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Dinah Lenney (née Gross; born November 18, 1956) [1] is an American actress and writer. She is the author of Bigger than Life: A Murder, a Memoir , a 2007 book about the murder of her father, Republican Party politician and businessman Nelson G. Gross .
Marie Mattingly was born on December 8, 1878, in Bardstown, Kentucky, the daughter of Cyprian Peter Mattingly, a physician, and his third wife, the former Sarah Irwin (1852–1934), an educationist and journalist who was the founding editor of The Kentucky Magazine, "one of the first publications of literature and science to be edited by a woman."
Life writing is an expansive genre that primarily deals with the purposeful recording of personal memories, experiences, opinions, and emotions for different ends. While what actually constitutes life writing has been up for debate throughout history, it has often been defined through the lens of the history of the autobiography genre as well as the concept of the self as it arises in writing.
A former Playboy model killed herself and her 7-year-old son after jumping from a hotel in Midtown New York City on Friday morning. The New York Post reports that 47-year-old Stephanie Adams ...
Lenora Mattingly Weber (1895–1971) was an American writer of short stories and novels. Lenora Mattingly was born in Dawn, Missouri on October 1, 1895, and lived most of her life in Denver, Colorado. She married Albert Herman Weber in 1916 and was the mother of six children. Al Weber died in 1945. Throughout her life, Weber consistently wrote.
Garrett Mattingly (1900–1962), American historian; Harold Mattingly (1884–1964), British historian; Ignatius Mattingly (1927–2004), American linguist; Jimmy Mattingly is a fictional character in the movie That Thing You Do! Ken Mattingly (1936–2023), American astronaut; Lenora Mattingly Weber (1895–1971), American author
The importance of William Wordsworth's Lyrical Ballads to the way Adam Bede is written has often been noted. Like Wordsworth's poems, Adam Bede features minutely detailed empirical and psychological observations about illiterate "common folk" who, because of their greater proximity to nature than to culture, are taken as emblematic of human nature in its more pure form.
The name comes from "Matta's ley" (ley means place in Old English), referring to the Matta family. The Mattingly surname originates in Mattingley. [2] In Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales (1870), John Marius Wilson described Mattingley as a "hamlet and a chapelry". [3] It was part of Heckfield before becoming its own civil parish in 1894. [4]