Wikipedia:Requested articles/Arts and entertainment/Literature: Difference between revisions
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*[[Chanda Feldman]] (born December 17, 1976) is a poet. She is author of Approaching the Fields, LSU Press [https://lsupress.org/authors/detail/chanda-feldman/] She has received awards and fellowships from the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, the Cave Canem Foundation, the MacDowell Colony, and the National Endowment for the Arts[https://www.arts.gov/nea-literature-fellowships/chanda-feldman]. She was a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University from 2008-2010. She holds an MFA from Cornell University and a BA in English Language and Literature from the University of Chicago. Chanda Feldman is an assistant professor of creative writing at Oberlin College. [https://www.oberlin.edu/chanda-feldman] |
*[[Chanda Feldman]] (born December 17, 1976) is a poet. She is author of Approaching the Fields, LSU Press [https://lsupress.org/authors/detail/chanda-feldman/] She has received awards and fellowships from the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, the Cave Canem Foundation, the MacDowell Colony, and the National Endowment for the Arts[https://www.arts.gov/nea-literature-fellowships/chanda-feldman]. She was a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University from 2008-2010. She holds an MFA from Cornell University and a BA in English Language and Literature from the University of Chicago. Chanda Feldman is an assistant professor of creative writing at Oberlin College. [https://www.oberlin.edu/chanda-feldman] |
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*[[Ben Fergusson]] (born July 12, 1980) is a writer and translator. In 2015 his debut novel The Spring of Kasper Meier (2014) won the Betty Trask Prize [https://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/jun/26/betty-trask-award-ben-fergussons-debut-novel], the HWA Debut Crown [https://www.harrogate-news.co.uk/2016/10/23/cecilia-ekback-philippa-gregory-win-historical-fiction-awards/] and was shortlisted for the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award [https://www.thebookseller.com/news/sarah-howe-wins-sunday-timespfd-young-writer-year-318317]. His second and third novels, The Other Hoffmann Sister (2016) and An Honest Man (2019) completed a trilogy of novels set in the same apartment block in Berlin [https://inews.co.uk/culture/books/an-honest-man-by-ben-fergusson-review-322012]. The latter was a book of the year in The Times, [https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/the-best-new-historical-fiction-lust-loyalty-and-breaking-barriers-in-cold-war-berlin-8sq0ww5kc] the Financial Times [https://www.ft.com/content/8abea34a-0c12-11ea-b2d6-9bf4d1957a67] and the Times Literary Supplement [https://www.the-tls.co.uk/articles/books-of-the-year-2019/]. He lives in Berlin with his husband and son [https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2020/jul/18/mums-day-off-is-it-what-adopting-as-a-same-sex-couple-taught-us] and teaches at the University of Potsdam [https://www.uni-potsdam.de/de/unterrichtsinterventionsforsch/team/benfergusson.html]. |
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She is author of Approaching the Fields, LSU Press [https://lsupress.org/authors/detail/chanda-feldman/] She has received awards and fellowships from the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, the Cave Canem Foundation, the MacDowell Colony, and the National Endowment for the Arts[https://www.arts.gov/nea-literature-fellowships/chanda-feldman]. She was a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University from 2008-2010. She holds an MFA from Cornell University and a BA in English Language and Literature from the University of Chicago. Chanda Feldman is an assistant professor of creative writing at Oberlin College. [https://www.oberlin.edu/chanda-feldman] |
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*[[Bradda Field]] (1904-1957) Canadian-born writer, daughter of [[Agnes Herbert]]. She was author of The Earthen Lot, 1928; Small Town, 1931 (awarded Femina Vie Heureuse prize, 1932–1933); Grand Harbour, 1934; Miledi, 1942, published in America as Bride of Glory (Literary Guild choice) [https://doi.org/10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U237206] |
*[[Bradda Field]] (1904-1957) Canadian-born writer, daughter of [[Agnes Herbert]]. She was author of The Earthen Lot, 1928; Small Town, 1931 (awarded Femina Vie Heureuse prize, 1932–1933); Grand Harbour, 1934; Miledi, 1942, published in America as Bride of Glory (Literary Guild choice) [https://doi.org/10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U237206] |
Revision as of 10:57, 28 July 2020
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- [[Warwick Collins]], British novelist, author of Gents — see his blog at http://www.publicpoems.com.
Do NOT add a link such as [[Collins, Warwick]], as it will not be able to be created and it will be removed.
You may also wish to have a look at Wikipedia:WikiProject Books, Wikipedia:WikiProject Novels and similar pages to learn more about collaborating on literature articles.
Authors (poets, novelists and fiction writers)
A
- Ibtisam M. Abujad, (Arabic: ابتسام ابو جاد) (born November 28, 1981 in Amman, Jordan)is a Muslim American poet and scholar. Ibtisam lives with her husband and four children in Milwaukee, WI.
She is known for her poetry and creative works which explore transnational Muslim experiences of migration. Her works have been published in a number of literary journals, such as The Nasiona, the University of Wisconsin’s Cream City Review, Blue Minaret Literary Journal, Rigorous, and Entropy.
Career
Abujad graduated with an MA in Literature and Cultural Theory from the University of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, after which she joined the doctoral program at Marquette University, a private Jesuit institution in the same state. Early on in her career, she taught Arabic Language, Literature, and Culture, but subsequently began focusing on migrancy and the field of Critical Muslim Studies.
(https://migrationdirectory.ajcunet.edu/united-states/milwaukee/faculty/ms-ibtisam-m-abujad)
(https://entropymag.org/calling-back-the-buraq/)
(http://www.blueminaret.com/your-mayjana/)
(http://www.blueminaret.com/the-boundaries-of-ancient-salih/)
(https://muse.jhu.edu/article/717279)
(https://thenasiona.com/2019/04/03/she-who-flies-over-ramallah/)
(https://www.rigorous-mag.com/v3i3/ibtisam-abujad.html)
Mentions in media: (https://marquettewire.org/3970701/news/take-a-stroll-in-my-scarf/)
- Sinan Alili, (born May 26, 1984 in Oslo, Norway) is a Norwegian writer, actor, producer and founder of StarReel Entertainment. He's best known for his work on Arrow, Seventh Son, Lego The Movie and Need For Speed. (https://www.imdb.com/name/nm5487257/), (https://pro.imdb.com/company/co0418490/). (http://www.starreel.com/) (https://www.cinoche.com/films/le-film-lego-2) (https://www.filmo.gs/credit/303796-starreel-entertainment) (http://www.classification.gov.au/Pages/View.aspx?sid=rzcjJKBggxbtaRYwe00oHQ%3D%3D) (https://www.metacritic.com/person/alili-sinan) (http://youmusic.tripod.com/talkingmovies/index.html)
- Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi American-British-Iranian writer; winner of 2019 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction. (https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/azareen-van-der-vliet-oloomis-call-me-zebra-wins-penfaulkner-award-for-fiction/2019/04/29/c03cc98e-6857-11e9-a1b6-b29b90efa879_story.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.fc53c014070c)
- Abhishek Kapoor (Author) (Indian author; Best known book name: The Selfish Betrayals; Born on August 8, 1987 in Kanpur, India; He has verified knowledge panel on Google and also a verified author on Goodreads. He has contributed significantly towards technical training of students and young professionals of Kanpur. He initiated the Jagruk India online campaign. The Selfish Betrayals is the first book written by him and is dedicated to his two little ones, who were unfortunately lost at different points of times. He is the only author in the world to dedicate his book to the children that were lost due to miscarriage. (https://g.co/kgs/R9RPn4), (https://www.goodreads.com/authorabhishekkapoor), (https://g.co/kgs/64ajJo), (https://www.amarujala.com/uttar-pradesh/kanpur/abhishek-kapoor-first-english-novel-the-selfish-betrayals-released), (https://theselfishbetrayals.com/), (https://www.amazon.in/Selfish-Betrayals-Abhishek-Kapoor/dp/9353611822), (https://www.amazon.in/Selfish-Betrayals-inevitable-impossible-ebook/dp/B07RSMJM5X/), (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/46404719-the-selfish-betrayals), (https://khyatigautam.wordpress.com/2019/07/23/the-selfish-betrayals-abhishek-kapoor-book-review/amp/), (https://books.google.co.in/books?id=GL2kDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA4&lpg=PA4&dq=abhishek+kapoor+the+selfish+betrayals&source=bl&ots=yDBbxWlSfN&sig=ACfU3U2hM7xEDW9Cpzp1Vr9YD26Mv5M96g&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjr2efQwaXkAhX64HMBHRmGBT4Q6AEwE3oECAkQAQ#v=onepage&q=abhishek%20kapoor%20the%20selfish%20betrayals&f=false), (https://www.google.com/search?q=abhishek+kapoor+the+selfish+betrayals&tbm=isch&source=univ&client=firefox-b-d&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjr2efQwaXkAhX64HMBHRmGBT4QsAR6BAgDEAE&biw=1366&bih=654), (https://www.instagram.com/theselfishbetrayals/)
- Amanda Lees British author born in Hong Kong, who also works as an actress and broadcaster. Mostly famous for her Kumari book series trilogy and she resides in London in the UK.
Her claimed Goodreads account with published books: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/669263.Amanda_Lees Her twitter account: https://twitter.com/amandalees Her books on Amazon.com: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Amanda-Lees/e/B002BM7VVQ%3Fref=dbs_a_mng_rwt_scns_share
B
- Bahk, Jane, award-winning children's book author. Juna's Jar is an NEA Foundation First Book and APALA Literature Award winner. (https://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/18/books/review/jane-bahks-junas-jar-and-more.html)
- Cooper S. Beckett, is the author of novels A Life Less Monogamous and Approaching the Swingularity: Tales of Swinging & Polyamory in Paradise, and his memoir My Life on the Swingset: Adventures in Swinging & Polyamory. [1] He is the co-founder of Life on the Swingset, a website about swinging and polyamory [2] and is the host of the website's podcast, Life On The Swingset. [3]
- Burrowes, Grace, best-selling, award-winning author of over 75 historical romance novels. Noted for premiering with a trilogy instead of a single book. Many of the books center around the fictional Westhaven family and their friends. (https://www.graceburrowes.com)
- Ben Brykczynski, is the author of Godzilla: A Comprehensive Guide. He also runs Godzilla Movie Reviews. (https://benbrykczynski.wordpress.com)
- Sydney S. Baron, is the author of One Whirl, a 1944 satire
- Bond Alaric, English novelist and author of the Fighting Sail series of nautical fiction books. https://www.alaricbond.com/ . Mentioned in https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Napoleonic_Wars_in_fiction
C
- Carmen Capuano, author, screenwriter and playwright. Born in Glasgow in 1966, she lives in Worcestershire and is the author of multiple genre books and screenplays.
