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Laura Elizabeth Howe Richards (February 27, 1850 – January 14, 1943) was an American writer. She wrote more than 90 books including biographies , poetry , and several for children. One well-known children's poem is her literary nonsense verse Eletelephony .
Captain January is an 1891 children's novel, about a lighthouse keeper and his adopted daughter, written by Laura E. Richards. [1] First published by Estes & Lauriat in Boston, it was also published in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, [2] and London, England. [3]
Beah Richards (1920–2000) Laura E. Richards (1850–1943) William Nauns Ricks (1876–1948) Lola Ridge (1873–1941) Laura Riding (1901–1991) Charles P. Ries (born 1952) James Whitcomb Riley (1849–1916) Alberto Ríos (born 1952) Laura Jacinta Rittenhouse (1841–1911) Tomás Rivera (1935–1984) Richard Robbins; Howard W. Robertson (born ...
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Maud Howe Elliott (November 9, 1854 – March 19, 1948) was an American novelist, most notable for her Pulitzer Prize-winning collaboration with her sisters, Laura E. Richards and Florence Hall, on their mother's biography The Life of Julia Ward Howe (1916).
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Their changing relationship is described by Elizabeth Friedmann in A Mannered Grace, by Richard Perceval Graves in Robert Graves: 1927–1940, The Years with Laura and by T. S. Matthews in Jacks or Better (1977; UK edition published as Under the Influence, 1979) and also was the basis for Miranda Seymour's novel The Summer of '39 (1998).
The book contains seventy-five poems with a range of poet-authors from a college freshman to the 1990 United States Poet Laureate. David Lehman publicly commented that poetry in America retains its vitality for both the poet and reader, after the 1989 series book attained bestseller status. [1]