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John Victor Maxwell Braithwaite (7 December 1911 – 19 March 1995) was a Canadian novelist and non-fiction author. He was born in Nokomis , Saskatchewan and spent his youth in a number of communities in that province.
Lawrence Ytzhak Braithwaite: 1963 2008 essayist, novelist, poet Max Braithwaite: 1911 1995 novelist, non-fiction The Night We Stole the Mountie's Car: Shannon Bramer: 1973 poet The Refrigerator Memory: Alan Bradley: 1938 mystery Flavia de Luce series Dionne Brand: 1953 essayist, novelist, poet What We All Long For, Land to Light On: Di Brandt: 1952
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Eventually, they come to an understanding, after Max discovers a vein of nickel ore on May's rural property just before she was to sell it. When Honey gives birth to Max's child, Zach, he is delighted. Max is a freelance writer, who sometimes writes crime stories or pieces for the local radio station, in addition to being school vice-principal.
Eustace Edward Ricardo Braithwaite (June 27, 1912 – December 12, 2016), publishing as E. R. Braithwaite, was a Guyanese-born British-American novelist, writer, teacher and diplomat best known for his stories of social conditions and racial discrimination against black people.
Braithwaite, Brathwaite, or Brathwait is an English surname of Old Norse origin. [1] At the time of the British Census of 1881, [2] the relative frequency of the surname Braithwaite was highest in Westmorland (37.3 times the British average), followed by Cumberland, Yorkshire, Linlithgowshire, Lancashire, County Durham, Nottinghamshire, Leicestershire, Anglesey and Flintshire.
Lawrence Christopher Patrick (aka Ytzhak) Braithwaite (March 17, 1963 – July 14, 2008 [1]) was a Canadian novelist, spoken-word artist, dub poet, essayist, digital drummer and short fiction writer. Born in Montreal , Quebec , he has been called "one of the outstanding Canadian prose writers alive" (Gail Scott) and linked to the "New Narrative ...
In 1633 his wife died, and in 1639 he married again. His only son by this second marriage, Sir Strafford Brathwait, was killed at sea. [1] Brathwait is believed to have served with the Royalist army in the Civil War. Frontispiece to A Solemne Joviall Disputation, 1617