- Amanda Carlson, author, https://www.amandacarlson.com/
- Simon Chapple, British author, public speaker and sobriety coach. Author of The Sober Survival Guide — has featured in national press, radio and TV, see his blog at https://besober.co.uk/in-the-media/
- Lucal C Wesker, (born May 15, 1996) erotic author. Wrote boy love erotic novels. [1]
- Ray Celestin
D
- S.J. Dahlstrom, American writer of fiction and poetry, three-time winner of Will Rogers Medallion, National Cowboy Hall of Fame Wrangler winner, Western Writers of America Spur Finalist, three-time Lamplighter Finalist for his series "The Adventures of Wilder Good."
https://www.lubbockonline.com/news/local-news/education/2018-01-08/lubbock-teacher-children-s-author-dahlstrom-continues-roping https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R-vIcxM6JvQ https://www.pauldrybooks.com/collections/featured-products/products/wilder-good-black-rock-brothers http://wildergood.com https://christianchronicle.org/tales-of-an-honest-to-god-cowboy/ https://www.amazon.com/gp/bookseries/B00YWGZ5HG/ref=dp_st_1589880870
- Divyansh Mishra DM, Indian fiction writer with over 10 books in a young age of 14. According to the google knowledge panel, he has been invited by Harvard Univeristy for his books.
https://g.co/kgs/uc87vJ https://books.google.co.in/books?id=HIV_DwAAQBAJ&num=15 https://www.goodreads.com/goodreadscomdiv https://www.instagram.com/divyanshmishradm/ https://twitter.com/DivyanshMisraDM https://www.amazon.com/author/divyanshmishradm
- Marjorie Darke, British fiction writer, children's historical novelist, author of A Question of Courage, First of Midnight, A Long Way to Go, Comeback, and others. https://www.librarything.com/author/darkemarjorie https://www.biblio.com/marjorie-darke/author/115174 http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?81805 https://oxfordindex.oup.com/view/10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U12834 https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/books/a-q-a-with-henrietta-mckervey-1.2666051 https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/402411.Marjorie_Darke
- Hernan Diaz, American fiction writer, Pulitzer Prize finalist author of In the Distance, Borges between History and Eternity, and several short stories https://www.pulitzer.org/finalists/hernan-diaz https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/02/books/hernan-diaz-in-the-distance.html https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_the_Distance https://www.inthedistancenovel.com/ https://www.hernandiaz.net/ https://www.whiting.org/awards/winners/hernan-diaz#/ https://www.penfaulkner.org/award-for-fiction/hernan-diaz/ https://best-books.publishersweekly.com/pw/best-books/2017/top-10#book/book-8 https://www.theguardian.com/books/2018/jul/06/in-the-distance-hernan-diaz-review-western https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2017/12/22/paris-review-staffs-favorite-books-2017/ http://library.stanford.edu/node/142538
- Christina Dalcher, American fiction writer, national and international bestselling author of VOX (Berkley 2018) and MASTER CLASS (Berkley 2020), Writer of micro fiction, first place winner of The Bath Flash Fiction Award (February 2019), Ph.D. Theoretical Linguistics, Georgetown University
https://christinadalcher.com https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/authors/2179142/christina-dalcher/ https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/37796866-vox https://time.com/5173343/vox-christina-dalcher-excerpt-cover-reveal/ https://nypost.com/2018/08/18/the-weeks-best-books-2/ https://www.thebookseller.com/profile/christina-dalcher-793736 https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/the-sunday-times-bestsellers-march-24-7kwkqgtfv https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2018/aug/23/book-review-vox-by-christina-dalcher/
- Max Davine, Australian author, essayist, PhD Literature
http://www.maxdavine.com/ https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6609884.Max_Davine https://www.imdb.com/name/nm2863751/ https://www.amazon.com/Max-Davine/e/B00FFJRU3G%3Fref=dbs_a_mng_rwt_scns_share http://www.thecosydragon.com/2019/06/interview-with-max-davine.html http://tamarindhillpress.co.uk/books-and-authors/
E
Emaan Zahra Ijaz- ( born December 8 2003 ) Author of Fleeing From The Flames, Realistic fiction writer.
Joshua Emlen - Author, Technology Enthusiast, Developer; Was born in Colorado. Author of The Secret Of Bright Inn [4]. His website is reachable at joshuaemlen.com [5] [2]
Scott Elliott, (born September 12, 1970) American fiction writer, author of the novels Coiled in the Heart (Putnam 2004) and Temple Grove (University of Washington Press 2013). http://www.scottelliott.net/ https://bookpage.com/reviews/3064-scott-elliott-coiled-heart-fiction#.XL83mJhKg2w https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=1501571 https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1830655.Coiled_in_the_Heart https://www.oregonlive.com/books/2013/05/temple_grove_review_lives_shap.html https://www.seattletimes.com/entertainment/books/lsquotemple-groversquo-war-over-olympic-peninsularsquos-old-trees/ http://www.newsofmillcreek.com/content/northwest-reads-university-book-store-temple-grove-scott-elliott https://www.mtpr.org/post/loggers-big-trees-and-pacific-northwest-indians https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/16285372-temple-grove?from_search=true http://old.seattletimes.com/html/books/2024751109_washingtonbookawardsxml.html https://nwbooklovers.org/2013/05/01/soak-the-map-in-rain-capturing-the-olympic-peninsula/ https://readinggroupchoices.com/books/temple-grove/
Ben Egginton, English novelist, author of historical fiction novels and textbooks, including The Chronicles of Ascension series (2019) and Shorthand SOS (2019) — see his author page at https://www.amazon.co.uk/Ben-Egginton/e/B07HT3LJG4/ref=dp_byline_cont_ebooks_1
- Evan Jones, author of "The Bard: Or, the Towers of Morven: a Legendary Tale".
https://books.google.com.br/books/about/The_Bard.html?id=0uaEtAEACAAJ&source=kp_book_description&redir_esc=y https://www.amazon.com/Bard-Towers-Morven-Legendary-Tale/dp/134339483X https://books.google.com.br/books?id=F6kiAAAAMAAJ&pg=PR3&source=kp_read_button&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q&f=false
F
- Latorial Faison (born April 14, 1973) American writer, poet, educator, and author of Mother to Son, Twenty-eight Days of Poetry Celebrating Black History, Love Poems, I Am Woman, Kendall's Golf Lesson, Secrets of My Soul, and Immaculate Perceptions. Military spouse and 2018 winner of the Tom Howard Poetry Prize sponsored by Winning Writers. English professor and 2018 finalist for the Furious Flower Poetry Prize, semi-finalist for the 2018 Wheeler Poetry Prize and the North Street Book Prize. http://www.latorialfaison.com/
- Chanda Feldman (born December 17, 1976) is a poet. She is author of Approaching the Fields, LSU Press [6] She has received awards and fellowships from the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, the Cave Canem Foundation, the MacDowell Colony, and the National Endowment for the Arts[7]. She was a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University from 2008-2010. She holds an MFA from Cornell University and a BA in English Language and Literature from the University of Chicago. Chanda Feldman is an assistant professor of creative writing at Oberlin College. [8]
- Ben Fergusson (born July 12, 1980) is a writer and translator. In 2015 his debut novel The Spring of Kasper Meier (2014) won the Betty Trask Prize [9], the HWA Debut Crown [10] and was shortlisted for the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award [11]. His second and third novels, The Other Hoffmann Sister (2016) and An Honest Man (2019) completed a trilogy of novels set in the same apartment block in Berlin [12]. The latter was a book of the year in The Times, [13] the Financial Times [14] and the Times Literary Supplement [15]. He lives in Berlin with his husband and son [16] and teaches at the University of Potsdam [17].
She is author of Approaching the Fields, LSU Press [18] She has received awards and fellowships from the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, the Cave Canem Foundation, the MacDowell Colony, and the National Endowment for the Arts[19]. She was a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University from 2008-2010. She holds an MFA from Cornell University and a BA in English Language and Literature from the University of Chicago. Chanda Feldman is an assistant professor of creative writing at Oberlin College. [20]
- Bradda Field (1904-1957) Canadian-born writer, daughter of Agnes Herbert. She was author of The Earthen Lot, 1928; Small Town, 1931 (awarded Femina Vie Heureuse prize, 1932–1933); Grand Harbour, 1934; Miledi, 1942, published in America as Bride of Glory (Literary Guild choice) [21]
- Mackenzie Flohr (born April 14, 1982) is a young adult fantasy author. She is author of The Rite of Wands, BHC Press [22] She has received awards from the Literary Classics Book Awards[23], the Foreword Magazine INDIES Book Awards[24], the Imadjinn Awards[25], and finaliist in the International Book Awards[26], and Author Academy Awards[27]. She holds a BA in Business Administration from Ashland University. http://www.mackenzieflohr.com/
- Ele Fountain (born 1979) was a children's editor and now an author, of such books like Boy 87, 2018 (awarded the Waterstones Children's book award) and Lost, 2020. [28]
G
- Jim Gavin, (ISNI: 0000 0003 6011 2680), author, creator of TV series, Lodge 49. Author of "Middle men" (2012). [29] [30]
- Geoffrey "Geoff" Merrick, an international author, and self-proclaimed bondage enthusiast. He's primarily known for his more risky works most notably his involvement with the FansadoX comics which usually involve beautiful young women in peril but he's also done other stories centered around different projects and genres.
- Richard Georges, writer and editor from the British Virgin Islands. Author of three collections of poetry, "Make Us All Islands" (Shearsman Books, 2017), which was shortlisted for the Felix Dennis Prize for Best First Collection by the Forward Prizes for Poetry, "Giant" (Platypus Press, 2018) which was highly commended by the Forward Prizes and longlisted for the 2019 OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature, and "Epiphaneia" (Out-spoken Press, 2019) which won the 2020 OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature. [31] [32] [33]
- Fawzia Gilani-Williams, internationally known Islamic children’s literature author, https://fawziagilani.com ; www.EidStories.org
- Eileen Goudge, best-selling American novelist, https://eileengoudge.com/
- Jeyna Grace (born December 3, 1990), Malaysian novelists with two novels, The Battle for Oz (published September 2015) and The Slave Prince (published May 2018) by Inkshares, she won the Geek & Sundry Fantasy Contest in 2016 and was nominated as a CLEO HotShot 2018, http://jeynagrace.wordpress.com
- Chadwick Ginther (ISNI: 0000 0003 7326 9126), author from Winnipeg, Manitoba, originally from Morden, Manitoba (https://ravenstonebooks.com/authors/chadwick-ginther.html). He is mentioned in several articles on Wikipedia without having a separate page (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_winners_and_nominees_for_the_Aurora_Award_for_Best_Novel#cite_note-Aurora13-31) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aurora_Awards_for_Fan_Achievement) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brave_New_Words:_The_Manitoba_Writing_and_Publishing_Awards). He wrote the Thunder Road trilogy (Thunder Road, Tombstone Blues, and Too Far Gone) and Graveyard Mind (published 2018: ) Other links: Author Bio with Chizine Publications: https://chizinepub.com/chadwick-ginther/, Thompson Citizen about a Writer's Festival appearance: https://www.thompsoncitizen.net/news/thompson/ucn-language-arts-festival-returning-to-thompson-with-a-comedic-twist-1.23791989, interview with Open Book: http://open-book.ca/News/Chadwick-Ginther-on-Writing-a-Necromancer-Who-Longs-for-a-Normal-Life-Discovering-His-Themes, National Post review: https://nationalpost.com/entertainment/books/book-reviews/open-book-thunder-road-by-chadwick-ginther, bio from Thin Air Writer's Festival: https://thinairwinnipeg.ca/writers/chadwick-ginther/, CBC News article about Manitoba Book Awards that mentions him: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/aboriginal-lawyer-takes-home-book-award-1.2624484
- Eryn Kendell Gunzenhauser (born December 15, 1993), Youngest South African Comic Writer. She wrote, designed and edited The Legend of Dollaretta: See https://dollaretta.com/
- Frederick Grice (1910–1983), British children's author best known for The Bonny Pit Laddie, which went through 18 editions. War memoirs also recently published with assistance of Gillian Clarke See https://worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n50031045/
H
- Emily Wallis Hughes, (Born in 1985. poet and editor. Author of Sugar Factory, a collection of poems with a series of paintings by writer and artist Sarah Riggs, in conversation with Hughes's poems. An editor at Fence. Born in Napa, California, grew up in small towns of Agua Caliente and El Verano in the Sonoma Valley. Currently lives in Brooklyn, New York. Active in avant-garde poetry communities. Work influenced by and descending from Joanne Kyger, Matthew Rohrer, Rebecca Wolff, Tomaz Salamun, Charles Simic, Larry Eigner, Lorine Niedecker, Joe Wenderoth, New York School, and San Francisco Renaissance poets. Teaches creative writing at Rutgers - New Brunswick.) (https://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2018/01/emily-wallis-hughes-rescues-sonoma-county-with-outpour-of-books) (https://emilywallishughespoetry.com) (http://www.spuytenduyvil.net/sugar-factory.html) (https://brooklynpoets.org/poet/emily-wallis-hughes/) (http://www.lunalunamagazine.com/blog/poetry-by-emily-wallis-hughes) (http://pbqmag.org/emily-wallis-hughes-inge-inge-ingeborg-bachmann/) (https://preludemag.com/posts/from-day/) (http://www.greetingsreadings.org/Greetings_Readings/Emily_Wallis_Hughes.html) (https://wh.rutgers.edu/people/faculty/faculty-category/428-emily-wallis-hughes) (https://www.fenceportal.org)
- Zeb Haradon, author and film maker. Wrote The Usurper King, a modern retelling of the Epic of Gilgamesh about an alternate reality where Ted Bundy becomes president in 2016, and directed the documentary Waiting For NESARA, about the NESARA cult/conspiracy theory (precursor of QAnon)
- M.S. Harkness, American Cartoonist and writer/artist of Tinderella and Desperate Pleasures
(https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/18836315.M_S_Harkness?from_search=true&from_srp=true) (https://www.msharkness.com/) (https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/new-titles/adult-announcements/article/81924-spring-2020-announcements-comics-graphic-novels.html) (https://www.newyorker.com/contributors/ms-harkness)
- Danette Haworth, author, hates tomatoes. site
- Andrea Hintz, author of multiple acclaimed adventure book series including The Tesoro Series and Perception and Deception. [34] [35] [36]
- Richard Raymond Haywood, one of the top authors in the UK, with over a million books downloaded. He is the creator of The Undead. A self-published series that has become a cult hit with a readership that defies generations and gender. Author of Extracted series - a world-wide best-selling time-travel series. [37]
- Clint Hofer, American author born in St. Louis, Missouri on July 8th, 1952. Author of The One That Got Away (2019) which is a humorous novel set in St. Louis at the time of the Great Mississippi River Flood of 1993.
