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Nino Tkeshelashvili (1874–1956), Georgian children's literature author and suffragist; Ekaterine Togonidze (born 1981), Georgian journalist, novelist, activist; Elena Topuridze (1922–2004), Georgian philosopher and non-fiction writer
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It includes writers that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Subcategories This category has the following 5 subcategories, out of 5 total.
O'Connor was born on March 25, 1925, in Savannah, Georgia, the only child of Edward Francis O'Connor, a real estate agent, and Regina Cline, both of Irish descent. [3] [4] As an adult, she remembered herself as a "pigeon-toed child with a receding chin and a you-leave-me-alone-or-I'll-bite-you complex". [5]
Barbare Jorjadze's tomb in the yard of the Giorgi Chubinashvili Telavi State History and Ethnography Museum. Considered Georgia's first feminist, Jorjadze was a poet, playwright and essayist. [2] She began writing in 1858, publishing poetry in Tsiskari magazine. [4]
Margaret Munnerlyn Mitchell (November 8, 1900 – August 16, 1949) [2] was an American novelist and journalist. Mitchell wrote only one novel that was published during her lifetime, the American Civil War-era novel Gone with the Wind, for which she won the National Book Award for Fiction for Most Distinguished Novel of 1936 [3] and the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1937.
Caroline Pafford Miller (August 26, 1903 – July 12, 1992) was an American novelist. She gathered the folktales, stories, and archaic dialects of the rural communities she visited in her home state of Georgia in the late 1920s and early 1930s, and wove them into her first novel, Lamb in His Bosom, for which she won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1934, and the French literary award, the ...
Georgia Blanche Douglas Camp Johnson, better known as Georgia Douglas Johnson (September 10, 1880 – May 15, 1966), was a poet and playwright. She was one of the earliest female African-American playwrights , [ 1 ] and an important figure of the Harlem Renaissance .