Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Lisa Kristine (born September 2, 1965) [1] is an American humanitarian photographer, [2] activist, and speaker. Her photography has documented indigenous cultures and social causes, such as modern slavery, in more than 100 countries. [3] Through her work, Kristine has supported charities and humanitarian organizations. She is a member of the ...
Photo book; 0–9. 50 Photographs; 78-87 London Youth; 100 Photographs that Changed the World; 700 Nimes Road; 1964: Eyes of the Storm; A. Above New York;
Kristine's adventurous Christmas-themed dance music EP, Mary Did You Know, was released the same year. Kristine W's EP What I Like About You, on which the artist covered the song originally performed by American rock band The Romantics, was also released in 2011. 2012 marked the release of Kristine W's two-part album New and Number Ones.
In May 1943, just before the final “liquidation” of Chiger's community, a small group moves into the sewers through a secret hole her father had been digging for weeks using spoons, forks, and other small tools. While there, Chiger's grandmother knit her a green woolen sweater to keep her warm, inspiring the title of her book.
Martha Cecilia (13 May 1953 – 8 December 2014) was a Filipino writer of Tagalog romance pocketbook novels. She was the author of best selling novel series Kristine and Sweetheart.
Pages in category "Books of nude photography" The following 17 pages are in this category, out of 17 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9.
It was 17th on USA Today's 2018 year-end top 100 best-selling books list. [6] The novel won Best Historical Fiction at the 2018 Goodreads Choice Awards. [7] As of 2021, the novel has sold two million copies in the United States. [8] Overall, the novel received positive feedback from critics. [9]
The book as a whole created a complicated portrait of the period that was viewed as skeptical of contemporary values and evocative of ubiquitous loneliness. "Frank set out with his Guggenheim Grant to do something new and unconstrained by commercial diktats" and made "a now classic photography book in the iconoclastic spirit of the Beats". [1]