- Rachel Howard (novelist), American memoirist, novelist, and dance critic born 1976. Author of The Lost Night (Dutton 2005), a memoir about her father's unsolved murder, and The Risk of Us (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2019), a novel. The New York Times called The Lost Night "enthralling," and the San Francisco Chronicle named it one of the best books of the year. The Associated Press called The Risk of Us "gorgeous."
- Tom Huddleston, novelist and film critic. British author of popular childrens' novels including FloodWorld and sequel DustRoad, the Warhammer Advantures: Realm Quest series and three instalments in the official Star Wars: Adventures in Wild Space series. Film writer for The Guardian, Sight & Sound, the BFI, Little White Lies and Time Out, where he worked in-house on the film desk. Articles and reviews are referenced in countless wikipedia articles including https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bone_Tomahawk, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kill_List, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lego_Movie among many others. Also plays in London-based folk rock band The No Sorrows, self-titled LP available on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/42sSZ97zl5impJAFaIAf1r?si=93M4-PlcRwGZZlX4O4wK1w. Not to be confused with actor Tom Hiddleston or footballer Tom Huddlestone. Further references on personal website: http://tomhuddleston.co.uk/
- Olivia Hunter, British beginner novelist born 2004, author of Synthesis, a fictional book about an alternate victorian world with some disturbing secrets regarding a new type of slavery.
- Jones Kimberly, American novelist, author of I'm Not Dying With You Tonight — see his article at https://www.bustle.com/p/im-not-dying-with-you-tonight-adds-a-crucial-story-to-the-ya-canon-on-race-relations-start-reading-now-16992718
I
J
John Lars Zwerenz (John Lars Zwerenz is an impressionistic, post romantic poet from the United States who is a living person. I have had many requests for an official wikipedia article on this man from both the student body and members of the faculty at the two Colleges where I am teaching as an English Literature Professor. Some of his works have appeared on mid term tests as well as on finals in the Universities' itineraries and there is heated interest on this person among a good sample of my students, friends and colleagues.) Sources: 35,000 [3][4] Kelleyanthony (talk) Professor of English Literature, Ms. Kelley Jane Anthony, Lincoln, NH, Denver, CO LeeAnn Howard @LeeAnnHoward18 John Lars Zwerenz is the best selling poet in The United States. - Bing, LinkedIn, Google, Yahoo (Photo of Zwerenz Google Images)173.68.75.19 (talk) 02:11, 18 January 2020 (UTC)Lee Ann Howard
- Peter Jinks, British author best known for Hallam Foe [38]
I used some of Zwerenz's poetic material on my final test in my humanities class last June for my students. I would appreciate a comprehensive article on this author. 173.68.75.19 (talk) Julia Andrews I would like to see a comprehensive bio on this poet, John Lars Zwerenz. I know of and work with Ms. Julia Andrews in the same professional capacity. 173.68.75.19 (talk)Robert Gardener, Hartford, CT
K
- Lydia Kang, (born October 4, 1971) American physician and author. Her books include Opium and Absinthe (2020, Lake Union Publishing), A Beautiful Poison (2017, Lake Union Publishing), Quackery: A Brief History of The Worst Ways to Cure Everything, co-written with Nate Pedersen (2017, Workman Publishing), The Impossible Girl (2018, Lake Union Publishing), Toxic (2018, Entangled Teen), The November Girl (2017, Entangled Teen), Control (2013, Penguin Random House), and Catalyst (2015, Penguin Random House). She is a contributor to the anthology Color Outside the Lines (2019, Soho Teen) and the forthcoming From A Certain Point Of View: The Empire Strikes Back (2020, Penguin Random House). She completed her B.A. at Columbia University in 1993 and her M.D. at New York University School of Medicine (1998), followed by a Primary Care Internal Medicine Residency (2001) and Chief Residency (2002) at Bellevue Hospital in New York City. She is faculty in General Internal Medicine at Nebraska Medicine and graduate faculty at the University of Nebraska in Omaha, Nebraska.
[39] [40] [41] [42] [43] [44] [45] [46] [47] [48] [49] [50] [51] [52] [53] [54] [55] [56] [57] [58] [59]
- Sasheena Kurfman, (born November 24, 1968) American author of the Fantasy Romance series Tales of Estolia. site
- Constantino Khalaf, (born December 18, 1979) American author and journalist. Born Constantino Díaz-Durán. Co-author of Modern Kinship: A Queer Guide to Christian Marriage (Westminster John Knox Press, 2019). [60] [61] [62] [63] [64] [65]
- David Khalaf, (born October 11, 1977) American author. Author of The Burdens Trilogy and co-author of Modern Kinship: A Queer Guide to Christian Marriage (Westminster John Knox Press, 2019). [66] [67] [68] [69] [70]
- Sophia Khan ((born October 22, 1985) Pakistani-American author. Author of Dear Yasmeen and The Flight of the Arconaut ([71])
- Tommy Keough ((born March 15, 1985) British author. Author of The Bogsproggler and The Bogsproggler: In Balen-Town) ([72])
- Malavika Kannan, (born February 5, 2001) American author and activist. Author of The Bookweaver's Daughter (Tanglewood Publishing, 2020) and contributor to Teen Vogue, Huffington Post, and Refinery29. Founder of Homegirl Project, a national political organization for young women of color. [73] [malavikakannan.com] [homegirlproject.org] [74] [75] [76] [77]
- Robert Kinge ((born May 24, 2000) British author. Author of Albert Speer: The man of Hitler’s Dreams. Hong Kong Independence: The Start. The protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. The brief history of Macau and Hong Kong. Cipher: The beginning. The Flensburg Government: A brief history of a brief Government. Business men.
[78] [79] [80] [81] [82] [83] [84] [85]
- Agnes Kinloch Kingston British translator of Jules Verne.
- KFC One Shots Three comic books, published by DC comics, originally given away free at the San Diego Comic Con, featuring Colonel Sanders teaming up with DC characters such as The Flash and Green Lantern. Titles are The Colonel of Two Worlds, Colonel Corps: Crisis of Infinite Colonels, and Across the Universe.
[86] [87] [88] [89] [90] [91] [92] [93]
- Virginia Kahl (February 18, 1919 - November 4, 2004) was an American children's author and illustrator. She wrote or contributed to 16 books starting in the early 1950s.Her titles include The Duchess Bakes a Cake, The Habits of Rabbits, The Perfect Pancake, and How Many Dragons Are Behind the Door?.
L
- Ian Lahey is an American author living in Italy. He writes science fiction, fantasy and historical fiction, all with a sprinkle of humor (See https://www.amazon.com/Ian-Lahey/e/B00PCKJC98%3F and https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/14349436.Ian_Lahey). Among his books are The 45th Nail[5], WWII historical fiction set in Italy; Asylum [6] an illustrated tale for children, as well as nonfiction and various participations in short story anthologies since 2014.
- M Pepper Langlinais is an American author of mystery, fantasy, and historical romance. Also a produced playwright and screenwriter.
http://pepperwords.com https://www.amazon.com/M-Pepper-Langlinais/e/B008FBOSPE/ https://books.google.com/books/about/Faebourne.html?id=R3xcvQEACAAJ&source=kp_author_description https://www.imdb.com/name/nm5997882/ http://pepperwords.com/?page_id=5071
- Bill Lavender (born October 22, 1951 is an American poet, novelist, editor, and publisher at Lavender Ink / Diálogos, an independent publisher in New Orleans. He is the co-founder of the New Orleans Poetry Festival. Amazon author page: https://www.amazon.com/Bill-Lavender/e/B003G2SRY0?ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_23&qid=1567358314&sr=8-23 Press web site: https://www.lavenderink.org Interview about the press at Jacket2: https://jacket2.org/category/commentary-tags/bill-lavender Poets and Writers page: https://www.pw.org/directory/writers/bill_lavender New Orleans Poetry Festival: https://www.nolapoetry.com
- Gabriel Longo, American writer, academic and ex-priest, author of Spoiled Priest— https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/10126999-spoiled-priest.
M
- Grant Maierhofer (born 30. June 1990 in Eau Claire, WI) is an American writer. He is the author of Flamingos (chosen as a best book of 2016 by Blake Butler for VICE Magazine), Peripatet, Drain Songs, and others. His work is available online and in print. He was previously the Hemingway Fellow at the University of Idaho. His work has earned accolades from Maggie Nelson, Kevin Killian, Sam Lipsyte, Dennis Cooper and more.
- Fred Majdalany (born of Lebanese parents in Manchester in 1913, died 1967). During the Second World War he fought in North Africa, Sicily and Italy, was wounded and was awarded the M.C. In the closing months of the war, when he was Chief Instructor of an OCTU, he wrote his first novel 'The Monastery'. Later novels include 'Cassino' and 'Patrol', the latter republished 2020 by the Imperial War Museum. He was film critic of the Daily Mail. His work has been highly praised by William Boyd.
- Karla Manternach Author of middle-grade books 'Meena Meets her Match' and 'Never Fear, Meena's Here'. Published under Simon and Schuster -https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simon_%26_Schuster https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/40539169-meena-meets-her-match
- Melissa Mccarter (born 27. February 1975 in Houston, TX) is an American writer. She is the author of the memoir Insanity: A Love Story. She writes about her struggles with bipolar disorder and infertility. She has also written fiction, including the novel What Moves Her. She is the editor of Joy, Interrupted: An Anthology on Motherhood and Loss. She is a graduate of Scripps College. Her PhD focused on feminism and composition studies. Mccarter is married to author William Matthew McCarter.[7]
- Jaron McFall (born November 9, 1989) is an American writer. He is the author of The Living Saga. Currently, book one, Surviving, is the only book of the series published. It is a post-apocalyptic fiction story that is based in East Tennessee.[8][9] Personal life: He is currently employed as a teacher at East Ridge Middle School in Whitesburg, TN.[10] He was the president of the Alpha Beta Iota chapter of Phi Theta Kappa while he attended Walters State Community College.[11] He graduated with an Honors Degree in History, Magna Cum Laude.[12] While attending Walters State, Jaron also was the recipient of the USA Today All Tennessee Academic Award.[13][14] He is also a graduate of East Tennessee State University where he graduated Cum Laude with a B.S. in History.[15]
- Lára Michelsen (born 2. September 1996 in Iceland) is an Icelandic fiction author and blogger. She is the author of The Adventures of Raven Darling: Lessons learned in Tokyo as well as Goodbye, Ingrim. She writes creative writing resources on her website and is a travel blogger on Travels of 2 Sisters.
- Cory Wheeler Mimms (born August 15, 1983) is an American writer. He is the author of the young adult novels Trailing Tennessee (Craigmore Creations, 2013) and Willa (Black Rose, 2019).[16][17][18][19] His short fiction has appeared in Joyland Magazine,[20] and he has reported for Oregon Business, Oregon Home, Beer West, and Pamplin Media.[21] He studied writing and publishing at Portland State University and screenwriting at New York Film Academy. [22][23]
- Peter Moore (born ?) British writer/historian/professor. He has written the books Endeavour (2018), The Weather Experiment (2015) and Damn His Blood (2012). There are two other Peter Moore writers on Wikipedia but not this one. The Weather Experiment was one of the New York Times 100 Notable Books of 2015 and Endeavour was a Sunday Times History Book of the Year.
