Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Haunted Doll's House" is a 1923 short story by M. R. James, collected by him in A Warning to the Curious and Other Ghost Stories (1925). It was commissioned by Queen Mary , wife of George V , as a miniature book for her famous Dolls' House , which can still be seen in Windsor Castle .
The book centres on the discovery of a dead pre-transition male-to-female transgender individual on a council housing estate in Birmingham.The inside of the house is like a doll's house with pink ribbons and pink walls, stuffed toys and the table set for a tea party. [1]
The Doll's House (classified as The Sandman, vol. 2: The Doll's House) is the second trade paperback of the DC comic series The Sandman.It collects issues #9–16. It was written by Neil Gaiman, illustrated by Mike Dringenberg, Malcolm Jones III, Chris Bachalo, Michael Zulli and Steve Parkhouse, coloured by Robbie Busch and lettered by Todd Klein.
Ted Gioia described "The Doll-House" as "a very appealing mixture of ancient mythology and modern psychodrama". [1] Algis Budrys said that it was a Weird Tales-style story, only published in Dangerous Visions because "Harlan got desperate for material". [3] The manuscript for "The Doll-House" is held in the Hugh Parry collection at Boston ...
The Dollhouse Murders is a 1983 book written by author Betty Ren Wright. It is a story of teenager, Amy, and her sister, Louann, who had an intellectual disability. [1] [2] In 1989, it received the Rebecca Caudill Young Readers' Book Award. [3] It was adapted into a film for television in 1992.
A Doll's House, an 1879 play by Henrik Ibsen also known as A Dollhouse or A Doll House "The Doll's House" (short story), a 1922 short story by Katherine Mansfield; The Doll's House, a 1947 children's book by Rumer Godden "The Doll-House", a 1967 short story by James Cross; The Sandman: The Doll's House, the second volume of the comic book ...
There are no props in director Jamie Lloyd’s version of Henrik Ibsen’s drama “A Doll’s House” — no sets, no costumes (just plain contemporary clothing in dark blue), not even a curtain.
Betty Ren Wright (June 15, 1927 – December 31, 2013) [1] was an American writer of children's fiction including Christina's Ghost, The Dollhouse Murders, The Ghosts Of Mercy Manor and A Ghost in The House. [2] [3]