Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Lois Ann Lowry (/ ˈ l aʊər i /; [2] née Hammersberg; born March 20, 1937) is an American writer. She is the author of several books for children and young adults, including The Giver Quartet , Number the Stars , and Rabble Starkey .
As of 2021, she taught at St. Cloud Technical and Community College for 11 years in the college's Liberal Arts division. [4] [5] There, she received The Loft’s Excellence in Teaching fellowship. She retired from teaching in August 2021 to pursue writing full-time. [6]
Lowry was born in 1953 in Auckland, New Zealand. [1] She has a diploma of teaching from Auckland Teachers College (1973), BA in English from Curtin University, a postgraduate diploma of English literature, and an MA in creative writing from the University of Western Australia. [2]
Jill Schary Robinson, an accomplished writer whose father replaced Louis B. Mayer at MGM and whose son is UTA co-founder/CEO Jeremy Zimmer, has died. Jill Schary Robinson, writer who was part of a ...
Lowry Mays, the founder of Clear Channel Communications, which is now known as iHeartMedia, has died. He was 87. It was Mays’ alma mater, Texas A&M University, that announced the businessman had ...
The Cinema of Malcolm Lowry: A Scholarly Edition of Lowry's 'Tender Is the Night' edited with an introduction by Miguel Mota and Paul Tiessen; The Collected Poetry of Malcolm Lowry (1992) edited by Kathleen Scherf; The Kaleidoscopic Vision of Malcolm Lowry: Souls and Shamans (2019) Nigel H. Foxcroft, Lexington Books: Lanham, MD.
Kailyn Lowry has shared the names of her twins after confirming that she welcomed a baby boy and baby girl earlier this year.. Lowry announced via TikTok on Friday, February 9, that her newborn ...
In 1960, she married Glenn Lowry and moved to Manhattan. [4] In 1965, the family moved to Houston and she began writing. In 1976, Lowry began teaching fiction writing at the University of Houston. [1] In 1977, she published her first novel Come Back, Lolly Ray. This was followed by Emma Blue in 1978.