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- N.G.K. (Born 28. October 1978, Pontypool, Wales) is a british writer. He uses his initials as his pen name. He is the author of the children's picture book series 'Harry The Happy Mouse'. (https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/bookseries/B07967R23M/ref=dp_st_0993367003). The books focus on teaching different values such as kindness, teamworking, saying thank you and 'pay it forward'. (http://www.prenderlandbooks.co.uk/blog/2017/3/15/interview-with-ngk-author-of-harry-the-happy-mouse).
- Nuin Christopher (Krzysztof Ireneusz Fiszer, born 5 May 1990, Sztum, Poland. Polish author writing under a pseudonym Christopher Nuin, selfpublisher as Krzysztof Fiszer. Author of fantasy short stories, as well as poems and song lyrics.)
(https://christophernuin.com/) (http://lubimyczytac.pl/autor/117106/christopher-nuin) (https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/18522564.Christopher_Nuin)
- Ali Nuri was born in Diwaniya, Iraq, in 1987. His family emigrated to the United States in 1994 as asylum-seekers. (https://arabamericanwriters.org/members/) He has authored a 2019 debut book of poetry, Rain and Embers, which focuses on the traumatizing experiences of refugees, the phenomenon of being torn between two places but being unable to call either one 'home', and the fragmentation of identity that characterizes the migrant's polarizing existence. (https://www.tweetspeakpoetry.com/2019/08/27/poets-and-poems-ali-nuri-and-rain-and-embers/) His work has been highlighted by Scriptable, Tweetspeak Poetry, the Erie Reader, and the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. He holds a B.A. in Urban Planning from Edinboro University of Pennsylvania. (http://www.edinboronow.com/article/your-future-self-your-past-self)
(https://rtreview.org/review/066nov2019.pdf) (https://www.eriereader.com/article/rain-and-embers) (https://www.post-gazette.com/opinion/Op-Ed/2019/11/03/Story-survival-Iraq-refugee-Ali-Nuri-Next-Page/stories/201911030009) (https://missmuslim.nyc/rain-and-embers) (https://www.forewordreviews.com/reviews/rain-and-embers) (http://city-sentinel.com/2019/09/rain-and-embers-an-iraqi-refugees-poetic-story-of-survival) (https://underratedreads.com/rain-and-embers-ali-nuri/) (http://reviewsbyamoslassen.com/?p=73875) (https://www.thisfunktional.com/2019/09/rain-and-embers-iraqi-refugee-poetic.html)
(Please note this is in the "N" section because a "Z" section does not currently exist.)
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- Christina Olivares is a Cuban-American poet and essayist. She is the author of No Map of the Earth Includes Stars[27], winner of the 2014 Marsh Hawk Poetry Prize[28], and of Interrupt, a 2015 chaplet by Belladonna* Collaborative[29]. She is a recipient of a 2018 BRIO Nonfiction Award [30], two Jerome Travel and Study Grants (2014 & 2010)[31], and a 2015 Lower Manhattan Cultural Council Workspace Residency[32]. Author page and bio[33]. No Map of the Earth Includes Stars was reviewed by Jacket2[34] and micro-reviewed by the Poetry Foundation's Harriet[35]. Her poetry has been anthologized in Bettering American Poetry Volume 2[36]. Her nonfiction has been published in Makhzin[37] and the Kenyon Review Online[38]. Olivares received her MFA in Poetry from CUNY Brooklyn College and her BA in Interdisciplinary Studies from Amherst College.
- Deonte Osayande is an African-American poet and non-fiction writer. He is the author of three books of poetry: Class, Circus, and Civilian. He has been published in several journals, including Curbside Splendor, Front Porch Review, Missing Slate, and Troubadour 21. He is also a noted performance poet, with noted performances at the Toronto Poetry Slam and Last Poet Standing, among others. He was a winner of the Knight Arts Challenge in 2015.
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- S.K. Paisley, is a Scottish crime author and writer of Tartan Noir.
Born Sian Duffy on May 8, 1981 in Glasgow, Scotland. Sian has an LLB, as well as degrees in English and Theatre Studies and Teaching from the University of Glasgow. Her first novel, Take a Breath, was published in 2014 and shortlisted for the Scottish New Writer's Award. The E-book went on to become a best-seller, placing in the top ten best-selling books in the Amazon Kindle Store during 2014. It was translated into Italian and published as Chiudi gli occhi (Close Your Eyes) by Rome based publisher, Fanucci Publishing, although their rights were later withdrawn due to their failure to pay the contracted royalties.
Sian traveled extensively, living in Glasgow, London, Santiago, Hamburg (where she met fellow Scottish author Irvine Welsh during his tour there in 2013), Amsterdam, Montreal and Ottawa. She continued writing short stories, screenplays and finally completed her second novel in 2020 during the periodic of isolation mandated due to the Covid pandemic.
Sian presented the award for Best Drama Screenplay at the Monaco International Film Festival Awards 2020, alongside Italian actress Antonella Salvucci and Canadian journalist Tammi Christopher.
- Grieving Series Novels:
- Take a Breath, Celandine Books 2014
- Madness & Soil, Celandine Books 2020
- Screenplays:
- Take a Breath, 2019
[98] skpaisley.co.uk
- Debra Parmley, American romantic author. Born June 7, 1962 in Columbus, Ohio, United States. Adopted as Debra Anne Bishop when she was months old by John (Jack) Milner and Mary Maxwell Bishop she was raised in Springfield, Ohio. Debra graduated from Shawnee High School in June, 1980 and from Springfield Joint Vocational School's merchandising program. She married Michael Parmley on Feb. 28, 1981. They have two sons. Debra has a BA in English Literature from Marywood University. Currently living in the Memphis, TN area with her husband. Her career began when her first novel A Desperate Journey was in the American Title II contest, sponsored by Romantic Times Book Lovers Magazine and Dorchester_Publishing in 2006. Ten unpublished romance novelists competed for one publishing contract with Dorchester Publishing, readers voted online and each month two authors were voted off. Debra made it to the second round and then signed with an agent who sold her book to Samhain Publishing. A Desperate Journey came out a year later in ebook in 2008 and in print in 2009. Debra went on to sign with Desert Breeze Publishing, Secret Cravings Publishing [99] DCL Publications [100] and Boroughs Publishing Group [101]. In 2013 she self published Twilight Dips, an anthology of her early poetry from her college days. She hosted Book Lights Radio, for Readers Entertainment from 2016 to 2017 where she interviewed authors of fiction every Tuesday night on Blogtalk Radio.
In 2017 she opened Belo Dia Publishing Inc. to publish most of her back list and became a hybrid author.
- Stand Alone Novels:
- A Desperate Journey, Samhain Publishing 2008 in eBook, 2009 in print, republished by Belo Dia Publishing Inc. 2016
- Aboard the Wishing Star, Desert Breeze Publishing, republished by Belo Dia Publishing Inc. 2016
- Dangerous Ties, Desert Breeze Publishing, republished by Belo Dia Publishing Inc.
- Isabella, Bride of Ohio; American Brides series, Belo Dia Publishing 2016
- Check Out, Belo Dia Publishing Inc. 2017
- Jenna's Christmas Wish, Belo Dia Publishing Inc. 2018
- The Twelve Stitches of Christmas, co-author Robert Arrow, Belo Dia Publishing Inc. 2018
- Special Forces Operation Alpha World:
- Protecting Pippa, (Originally [[102]]), republished by Aces Press 2018
- Split Screen Scream, Aces Press 2018
- Brotherhood Protectors World:
- Montana Marine, (originally [[103]]), republished by Twisted Pages Press, 2018
- Defensive Instructor, Twisted Pages Press, 2018
- Marine Protector, Twisted Pages Press, 2018
- Butterflies Fly Free series:
- Trapping the Butterfly, book one
- Dancing Butterfly, book two
- The Hunger Roads Trilogy:
- A Change of Scenery, book one, Belo Dia Publishing Inc. 2018
Poetry:
Twilight Dips, poetry anthology, 2013
[40]https://www.debraparmley.comhttp://debraparmley.com/
- Michelle M. Pillow, American novelist, NY Times and USA TODAY Bestselling Romance, Cozy Mystery, and Paranormal Women's Fiction (PWF) Author with over a million books sold. She is the author of over 100 titles (100 published titles recognized by RWA Romance Writers of America). Michelle has a BGS in History and Business with an English Minor. She is involved with various film and historical documentary projects with her filmmaker husband. She currently lives in the American South.
She is published in multiple fiction genres including romance, paranormal, fantasy, historical, contemporary, sci fi, alternate reality, cozy mystery, women's fiction, PWF (paranormal women's fiction) and more. Her first book was published in April 2004.
She is a hybrid author published with big traditional publishers, small press and indie. Publishers include Random House, Virgin Books, Ebury, Rouge, Simon and Schuster (Pocket Books), The Raven Books, Entangled Publishing, Adams Media, Ellora’s Cave Publishing, Samhain Publishing, Running Press, Robinson Publishing, Paranormal Underground Magazine, and others.
[104] MichellePillow.com
- Notables:
- New York Times (#8) & USA Today Bestselling Author
- 2015 Virginia Romance Writers HOLT Medallion Award of Merit recipient for outstanding literary fiction in Paranormal, Love Potions
- Bestselling Author Amazon.com (#1)
- 2011 Romantic Times BOOKreviews Magazine Lifetime Achievement Award Nominee
- Winner 2006 Romantic Times Bookclub Magazine’s Reviewer’s Choice Award for the historical romance Maiden and the Monster
- 2007 Romantic Times Bookclub Magazine’s Reviewer’s Choice Award Nominee for the futuristic romance The Bound Prince
- Kensington Brava Novella Contest Finalist (3rd)
- Recognized by RWA for writing over 100 books.
- Book Series:
- Dragon Lords
- Lords of the Var®
- Space Lords
- Qurilixen Lords
- Captured by a Dragon-Shifter
- Galaxy Alien Mail Order Brides
- Dynasty Lords
- Warlocks MacGregor®
- Order of Magic
- Happily Everlasting
- (Un)Lucky Valley
- Lords of the Abyss
- Realm Immortal
- Divinity Warriors
- Divinity Healers
- Call of the Lycan
- Tribes of the Vampire
- Naughty Cupid
- Matthews Sisters
- This list does not include her standalone titles
R
- Diana Raymond 20th Century novelist and wife of Ernest Raymond https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernest_Raymond https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/diana-raymond-writer-whose-novels-were-infused-with-wit-and-metaphysics-1640300.html
- Vanessa Ravencroft, American novelist, author of Eric Olafson, Space Pirate — she is easily found all over the net by googling. Since I am Vanessa I have a conflict of Interest creating the post myself. https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/16124730.Vanessa_Ravencroft https://www.amazon.com/Vanessa-Ravencroft/e/B06XKL3BFQ%3Fref=dbs_a_mng_rwt_scns_share https://galnet.fandom.com/wiki/Vanessa_Ravencroft https://www.fantasticfiction.com/r/vanessa-ravencroft/
- Kimberly Reyes, American poet and essayist, author of Running to Stand Still — kimberlyreyes.online
https://poets.org/poet/kimberly-reyes https://www.amazon.com/Life-During-Wartime-Kimberly-Reyes/dp/1889292761 https://www.amazon.com/Running-Stand-Still-Kimberly-Reyes/dp/163243072X http://www.fulbright.ie/custom_alumni/kimberly-reyes/ https://www.theatlantic.com/author/kimberly-reyes/ https://ew.com/author/kimberly-reyes/ https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/kimberly-reyes https://lca.sfsu.edu/lcanews/2019/07/03/819134-whether-writing-poetry-or-news-alum-kimberly-reyes-always-running-stand
- Randy Ribay, American author of novels for young adult and middle-grade audiences, including Patron Saints of Nothing, which was was a winner of the Freeman Book Award for YA and a finalist for National Book Award for Young People's Literature, Los Angeles Times Book Prize for YA, the Mystery Writers of America's Edgar Award for Best YA, and the Carnegie Medal.
http://www.randyribay.com http://www.randyribay.com/on-the-interwebs.html https://www.rappler.com/thought-leaders/251747-leila-de-lima-reflection-randy-ribay-patron-saints-of-nothing
- Greg Roensch writer of “The Guitarist in the Doorway Fiction” about San Francisco Homeless Crisis. Greg Roensch is a writer who lives in San Francisco, California. In addition to owning a writing and editing business (Six String Communications), Greg writes books for young adults, travel articles, short stories, and songs. I am not Greg Roensch and I have never met him or had contact with him. http://www.gregroensch.com/ https://defiantscribe.com/words-writer-greg-roensch/ https://www.potreroview.net/the-guitarist-in-the-doorway/
- J.D. Richardson American Novelist/non-fiction writer. Author of "Serenity War: A Noble Series Book", "Modern Bible Companion: A guide to reading the New Testament", and "Coaching Flag Football: What to expect as a parent volunteer (and how to succeed)" He uses J.D. Richardson for his Fiction pen name and Jason Richardson for his Non-Fiction. Since I am J. D. I have a conflict of interest and am unable to create the page. The URLs below have a description of the author.
Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/Jason-Richardson/e/B079H2Q5JW Goodreads Page for Fiction: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/20479380.J_D_Richardson Goodreads Page for Non-fiction: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/17860909.Jason_Richardson Serenity War book page: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08CBR3FJ7
S
- Shannon Sankey, American poet, author of We Ran Rapturous (The Atlas Review 2019), winner of The Atlas Review 2019 TAR Chapbook Contest: [[105]]. Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1993. Founder of Stranded Oak Press [[106]].
- Erik Schubach (Author of the Techromancy Scrolls) (Film Director of Zombie Hotline), born July 28, 1966 in Lakenheath England, is a bestselling American fiction author of lgbt romance, paranormal, and scifi novels. As seen on Goodreads (https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7069686.Erik_Schubach), IMDB (https://www.imdb.com/name/nm5967285/), and Amazon (https://www.amazon.com/kindle-dbs/entity/author/B00CZE31UA).
- Juliette Sebock (poet/writer) (https://www.pw.org/directory/writers/juliette_sebock) (author of Boleyn, How My Cat Saved My Life and Other Poems, Three Words, Mistakes Were Made, Micro, and Plight of the Pangolin) (https://twistintimemag.com/product/boleyn-by-juliette-sebock/)(https://bunkysbooks.com/products/how-my-cat-saved-my-life-and-other-poems-by-juliette-sebock) (https://bunkysbooks.com/products/three-words-by-juliette-sebock) (https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/16997943.Juliette_Sebock) Founder of Nightingale & Sparrow (http://nightingaleandsparrow.com/)(https://thegingercollect.com/issuenine/issuenineinterviews/juliettesebock/) (https://thewombwellrainbow.com/2020/01/02/wombwell-rainbow-interviews-juliette-sebock/) (https://mysmallpresswritingday.blogspot.com/2019/09/my-small-press-writing-day-juliette.html) (https://awesomegang.com/juliette-sebock/) (https://mariasatsampaguitas.wixsite.com/marias/blog/interview-with-juliette-sebock)
- Norma (Feldstein) Simon Born: December 24, 1927 in New York, New York, United States
Other Names: Simon, Norma; Simon, Norma Bernice Nationality: American Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit, MI: Gale, 2002. From Contemporary Authors Online. Full Text: COPYRIGHT 2018 Gale, a Cengage Company
- Cath Staincliffe, born in Ireland in 1956 , is a British crime author and screenwriter.
- Angela Yuriko Smith (born November 21, 1968) is an American author of horror, speculative fiction and poetry. Her first poetry collection, In Favor of Pain, was nominated for a 2017 Elgin Award[[107]]. Her most recent book, Bitter Suites, was nominated for a 2018 Bram Stoker Award in the Superior Achievement in Long Fiction category[[108]]. She is also the publisher of Space and Time (magazine), a 52 year old speculative fiction publication, as of January 2019[[109]].
- Strong Terence, English athriller novel author, check his personal blog [[110]]
- Jandra Sutton (born July 16, 1989) is an American author of young adult fiction and host of The Wildest Podcast [[111]]. Her debut novel, Fragile, was published in July 2017. [[112]]
- Wayne Stinnett, American novelist. Author of the bestselling 17-volume Caribbean Adventure series. https://waynestinnett.com
- Sukanya Basu Mallik, Indian author. Sukanya Basu Mallik is an undergraduate student researcher , social entrepreneur, multi-genre
author, film and book critic. Having published in various journals, magazines, and anthologies nationally and internationally she's released two books of her own. Currently, she is running an online literature festival which is one of its kind. She has been recognized by six media houses for her initiative during quarantine period. Willing to take it up further she is looking for sponsors who are ready to work for like minded cause Her works can be seen on Reader’s Digest, Times Of India, Sahitya Akademi Bimonthly Journal, Lucidity Int. Poetry Journal, SEAL (South East Asian Literature) festival anthologies and AIPF Int. Anthology (Austin International Poetry Festival). Crowned with The Best Manuscript Awards for fiction & non-fiction categories (Mumbai Litofest, Literature Festival 2018), she was also appreciated for her short story ‘Healing of wounds’ by National Children’s Literature Festival led by eminent author, Ruskin Bond. Her latest releases include Mocktail and #Metoo. Her movie reviews have been published in various newspapers and journals of repute like 'Just film' magazine, Different truths,'Creation and Criticism' (A Quarterly International Peer-reviewed Refereed e-Journal Devoted to English Language and Literature) and many more. She has extensively worked and published her research on 'The Expression: An International Multidisciplinary e-Journal', A Peer-Reviewed Journal | and "THE AERONAUTS: AN AMALGAM OF MANY DIFFERENT SITES AND MANY DIFFERENT VOYAGES" which was based on a contemporary movie. Her upcoming projects include, a poetry film and a song that she has written. To learn more visit www.sukanyabasumallik.com
T
- Annette Turngren, 1903-1980, was an American author of children's mystery novels. In the novel, Flaxen Braids, she wrote of her mother's childhood in Sweden, before emigrating to the United States.
- Dane Thomas, 1989- American poet. He is the author of Black and Blue published in November 2017, and Light in the Darkness published in August 2018. He earned a bachelors degree in Business/Marketing from Huntington University. link to his website, Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook.
https://www.dthomasquotes.com/ https://www.instagram.com/dthomasquotes/ https://twitter.com/dthomasquotes1 https://www.facebook.com/dthomasquotes/
- Nafissa Thompson-Spires, American author. She is the author of Heads of the Colored People, her debut collection of short fiction sketches. She earned a Ph.D. in English from Vanderbilt University and a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from the University of Illinois. link to her publisher page, twitter, and interviews. http://www.simonandschuster.com/authors/Nafissa-Thompson-Spires/2125430166; https://electricliterature.com/nafissa-thompson-spires-is-taking-black-literature-in-a-whole-new-direction-b19309c5acf4; https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/15/books/heads-of-the-colored-people-nafissa-thompson-spires-interview.html
- Steven Toussaint, 1986-, is an American-New Zealand author of poetry. His book Lay Studies was shortlisted for the Mary and Peter Biggs Award for poetry at the 2020 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards. He is married to Man Booker Prize Winning novelist, Eleanor Catton. https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/steven-toussaint
https://www.oxonianreview.org/wp/the-limits-of-the-new-laity/ https://www.anzliterature.com/feature/ockham-shortlist-2020-lay-studies-by-steven-toussaint/ https://steventoussaint.com https://www.stuff.co.nz/entertainment/books/75602424/the-luminaries-author-eleanor-catton-weds https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eleanor_Catton#Personal_life
- Yoshio Toyoshima, Japanese translator and author of short stories, novels, and children's tales. Toyoshima was said to be highly respected by Osamu Dazai. There is already a detailed Japanese Wikipedia article on Toyoshima, so it may be best to selectively translate that as a start: https://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E8%B1%8A%E5%B3%B6%E4%B8%8E%E5%BF%97%E9%9B%84.
- Jack Townsend, American author and blogger. He is the creator of "Tales from the Gas Station," an internet-based serial story and winner of the "NoSleep" subreddit's "Best Series of 2017." He is also the author of the novel "Tales from the Gas Station: Volume One," based on the internet series. His blog can be found at http://www.gasstationjack.com
- Translations of Ulysses or Translations of James Joyce's Ulysses. Notable for the difficulty of such an endeavor and for the fact that such translations, as a result, often make the news and are subjects of scholarship in themselves:
- Mark Greaves (2014), "How one Iraqi poet translated Joyce’s Ulysses into Arabic", Channel Four News.
- Bernard Hœpffner (2017), Straightening out Ulysses, The Paris Review.
- Ida Klitgård (2005), Taking the pun by the horns: The translation of wordplay in James Joyce’s Ulysses
- Cait Murphy (1995), "'Ulysses' in Chinese", The Atlantic.
- Akram Pedramnia (2017), "'Pleasure or pain, is it?': Translating Ulysses into Persian", Dublin James Joyce Journal.
- Martin Turnell, a British literary critic, author of well regarded works on French literature including 'The Art of French Fiction', 'The Novel in France', 'Jean Racine, Dramatist', 'Baudelaire'. He contributed to Scrutiny, to the NY Review of Books and to the Spectator between about 1930 and the early 1960s. He worked for the BBC for about 10 years. But there is, very oddly, no biographical information anywhere about him. His books, where there is normally some brief account to be found, give nothing, not even a date of birth. I don't know how one would go about getting any information - there must still be people alive who knew him, maybe his publisher would be a way in? I don't know if he is still alive. If so, he will be of very advanced age. He was. probably still is, a significant and influential critic for a generation of English readers. He brought to the French tradition the spirit of English criticism of the day, always focused on evaluation, close reading, and a humane accurate and balanced sensibility.
- Andrew Turpin, author of the Joe Johnson series of thrillers. Originally from Grantham, Lincolnshire, now in St. Albans in Hertfordshire. [113]
V
- Madhuri Vijay; author of crtically-acclaimed The Far Field. https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/no-grand-conclusions-an-interview-with-madhuri-vijay/
- Janette Voski; Australian poet and author of the poetry book Bones. https://www.amazon.com/Bones-Janette-Voski/dp/0648592502
- Vivekanand Jha; an Air Force veteran, is an Indian English poet, translator and editor. Founder and chief editor of two literary journals, VerbalArt & Phenomenal Literature published by Authorspress, New Delhi. Editor of two poetry anthologies: The Dance of the Peacock & Universal Oneness
(http://vivekanandjha.com/about.php) (http://verbalart.in) (http://phenomenalliterature.com) (http://www.poetvjha.wordpress.com)
W
- LynDee Walker; an American author of crime fiction. Finalist for the Agatha Award for Best First Novel (2013); author of ten books in two nationally bestselling series, the Nichelle Clarke Crime Thrillers and The Faith McClellan Novels. Former journalist. Official Website: www.lyndeewalker.com; news coverage sample: https://www.wric.com/community/local-author-talk-to-help-raise-money-for-friends-of-the-chesterfield-public-library/
- Kate Wexell; an American poet and author of the poetry book Seasons of Love (2019). She is a high school student who has self-published her book on Amazon. Publisher's Website: https://www.amazon.com/kindle-dbs/entity/author/B081BFHTW8?_encoding=UTF8&node=2656022011&offset=0&pageSize=12&searchAlias=stripbooks&sort=author-pages-popularity-rank&page=1&langFilter=default#formatSelectorHeader
- Theodore Wheeler (novelist); an American author of topical subjects set on the Plains. Author of two novels, Kings of Broken Things and In Our Other Lives, and a short fiction collection. Winner of National Endowment for the Arts creative writing fellowship, fellowship at Akademie Schloss Solitude, Nebraska Book Award. Published in Best New American Voices, Kenyon Review, Southern Review, Narrative. Official Website: theodore-wheeler.com; news coverage sample: https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/theodore-wheeler/kings-of-broken-things/; http://www.kansascity.com/entertainment/books/article172730356.html; http://therumpus.net/2018/01/kings-of-broken-things-by-theodore-wheeler/; http://journalstar.com/entertainment/books/five-questions-with-nebraska-author-theodore-wheeler/article_34167a2b-0ef9-5703-b164-39a7bad9db46.html; http://newterritorymag.com/2016/07/20/review-bad-faith/.
