Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Caucasia (1998) is the first novel written by American author Danzy Senna.It is the coming-of-age story of two multiracial girls, Birdie Lee and her sister Cole, who have a Caucasian mother and an African-American father.
Joseph (Joe) Hayes (born November 12, 1945) [1] is an American author and teller of stories mainly found in the folklore of the American Southwest. [2] [3] Hayes was an early pioneer of bilingual Spanish/English storytelling. [3] [4] [5] Joe currently lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico. [6]
Camp Green’s background is a story of the main characters’ ancestors, told in flashbacks throughout the film. Kate is a Caucasian schoolteacher whose love for Sam, an African-American onion salesman leads to tragedy when the town persecutes them for their love. 2003 [47] [48] Bollywood Queen: Jeremy Wooding
The first Westerner to take note of the Nart stories was the German scholar Julius von Klaproth, who traveled to the Caucasus during the first decade of the 19th century. [4] The earliest written account of the material is attributed to the Kabardian author Shora Begmurzin Nogma , who wrote in Russian in 1835–1843, published posthumously in 1861.
The story is based on a real incident in his life while he was serving in the Russian military. [1] It is about two soldiers kidnapped by their rivals for ransom who were in custody for some time. They tried to escape twice, were caught the first time, but succeeded the second. The novella was acclaimed for its view of humanity in the face of ...
Homeless Children in 2010: 31,386 11 For the complete Report Card (including sources), please visit: www.HomelessChildrenAmerica.org STATE RANKS (1-50, 1 = best)
The heroine is a serving girl who rescues and raises him, becoming the "real" mother. In 1944, he further reworked the story as the play, The Caucasian Chalk Circle, moving the events to medieval Georgia, adding a prologue set in Soviet Georgia, and greatly elaborating the narrative.
The Prisoner of the Caucasus (Russian: Кавка́зский пле́нник Kavkázskiy plénnik), [a] also translated as Captive of the Caucasus, is a narrative poem written by Alexander Pushkin in 1820–21 and published in 1822.