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Canadian author, poet, journalist and publisher [120] Claire Martin: 1914–2014: 100: Canadian novelist [121] Lambert Mascarenhas: 1914–2021: 106: Indian journalist (The Navhind Times and Goa Today), independence activist and writer [122] Mildred Shapley Matthews: 1915–2016: 101: American book editor and writer, best known for her ...
Ruth Moose, author and former UNC-Chapel Hill professor, sits for a portrait at her home in Albemarle, N.C. Since retiring, Moose continues to write, having recently released her book The Goings ...
The Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference runs through Saturday, Aug. 24, giving Vermonters the chance to attend free talks and readings by some of today’s top fiction authors, nonfiction writers and ...
American educator and author [117] Barbara Reynolds: 1914–2015: 100: British scholar of Italian studies [118] Fazlollah Reza: 1915–2019: 104: Iranian professor of engineering [119] Laban Lacy Rice: 1870–1973: 102: American educator and President of Cumberland University [120] Charles P. Roland: 1918–2022: 104: American historian [121 ...
James H. Morey – Professor of English, expert in Middle English; Salman Rushdie – author and literary scholar; Avi Sharon – professor of classics, translator, consultant; Stephen Spender – artist in residence, mid-1980s; Natasha Trethewey – Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, United States Poet Laureate 2012 and Robert W. Woodruff professor ...
Many complained of there being only nine books- Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift (1726), The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman by Laurence Sterne (1759), The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde (1891); Dracula by Bram Stoker (1897), Ulysses by James Joyce (1922), Murphy by Samuel Beckett (1938), At Swim-Two-Birds by Flann ...
Richard Mitchell (April 26, 1929 – December 27, 2002) was a professor, first of English and later of classics, [1] at Glassboro State College in Glassboro, New Jersey.He gained fame in the late-1970s as the founder and publisher of The Underground Grammarian, a newsletter of opinion and criticism that ran until 1992, and wrote four books expounding his views on the relationships among ...
Bauerlein's books include Literary Criticism: An Autopsy (1997) and The Pragmatic Mind: Explorations in the Psychology of Belief (1997). He is also the author of the 2008 book The Dumbest Generation: How the Digital Age Stupefies Young Americans and Jeopardizes Our Future (Or, Don't Trust Anyone Under 30), [citation needed] which won the Nautilus Award.