- Will Wight; author of the Cradle series
- Brian Williams(author); co-author of the Tunnels Series.
- Sean Fay Wolfe; American author of the Elementia Chronicles. The series contains 4 books. He published his first book when he was 16 years old. Personal website: http://sfaywolfe.com/, publishers website: https://www.harpercollins.com/author/cr-121244/sean-fay-wolfe/
- We Are Legion (We Are Bob), first in a trilogy by Dennis E. Taylor
- Matthew C. Woodruff; American author of 26 Absurdities of Tragic Proportions. Inspired by Edward Gorey and his The Gashlycrumb Tinies, Woodruff's book is a new look at an old favorite - 26 tales depicting the story of each child in Gorey's most famous work. Personal website: http://mattwoodruffauthor.com/, Books https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/44009311-diary-of-a-sex-addict , https://www.amazon.co.uk/Diary-Addict-Laurie-Jade-Woodruff-ebook/dp/B07NPRWY1M
- Amy Woolard Poet and Non-fiction Writer. Author of Neck Of The Woods, winner of the 2018 Alice James Prize from Alice James Books, forthcoming April 2020 (poetry collection).
Publisher's website https://www.alicejamesbooks.org/bookstore/neck-of-the-woods Goodreads site: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/18882987.Amy_Woolard Author of "Tent Revival" winner of Virginia Quarterly Review Staige D. Blackford Prize 2016: https://www.vqronline.org/vqr-congratulates-2016-prize-winners 2019 National Endowment for the Arts Poetry Fellow: https://www.arts.gov/nea-literature-fellowships/amy-woolard
Y
- J. Yuvanesh, Indian novelist, who published his first book at the age of 25. author of 'What life is all about' – [[114]]; see his blog at [[115]]
Z
- Carolyn Zaikowski Poet, experimental novelist, hybrid writer, essayist. Has also written widely about feminism, veganism, ableism, and having Ehlers Danlos Syndrome. Author of the fragmentary/experimental novels In a Dream, I Dance by Myself, and I Collapse (winner of Civil Coping Mechanisms' Mainline Contest, 2016)and A Child Is Being Killed (Aqueous Books) which poet Eileen Myles called "a saint of a little book". Work has been published in The Washington Post, The Rumpus, Denver Quarterly, Entropy, Everyday Feminism, Nebula: Journal of Multidisciplinary Scholarship, PANK, DIAGRAM, Huffington Post, Dusie, West Branch, and elsewhere. Work on trauma and literary theory ("traumatized texts"), veganism, feminism, and ableism been cited in several academic peer reviewed articles (see google scholar), Quartz, and elsewhere. Reviews and interviews in The Rumpus, Razorcake, Big Other, Entropy, HTMLGIANT, Eileen Myles's website, interview series by Rob McLennan (see his blog), Which Side Podcast, Grab the Lapels, Rain Taxi, and elsewhere. www.carolynzaikowski.com
- Su Zi Poet, fiction writer, essayist, visual artist, publisher/editor of Red Mare Books, and an eco-feminist. Her work has appeared in Alien Buddha, Unlikely Stories Mark V, Red Fez, Thrice Fiction, and more.
Her books include:
Transgression In Motion (Breaking Rules) https://www.breakingrulespublishing.com/store/p147/Transgression_In_Motion_By_Su_Zi_.html
Tropical Depression (Outlandish Press) https://store.outlandish.press/product/topical-depression/
Solstice Epistles https://jamminshop.com/collections/publications/products/solstice-epistles
Chirp (Hysterical Books) https://www.hystericalbooks.com/product-page/chirp-by-su-zi
Sister Woman https://www.amazon.com/Sister-Woman-Zi/dp/1943333076
Lit (Jammin) https://www.amazon.com/LIT-Zi/dp/1943333122
Three Days https://jamminshop.com/collections/publications/products/three-days-by-su-zi
Building Community: The Gypsy Art Show Essays https://jamminshop.com/collections/publications/products/building-community-the-gypsy-art-sow-essays
Pillar of Salt https://www.amazon.com/Pillar-Salt-Art-Zi/dp/0988859939/
Interviews:
http://www.handyuncappedpen.com/2019/07/interview-with-poet-and-publisher-su-zi.html
https://www.instagram.com/p/B8t7bauHEDC
Works
Novels
- Piaget's Last Fear by Vladimir Jankovic (2018)
- The Zoltan Chronicles by Adam Hayes (2019)
- Girls of Paper and Fire by Natasha Ngan
- Duckett & Dyer: Dicks For Hire by G.M. Nair (2019)
- The One-Hundred Percent Solution by G.M. Nair (2020) - The sequel to Duckett & Dyer: Dicks For Hire.
- The Monster Baru Cormorant by Seth Dickinson (2019) - The sequel to The Traitor Baru Cormorant
- The Cry of Winnie Mandela by Njabulo S. Ndebele (2003)
Wilder Good series
- The Elk Hunt (2013)
- Texas Grit (2014)
- Wilder and Sunny (2015)
- The Green Colt (2016)
- Black Rock Brothers (2018)
- Silverbelly (2020)
The 45th Nail (2015)- Wuxia novels such as Azyl Academy, Unsouled, Wuji Tianxia (or Martial World).
Sal Kilkenny Series
- Looking for Trouble (1994) Published in French under the title Black Nights in Manchester , Paris, Librairie des Champs-Élysées, Le Masque # 2465, 2002
- Go Not Gently (1997)
- Dead Wrong (1998) Published in French under the title Tout l'accusait , Paris, Librairie des Champs-Élysées, The Mask # 2481, 2003
- Stone Cold Red Hot (2001)
- Towers of Silence (2002)
- Bitter Blue (2003)
- Missing (2007)
- Crying Out Loud (2011)
Janine Lewis series
- Blue Murder (2004)
- Hit and Run (2005)
Scott & Bailey Series
- Dead to Me (2012)
- Bleed Like Me (2013)
Other detective novels
- The Kindest Thing (2009)
- Witness (2011)
- Split Second (2012)
- Blink of an Eye (2013)
Autobiographical novel
- Threesome (2002)
Webcomics
- Strange Planet: A poignant webcomic having recently obtained popularity about strange human behaviors. Written by Nathan W. Pyle. On Instagram: [116] Author's website: [117]
Novella
- Nate the Snake: Significant short story, available on [118]
Authors (other than poets, dramatists and fiction writers)
Please request articles about non-fiction writers at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Biography/By profession#Non-fiction writers, not here. |
- Jenny Alexander - UK author of scores of books for children including Blue Peter Book Club "How to get what you want, by Peony Pinker", Red House Highly Commended "Car-mad Jack' and amazon bestseller "Bullies, Bigmouths and So-called Friends" - most recently three books for adults about writing - "Writing in the House of Dreams: Unlock the power of your unconscious mind", "Happy Writing: Beat your blocks, be published and find your flow" and "Free-Range Writing: 75 forays for the wild writer's soul" Articles for writers in Mslexia, Writers' Forum, Writing Magazine and The Author - monthly column in Writing Magazine. Teaches for organisations including Society of Authors, Scattered Authors' Society, the Arvon Foundation, Lapidus, Mantle Arts, Writing magazine. https://jennyalexander.co.uk/
- Kit Cox- author and illustrator of "How to bag a Jabberwock: a practical guide to monster hunting"(under the pen name Major Jack Union), the Benjamin Gaul Adventures "The Monster Hunter""Smoke and Mirrors",The Dr Tripps' chronicles "Kaiju cocktail""Moon monster""Time terror"and the cold war fantasy drama "Morningwood"
- Alexandra Berlina - author of Brodsky Translating Brodsky & Viktor Shklovsky: A Reader; she is mentioned in a couple of articles on translation (the books are not biographies, hence I am not listing her at Wikipedia:Requested articles/Biography/By profession#Non-fiction writers
- S.G.C. Middlemore (Samuel George Chetwynd Middlemore) - author
- Lara Platman (Author, Photographer and Broadcaster) (https://www.quartoknows.com/authors/2039/Lara-Platman/ http://www.unicornpublishing.org/page/detail/Art-Workers-Guild-125-Years/?k=9781906509057 https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00km27k https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2011/11/harris-tweed-the-story-of-the-greatest-cloth-from-land-to-street/247915/ http://photofeature.co.uk/)
Fictional character
- Wilder Good - fictional character in the Wilder Good middle-grade book series by S.J. Dahlstrom, published by Paul Dry Books, Philadelphia, PA.
- Brady Coyne - a fictional character by William Tapply
- Billy Caspar - child character featured in Barry Hines' classic Angry Young Man novel, A Kestrel for a Knave. One of the most notable literary characters of the 1960s.
- Constance Blackwood and Cousin Charles - both characters in ''Shirley Jackson'''s classic novel ''We Have Always Lived in the Castle. Pages to go with the article for Merricat Blackwood that has already been made. Especially necessary with the impending release of a film adaptation, and a possible revival of the stage musical.
- Mablung- A fictional character in J.R.R. Tolkien´s novels, including The Silmarillion and Unfinished Tales. A ranger/marchwarden of Doriath, important in the First Age. Also a name of a ranger of Ithilien, in Lord of The Rings [119]
Fictional locations
- Estolia - fictional Balearic island in the Tales of Estolia series
- Teolan - fictional country in the Taulia universe
- Pyrrhia - fictional continent in the Wings of Fire novels
Literature-related awards
- Micro Award - annual juried award, not a contest; given to the best story of under 1,000 words published in English during a calendar year; private money funds the award; editors nominate work just as they do for the Pushcart Prize and similar honors
- Author Academy Awards - annual judged award in 16 categories, three step process. Any book can be submitted, then a panel decides whether the nomination is accepted or not. Once it is accepted, popular vote and judges panel narrows it down to a top ten for each of the 16 categories. Step three, popular votes again, the panel of judges read the books and on the day of the awards in Columbus, OH, each top ten finalist in the 16 categories is asked to present their book to a judge or two in speech format. Then, that night, everyone comes together in formal wear, and, just like the Oscars, the awards are given. authoracademyawards
.com
Literature-related events
- The Windy City Story Slam - monthly story competition in Chicago
- The Australian Poetry Slam - annual national poetry competition in Australia
- The Iowa Summer Writing Festival - annual weeks-long writing workshops taught by highly regarded authors and hosted by the University of Iowa, home to the top-ranked graduate writing programs in the U.S. [120]
- Languages used in books and other media - Languages used on the Internet, List of languages by a total number of speakers, List of languages by a number of native speakers, and others already exist. I believe a similar article about languages used in books and other print media would be highly informative and useful. dis also applies when expanded to other media, such as radio, television, movies, songs, software, video games, etc.
- List of poems set in Chicago - their is list of fiction set in Chicago, why not poetry?
- List of United States presidential inaugural poems or List of inaugural poems - Wikikpedia TEMPhas some of these poems, but finding them is a chore
Literature-related organizations
Asian Festival of Children's Content(afcc.com .sg) - annual literary festival held in Singapore; a festival that brings together content creators and producers (including authors, illustrators, television producers, bloggers, etc.) with parents, teachers, librarians and anyone interested in quality Asian content for children around the world; [121]; [122]; [123]; [124]; [125]; [126]; [127]; [128]; [129]; [130]; [131]; [132] - Boondi (magazine) (boondi
.lk); online magazine; [133] - DEEP: Database of Early English Playbooks - google books; here. This is encyclopaedic because it is a widely used scholarly resource that offers a database of factual information about English Renaissance drama, including that of Shakespeare. It is already cited by several articles in Wikipedia and because of these citations, the database itself ought to be in Wikipedia.
