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Jill Mansell first had the idea for becoming a novelist after reading an article in a magazine about women who had changed their lives by becoming best-selling authors. Eventually she decided to write the kind of book "I would love to read". [1] The end result was her first novel, Fast Friends.
Blank was born on August 5, 1915, in Allentown, Pennsylvania, to Bessie and Edgar H. Blank. [1] [2] Her father worked as a loom fixer at a local silk mill, and later at a clothing plant in the Germantown section of Philadelphia; [1] in three consecutive U.S. census reports in 1920, 1930, and 1940, his occupation is listed as a knitter.
The cover illustration of Beverly Gray, authored by Clair Blank, the pen name of Clarissa Mabel Blank Moyer. Beverly Gray is a series of mystery stories comprising 26 novels, and published between 1934 and 1955, by Clair Blank, the pen name of Clarissa Mabel Blank Moyer. [1]
Image credits: joetatochips In regards to audiences and their takeaway, Joe wrote: “I hope they take away a happy feeling that life is meaningful and silly and can be approached with joy.
'Blanche.draw,' a talented comic artist from Montreal, has carved out a vibrant niche in the online art world, captivating over 27K Instagram followers with her clever and relatable takes on ...
Empty books or blank books are novelty books whose title indicates that they treat some serious subject, but whose pages have been left intentionally blank. The joke is that "nothing" is the answer to whatever the title of the book asserts. A number of such titles have been published as attempts at satire or polemic, to some commercial success.
A feminist periodical is a journal, magazine, or newsletter that primarily publishes content reflecting the ideologies of the Women's Movement. Though interpretations of feminism vary from one periodical to the next, all of these publications aimed to provide a space for women to express their thoughts, ideas, and goals. This list is by no ...
Spare Rib was a second-wave feminist magazine, founded in 1972 in the United Kingdom, that emerged from the counterculture of the late 1960s as a consequence of meetings involving, among others, Rosie Boycott and Marsha Rowe.