in ...
Pin is an adaptation of the 1981 novel of the same name written by Andrew Neiderman. [2] The novel eventually found its way to Sandor Stern, a director who had started off as a medical doctor, who loved Neiderman's rich characters as well as the unconventional focus of an anatomical medical dummy. [2]
The Baby Squad is a dystopian thriller by Andrew Neiderman first published in 2003. [1] Set in the United States in the not-too-distant future, the novel envisages a future American society where giving birth to children is illegal and where only few women are biologically able to reproduce.