- New Renaissance Writers Guild
- Scottish Association of Writers (sawriters
.org .uk) - a Scottish National Association; of great importance to writers and writer groups; [134]; [135] - Women's Fiction Writers Association (womensfictionwriters
.org) - an international non-profit writing association. It provides networking and support to individuals interested in pursuing a career in women’s fiction. - Henry Sotheran ([136])
Publishing companies
- Anaphora Literary Press (anaphoraliterary
.com) - run by Anna Faktorovich; published over 160 titles since 2009; dozens of references to Anaphora in Wikipedia articles for S. John Ross, William James Maloney, Marilyn Jaye Lewis, David R. Slavitt, and John Michael Cummings; Anaphora's Pennsylvania Literary Journal conducted interviews not only with John Michael Cummings, but also bestselling writers, including Larry Niven, Mary Jo Putney and Geraldine Brooks - theNewerYork Press (theneweryork
.com) - experimental literary press; funded on Kickstarter; promoted by big authors; founded 2009 - Nightingale & Sparrow (Nightingale & Sparrow is a literary magazine and small press featuring poetry, short fiction, creative nonfiction, and photography.) (Publishes quarterly lit mag and chapbooks, microchapbooks, and full-length manuscripts by writers across the globe) (Activist imprint Vociferous Press) (Children's imprint Chickling Press) (http://nightingaleandsparrow.com/)
- Pustaka Antara - first publishing house in Malaya; notable for printing works of national laureates and independence-related literature post-WWII
- The Readers Library Publishing Company Ltd. - English book publishers; Ancaster House 42-43 Cranbourn St. London W.C.2
- Terreldor Press (terreldor
.com)- small press; publishes fiction (adventure/fantasy and short stories) in print, ebooks, and audio books; has sold over 500,000 books since 2011 (according to its website); several books have won various awards; several books published have been very popular on Amazon.com, one with over 2,500 reviews ([137]); has sold its works in over a dozen countries; has published works in English, Spanish, and Chinese - Bonnier Books UK (bonnierbooks
.co .uk)- UK book publisher run by Perminder Mann, owned by Bonnier AB [42]. - BHC Press (bhcpress
.com)- is an award-winning independent publisher leading the way in today’s publishing industry. Their unique publishing philosophy blends the models of traditional, hybrid, and independent publishing. Their books have been reviewed and featured in Publishers Weekly, BookList, School Library Journal, Foreword Reviews, and Parade Magazine. [43]. - Amber Books Ltd (amberbooks
.co .uk)- is an independent UK publisher of illustrated non-fiction books founded in 1989, producing 60-80 new books a year. Subjects covered include history, travel, military technology, natural history, gift books and general reference.
Websites
- Bangla Kabita (bangla-kobita
.com) - literature website on Bengali poetry - Shadow Unit - collaborative website/pseudo-television show by Elizabeth Bear, Emma Bull, Amanda Downum, Sarah Monette, Will Shetterly and Stephen Shipman
Literary movements and styles
A–F
- agricultural theory
- bibliomystery [138]
- Bosnian Medieval literature - history of literature in the territory of today Bosnia and Herzegovina focusing on the medieval literature. There already exists such an article, but only in Bosnian and, apparently, Russian, but no translations to either English or any other languages. bs:Bosanska srednjovjekovna književnost
- Chechen literature
- chi-chu - literary style mentioned in Wikipedia article about the Yellow Emperor involving assembling writing from fragments of various sources (I think) - unable to find any wiki or other search engine articles on it, nor any online books a bout it - even trying different spelling variants and combinations, though I realise this can subtly change meaning in the translation from Chinese to English.
childhood in literature, children in literature, childhood account- whatever the title of the article, I do think an article on depictions of childhood in literature is requestable; there is one on the Swedish-language Wikipedia (sv:Barndomsskildring)combinatory literature- e.g., the Oulipo- Crimean Tatar literature
- culinary mystery - gourmetmysteries
.com - dolphin and whale spot - term; (on the cranium) quoted by David Foster Wallace in Although Of Course You End Up Becoming Yourself: A Road Trip with David Foster Wallace by David Lipsky. Pg. 295. "'And she said that there were these various chakras and one of the big ones was what she called the spout hole, at the very top of your cranium' [He demonstrates where it is, the dolphin and whale spot.]".
E-fiction- relatively-recent phenomenon is the commercial (for-profit) "self-publication" of strictly- or primarily-electronic fiction under the banner of longtime "E-tailers" such as Amazon. This is NOT a vanity press as the author does not pay for the privilege of publication: they invest only their time and effort, and the "publisher" is merely a retailer who takes a percent-of-sale, not an up-front fee (in effect, the authors are paying for the publisher's "retail channel").
- - It might be likened to an author mill in some ways, but due to the low costs all round (and the lack of any guaranteed "vanity market" of the authors friends/family), it appears to be a different phenomenon. This is LIKE Web fiction, but usually offered via Amazon, Lulu, or the like, typically for low entry price (e.g. 99¢ per chapter for a novel, etc). Authors who are popular on fiction forums sometimes make the jump to professional writers (albeit nontraditionally so) in this way. The topic is too-briefly mentioned as a minor element of the existing article Self-publishing#Electronic_.28E-book.29_Publishing, but appears to merit its own entry, as modern electronic means have enabled a sea-change in the older concept of "self-publishing." [139]; [140]; [141]; [142]
- - The term "E-fiction" (that I've chosen) is perhaps overly-broad for the topic (the phrase connotes both commercial and free fiction) AND overly-narrow (the same model might apply to non-fiction); I note that "e-pub" is already in use, largely in the non-fiction realm. "E-fiction" might be useful as an umbrella for linking all these related topics. No other phrase has occured to me, that might concisely describe this phenomenon (and therefore be apt for titling an article).
G–Z
- Crimean Tatar literature
- Georgian literature - Also called literature of Georgia (country). Both now redirect to Culture of Georgia (country)#Literary and other written works. There's an Encyclopaedia Britannica article on it ([143]), which should shame every member of WikiProject Georgia, since English Wikipedia is larger than EB.
- indigenous current
- Irish-American poetry
- list poetry
- Little Willy-style poetry - short, morbid, rhyming verses concerning a boy named Willy; [144]
- locus dramaticus
- magepunk (mage-punk) - [145]
- metametafiction
- online-dating novels
- open fiction - like open-educational resources, people started to publish fiction also under open license; examples include Juan Julián Merelo Guervós (with Hoborg), P. Anil Prasad (with Imanofutu), Cheryl Ives (with Timeless) and Ryan Somma (with ideonexus.com)
- outline of spy fiction spy fiction - outline needed as a parent of outline of James Bond; see Portal:Contents/Outlines and look under Recreation and Entertainment, outline of spy fiction is red
- outsider writers - Example
- persona poems - first-person poems with a speaker other than the poet; often in the form of a dramatic monologue
- phenomenology (literature) - authors who wrote with a phenomenological perspective and what their books tend to be about
- philosophical autobiography
- Pia Desideria - a piece by Philipp Spener what the cultural and social significance was and the impact it had at the time
poetic forms – plain style (maybe plain style (poetry))- positive imagery
- pulp-fiction novel (pulp fiction novel) (pulp novel) - pulp magazine and lesbian pulp fiction already exist but not this/ or rename pulp magazine to pulp fiction?; High Heels on Wet Pavement 16:09, 15 February 2007 (UTC)
- Rabelais Club
- Ring Cycle theory
romantic tragedy- rude letter - a form of letter-writing
- Sa'alik - (Arabic: الصعاليك, es-sa'alik) a group of brigand outlaw poets of pre-Islamic ancient Arabia. Article exists in Arabic. Their impact is widely felt in post-Arab Spring poetry and prose.[44] Mrmalabi (talk) 21:41, 11 December 2018 (UTC)
RS212 Science Fiction Romance is a subgenre of Romantic Fiction. The first futuristic romance to be marketed by a mainstream romance publisher, Jayne Ann Krentz's Sweet Starfire, was published in 1986 and was a "classic road trip romance" which just happened to be set in a separate galaxy. This genre has become much more popular since 2000. Krentz attributes the popularity of this subgenre to the fact that the novels "are, at heart, classic historical romances that just happen to be set on other worlds".[45] CynthiaSax (talk) 21:19, 2 February 2019 (UTC)- Splat Pack (horror fiction) - Splat Pack
- Tatar literature
- travesty (literature) - The article burlesque exists and refers to this; travesty is a disambiguation page; see Talk:Travesty
Western Romance genre(I've been trying to find information on this specific sub-genre, due to interest in writing within it; however, not only can I not find this specific sub-genre, I can't find information pertaining to Romances set in Western times at all. It stands to reason that this sub-genre exists, probably in pretty sizable amounts, I just can't find more than one tidbit at a time, if that makes sense.)- Uyghur literature
- young-adult non-fiction
- Young Trollopes
Works and publications (poetry, drama and fiction)
Books
Requests for articles about books are on a separate page, and should be added there. |
Accidental Feminists (Written by Australian social commentator Jane Caro and published in 2019. This is a non-fiction book which explores what Caro refers to as the "Accidental Feminists", a generation of women who inadvertently changed history through seeking higher education, working, and living lives of financial independence. This book contains interviews with many Australian women, whose paths in life differ greatly and analyses the source of their continued inequality. (https://www.booktopia.com.au/accidental-feminists-jane-caro/prod9780522872835.html)
The Good Immigrant (Written by Nikesh Shukla and published in 2016, this compilation of twenty-one essays recounts a collection of experiences from the perspective of Black, Asian and Ethnic Minority (BAME) writers.) (http://www.nikesh-shukla.com/the-good-immigrant)
Template:God in Peril Written by Indian author Ajatshatru Parmar. It is a non-fiction book that contains real life examples and statistical data on the violence and cases against doctors in India at the workplace and demonstrate the diminishing bond between a doctor and his patient. The book is the first published in India by Manjul Publications. It also contain interviews of many health expert of India with the author on the burning issues. Book gives an insight of Indian medical scenario and replies to questions, like why doctors don't want their children to become a doctor? This is the first title of its kind which introduces a few superstitious scenarios prevailing in India. Template:URL- http://www.amazon.in/God-Peril-Ajatshatru-Parmar/dp/818322752X http://manjulindia.com/god-in-peril.html
- List of Rick and Morty Comics
- A Gentle Echo on Woman Poem attributed to Jonathan Swift, famous (also, awesome); 14,700,000 results on google, nothing on Wikipedia. First result on google: www.bartleby.com/380/poem/387.html
- Wedding (poem) - Very influential poem by the wonderful Alice Oswald written in 1996 for her collection The Thing in the Gap-Stone-Stile. Acclaim from Carol Ann Duffy and James Fenton. Often studied. More poems by her also need adding, just like by other modern poets like Fenton, Duffy, Armitage, Paterson and Olds.
