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John Michael Crichton (/ ˈ k r aɪ t ən /; October 23, 1942 – November 4, 2008) was an American author, screenwriter and filmmaker.His books have sold over 200 million copies worldwide, and over a dozen have been adapted into films.
Michael David Warner (born 1958) is an American literary critic, social theorist, and Seymour H. Knox Professor of English Literature and American Studies at Yale University. He also writes for Artforum , The Nation , The Advocate , and The Village Voice .
The Trouble with Normal: Sex, Politics, and the Ethics of Queer Life is a book by Michael Warner, in which the author discusses the role of same-sex marriage as a goal for gay rights activists. First published in 1999 by The Free Press, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, it was re-published in 2000 in paperback by Harvard University Press.
The Hollywood Hall of Shame is a 1984 book by brothers Harry and Michael Medved.The authors had previously written or been involved in the creation of similar books exploring "bad movies" or "cinematic mistakes": The Fifty Worst Films of All Time, and The Golden Turkey Awards.
Cannell's eclectic works of nonfiction run from a biography of architect I.M. Pei ("I.M. Pei: Mandarin of Modernism") to the story of American racing driver Phil Hill's 1961 world championship ...
Michael Scarce is a writer, researcher, activist and gay men's health advocate. He lives in San Francisco . He is the author of two books: Smearing the Queer: Medical Bias in the Health Care of Gay Men [ 1 ] and Male on Male Rape: The Hidden Toll of Stigma and Shame .
Disclosure is a novel by Michael Crichton, his ninth under his own name and nineteenth overall, and published in 1994. The novel is set at a fictional computer hardware manufacturing company. The novel is set at a fictional computer hardware manufacturing company.
Its purpose is an examination and condemnation of violence and sexuality in cinema, as well as other media, such as TV and rock music. [2] Medved argued in the book that since the 1960s, American popular culture, especially Hollywood cinema, had been producing art that was excessively violent, sexual and disrespectful to authority, and that such art was having a harmful effect on American ...