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The Notebook was a hardcover best seller for more than a year. [3] In interviews, Sparks said he was inspired to write the novel by the story of his wife's grandparents, who had been married for more than 60 years when he met them. In The Notebook, he tried to express the long romantic love of that couple. [4]
The Notebook is a 2004 American romantic drama film directed by Nick Cassavetes, from a screenplay by Jeremy Leven and Jan Sardi, and based on the 1996 novel of the same name by Nicholas Sparks. The film stars Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams as a young couple who fall in love in the 1940s.
The Notebook is a musical with music and lyrics by Ingrid Michaelson and a book by Bekah Brunstetter. It is based on the 1996 novel of the same name , written by Nicholas Sparks . The musical opened on Broadway on March 14, 2024 at the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre .
The Notebook Trilogy is a collection of books by Hungarian writer Ágota Kristóf, written in the French language.It tells the story of originally unnamed identical-twin brothers who live with their grandmother in a small village and border town of a war-torn country during an unspecified war.
Betrayed by landowners who catch him poaching, Benoît is arrested for possessing a gun. During the arrest he contrives to shoot Bonnet dead. (In her notebook, Némirovsky mentions a possible revision where Bonnet is wounded, not killed.) The stories come together when, at Madeleine's request, Lucile conceals Benoît in her house.
Nicholas Charles Sparks (born December 31, 1965) is an American novelist, screenwriter, and film producer. He has published twenty-three novels, all New York Times bestsellers, [1] and two works of nonfiction, with over 115 million copies sold worldwide in more than 50 languages. [2]
Like his first published novel The Notebook, the prologue to A Walk to Remember was written last. [2] The title A Walk to Remember was taken from one of the tail end pages of the novel: "In every way, a walk to remember." [3] [4] The novel is written in first-person, and its narrator is a seventeen-year-old boy, living in the 1950s. [1]
Ágota Kristóf (Hungarian: Kristóf Ágota; 30 October 1935 – 27 July 2011) [1] was a Hungarian writer who lived in Switzerland and wrote in French. Kristóf received the "European prize" (Prix Europe, a.k.a. Prix Littéraire Europe, Grand Prix Littéraire Européen) from ADELF, the association of Francophone authors, for Le Grand Cahier (1986; later translated into English as The Notebook ...