- Il cinque maggio (The Fifth of May), poem by Alessandro Manzoni. See: it:Il cinque maggio
- Poems For All the Annettes, by Al Purdy
- Song of The Nephilim (Written by the Romanian author Daria Finica. It's a fictional vampire novel that offers a new explanation for the myth of the nephilim) (https://www.amazon.com/Song-Nephilim-Daria-Finica-ebook/dp/B07V9VKH3G/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=song+of+the+nephilim&qid=1564559130&s=gateway&sr=8-1, http://dariafinica.com/about-me/)
Periodicals
- 805 Lit + Art (ISSN 2379-4593)(805lit
.org) - Online, quarterly literary and art journal featuring emegering artists and authors worldwide; published by the Manatee County Public Library System; article requested so that the magazine can appear in the list of literary magazines;[46][47][48] - Conclave: A Journal of Character - bi-annual print and e-journal with character-focused writing and photography
- Flash: The Short-Short Story Magazine - The world’s leading journal of quality flash fiction and reviews of up to 360 words. It is based at the University of Chester in the UK and is edited by Peter Blair and Ashley Chantler. [146]; (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flash_fiction); (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Gaffney)
- Fourth Genre: Explorations In Nonfiction (ISSN 1522-3868) (msupress
.org /journals /fg /) (fourthgenre .msu .edu) -a literary journal of creative nonfiction , published twice annually by Michigan State University Press since spring 1999; offers an annual contest called the Steinberg Essay Prize, named after the journal's founding editor. article requested so journal appears on the list of literary magazines - Hippocampus Magazine (hippocampusmagazine
.com) - monthly journal of creative non-fiction; offers an annual contest and writer's conference - Journal of Extension (ISSN 1077-5315 (joe
.org) - peer-reviewed journal; official refereed journal of the U.S. Cooperative Extension System - Midda's Chronicles (it:Midda's Chronicles) (ISSN 2282-1120) - Italian sword and sorcery series, published every day since January 11, 2008
- National Era - c. 1850s abolitionist periodical out of Washington, D.C.; first to publish Uncle Tom's Cabin
- Rock & Sling: A Journal of Witness (rockandsling
.com) - Christian literary magazine; staffed by Whitworth University in Spokane, Washington; emphasis on poetry and prose that speaks to an experience that is compellingly true in some way; article requested so that the magazine can appear in the list of literary magazines; [147]; [148]; [149] - Short Story International (req. 2013-12-13) - magazine that republished, in English, contemporary short stories from various countries; [150]; [151]
- Stand Magazine (standmagazine
.org) - British literary magazine; founded 1952; now published at Leeds University; (British Literary Magazines, Volume 4, ed. Alvin Sullivan Greenwood Press, 1986) - D-Day (comic book) - It's a French comic of alternative stories. - [152]
Stage and theatre
People (playwrights and others)
- Sharon Bakker - Canadian stage and film performer
- Antony Braithwaite - Philadelphia actor; Barrymore award winner
- Hilary Dean - American stage and film performer; for more information go to bebo and look for HilaryD026
- Nick Drake (playwright)
- Katherine Fitzmaurice - fitzmauricevoice
.com - Eamon Foley - young actor; currently performing in [13]
- Jon Adam Freeman - singer, actor, dancer; {{URL|jonadamfreeman.co.uk}
- Dylan Gamblin
- Gracie Gardner (American playwright, author of Athena)
- Sean Gill - American playwright and filmmaker; IMDb; [153]; [154]; [155]; [156]
- Carly Jibson
- Ryan Kiggell - award-winning theatre and television actor
- Yu Zuwa Junji Kinoshita - dramatist of Twilight of a Crane
- Helen Langworthy - founder, Little Theatre of the Rockies, Greeley, Colorado
- John Lion - started the award-winning theater The Magic Theater in San Fransico, Caliornia; helped launch careers of Sam Shepard, Peter Coyote and Ed Harris among others; recipient, the highest honor given by the Dramatists Guild; appeared in The Right Stuff; [157]; IMDB; [158]; [159]
- Anew McMaster - Irish actor-manager; employed Harold Pinter early in the Pinter's career
- Jonathan M. Mellor - theatre and television actor
- Larry Pressgrove - musical arranger and keyboardist for Broadway's [title of show]
- Lulu Sweigard
- Benvolio Tomaiuolo - director, actor; punk-theatre pioneer
- David I. Taylor - theatre designer and theatrec consultant, Theatre Projects and Arup
- Orl Unho - cult American playwright
- Ferdinand Vanӗk
- Stephen Wadsworth - American theater director and scholar/translator
Non-people
A–K
- The Adventures of Princess Atlantis - books and musical created by Mark Frank
- Alternative Theatre Company - non-profit LGBT theatre company in New York City; produces gay-themed Off Broadway plays; production The Gayest Christmas Pageant Ever! playing (played?) at The Actors' Playhouse; alternativetheatreco
.org - Amuse Presents「THE GAME 〜Boy's Film Show〜」 - boysfilmshow
.jp /pc - The Barker Playhouse (theater) - theater in Providence, RI. Known as the America's oldest little theater, founded 1909 [160][161]
- Baroque-period drama
- The Beads (req. 2007-01-27) - lyric play written by M. Ragasa Avena, a Philippine writer in English
- Belt Up (nothing to see/hear) - British theatre company
- Bertolt Brecht techniques - techniques of Bertolt Brecht; there is already Category:Bertolt Brecht theories and techniques; an article on the same would be useful
- The Bishop's Candlesticks - play written by Norman McKinnel; People's Theatre, Newcastle upon Tyne; a "mundane drama"; produced in July 1911; often revived
- The Brothers Grimm Spectaculathon - play written by Don Zoildis (and some of his other works)
- Cariad Productions
- The Clockwork Theatre, Inc. - NYC-based not-for-profit theatre company; theclockworktheatre
.org - Close for Comfort Theatre Company - [162]
- Get Smart (play) - play written by Christopher Sergel
- EBE Ensemble - New York-based theater ensemble; founded in 2006; dedicated to "developing and presenting new and unique works of theatre"; [163]; [164]; [165]; [166]; winner, 2009 NYIT Award for Best New Short Play; [167]; [168]; [169]; [170]
- Eginton Alignment - alignment work established by Margaret Eginton; egintonalignment
.com - El Concierto Siniestro - Spanish play; about fictional murders; often used for Spanish projects in schools
- Factory of the Eccentric Actor - avant-garde Soviet theatre group in the 1920s
- Fitzmaurice Voicework - fitzmauricevoice
.com - Finger in the Pie Theatre - London-based theatre and cabaret company; notable for its role in the cabaret and burlesque revival in London and recent Total Theatre Award-nominated production of Sweeney Todd: His Life, Times and Execution; fingerinthepie
.com - Flinders University Drama Centre - acting school of Flinders University; see Xavier Samuel, Noni Hazlehurst, Scott Hicks
- Forest Fringe - artist-led Edinburgh Festival initiative; founded by Deborah Pearson and Andrew Field; winner of a Herald Angel, The Peter Brooke Award Special Mention for site-specific work, and the Arches Brick Award (for Paper Cinema's show The Night Flyer); forestfringe
.co .uk - Frederic Loewe Foundation
- Geordie Productions - professional Canadian theatre for young audiences; founded 1982; geordie
.ca; [171]; [172] - Good Boys and True, play by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa; [173]
- Historic Asolo Theater - [174]
L–Z
- Laughtrack Theater Company - Hawaii's first home, and currently only home, for long-form improv in the arts disctrict of downtown Honolulu in Chinatown; laughtracktheater
.com - Livingston Theatre Company - Rutgers University's only theater company committed to only performing musicals
- List of Nobel Prize winners who have been dramatists
- London Theatre Blog - londontheatreblog
.co .uk; long-standing, non-profit, group-authored theatre publication covering the performing arts in London and beyond; edited by Andrew Eglinton; principal contributors: Stephe Harrop, Matt Bootman, Jens Peters, Diana Damian - Ludus Ludius Improvisation Theatre Company - theatre group based in Cardiff, Wales; creates theatre through improvised playfulness; ludusludius
.co .uk - Missoula Children's Theatre
- Nakai Theatre - theatre associated with the Owen Williams (calligrapher)
New Old Friends Theatre Company- British theatre company; produces original comedy for the stage; newoldfriends.co .uk - A Narrow Bed - play written by Ellen McLaughlin
- Peninsula Youth Theatre - nonprofit youth theatre in Mountain View, California; pytnet
.org Pigs in the Wind- Greek filmmaker, Nikos Nikolaidis' third novel; published by Kastaniotis Editions in 1992 [175].- Pink Banana Theatre Company - theatre company in Milwaukee, Wisconsin
- psuedomedieval - term used in many medieval English literature classes to describe today's attempts at medieval-like works
- Red Lemon Productions - Belfast, Northern Ireland-based physical theatre company; supported by funding from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland; most recently produced The Weein at the Old Museum Arts Centre and reviewed on Culture Northern Ireland; redlemonproductions
.co .uk - Retaliation (musical) - modern youth musical; based on virtual reality; [176]; [177]; possible link with Once Upon a Midnight
- Saint John Theatre Company - locally run, not-for-profit theatre company in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada; {{URL|saintjohntheatrecompany.com}
- Speech Choir
- Sumner Theatre - the new theatre of the Melbourne Theatre Company; opened 2009
- The Suzi Bass Awards - Atlanta's version of the Tony Awards for professional theatre; similar in scope and prestige as The Helen Hayes Awards, The Joseph Jefferson Awards and The Carbonelles
- TeatroStageFest - Latino International Theater Festival of New York, Inc.
- Teesri Duniya Theatre - Canadian theatre
- Theatre in Norwich, England - an article on the local theatres and local professional theatre companies
- The Theater of Western Spring - theater in Western Springs, Illinois
- Too Much Punch for Judy - play written by Mark Wheeler (writer)
References
- ^ "Search: Lucal C Wesker". Google.com. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- ^ www.joshuaemlen.com
- ^ "Search: John Lars Zwerenz". Yahoo.com. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- ^ https://www.google.com/search?q=john+lars+zwerenz&oq=john+lars+&aqs=chrome.2.69i59l2j0j69i57j0l4.7774j0j8&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8
- ^ "The 45th Nail". Amazon.com. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- ^ "Asylum: A story by Ian Lahey". Amazon.com. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- ^ "Search: Lucal C Wesker". Google.com. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- ^ McFall, Jaron. Surviving. Self-Published. pp. 4–10. ISBN 1719826560.
- ^ "Surviving (The Living Saga)". Amazon. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- ^ "East Ridge Middle School: Jaron McFall". Hamblen County Department of Education. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- ^ "Completion Challenge Issued to Walters State Community College". Phi Theta Kappa News. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- ^ WSCC Commencement. YouTube. May 2013. Event occurs at 1:33:32. Retrieved September 25, 2019.
- ^ "Apple Distinguished Program" (PDF). Walters State Community College. p. 17. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- ^ "House Joint Resolution 23" (PDF). Tennessee General Assembly. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- ^ "Commencement Ceremony 2016" (PDF). East Tennessee State University. p. 42. Retrieved September 28, 2019.
- ^ https://www.craigmorecreations.com/trailing-tennessee
- ^ https://www.blackrosewriting.com/teenya/willa?rq=cory%20mimms
- ^ https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/cory-wheeler-mimms/trailing-tennessee/
- ^ https://www.publishersweekly.com/9781940052007
- ^ http://www.joylandmagazine.com/regions/pnw/boat-building
- ^ https://www.oregonbusiness.com/component/search/?searchword=cory%20mimms&searchphrase=all&Itemid=399
- ^ https://www.imdb.com/name/nm7971297/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1
- ^ https://ooligan.pdx.edu/tags/cory-wheeler-mimms/
- ^ https://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/06/books/review/100-notable-books-of-2015.html
- ^ https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/best-history-books-of-2018-s67hbz3gd
- ^ https://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/jul/08/peter-moore-damn-his-blood
- ^ https://www.spdbooks.org/Products/9780990666905/no-map-of-the-earth-includes-stars.aspx
- ^ https://marshhawkpress.blogspot.com/2015/02/new-from-marsh-hawk-press.html
- ^ http://www.belladonnaseries.org/chaplets/
- ^ http://www.bronxarts.org/brio_winners_2018.asp
- ^ https://www.jeromefdn.org/search/node?keys=olivares
- ^ https://dev.lmcc.net/person/christina-olivares/
- ^ http://www.christinaolivares.com
- ^ https://jacket2.org/reviews/field-invisible
- ^ https://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2016/09/party-like-its-1898
- ^ http://www.vidaweb.org/voices-of-bettering-american-poetry-volume-2-christina-olivares/
- ^ http://www.makhzin.org/issues/dictationship/thoughts-on-the-erotic-in-audre-lorde-s-archive
- ^ https://www.kenyonreview.org/2017/12/a-better-tomorrow/
- ^ https://www.pw.org/directory/writers/deonte_osayande
- ^ https://www.amazon.com/Debra-Parmley/e/B002BM9H4A/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_1?qid=1546109041&sr=1-1
- ^ As to the notability of American poet and writer John Lars Zwerenz, of whom many academics are expressing a need for an article on Zwerenz on Wikipedia, he is referred to as a famous person in many third party online and offline sites. For one example, you may examine the following link: https://pin.it/5hxsyqR
- ^ https://www.thebookseller.com/news/bonnier-publishing-rebrands-zetterlund-steps-back-mann-steps-838886
- ^ https://www.bhcpress.com/About_BHC_Press.html
- ^ http://www.aensiweb.com/old/jasa/rjfh/2013/359-362.pdf
- ^ Gelsomino, Tara (2002), "Review Of Smoke In Mirrors", Romantic Times, Archived from the original on 2007-10-04. Retrieved 2007-07-26.
- ^ "Nine New Lit Mags You Need to Read". Poets & Writers. 2016 (November/December): 68. October 12, 2016. Retrieved February 8, 2017.
- ^ Katz, Stephanie (Spring 2016). "Library as Publisher: 805 Lit + Art Journal" (PDF). Florida Libraries. 59 (1): 19. Retrieved February 7, 2017.
- ^ Katz, Stephanie (August 15, 2016). "Library + Publishing = 805 Lit + Art". Strategic Library (31): 1.
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