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Mary: A Fiction is the only complete novel by 18th-century British feminist Mary Wollstonecraft. It tells the tragic story of a woman's successive " romantic friendships " [ 1 ] with a woman and a man.
April Smith; Joan Smith (born 1953) Julie Smith (born 1944) Sarah Smith (born 1947) Caro Soles; Nancy Spain (1917–1964) Julia Spencer-Fleming (born 1961) Dana Stabenow (born 1952) Susannah Stacey (pseudonym for Jill Staynes and Margaret Storey) Kelli Stanley (born 1964) Viveca Sten (born 1959) Robin Stevens (born 1988) Mary Stewart (1916–2014)
Baba of Karo is a 1954 book by the anthropologist Mary F. Smith. [1] The book is an anthropological record of the Hausa people, partly compiled from an oral account given by Baba (1877–1951), the daughter of a Hausa farmer and Koranic teacher. Baba's reports were translated by Smith. [2]
At the beginning of the novel Coulson slyly announces that the exhibition, “One Woman Show,” opening Oct. 17, 2023 (when the book was to go on sale), was “made possible by gin, taffeta and ...
Cussy Mary is a "Book Woman" — one of the Packhorse Librarians who delivered books to remote areas of the Appalachian Mountains during the Great Depression, from 1935 to 1943, as part of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's Works Progress Administration (WPA) program.
Barbara Mary Crampton Pym FRSL (2 June 1913 – 11 January 1980) was an English novelist. In the 1950s she published a series of social comedies, of which the best known are Excellent Women (1952) and A Glass of Blessings (1958).
Mag Smith - The mother of Frado, a poverty-stricken white woman. Jim - Mag's black husband and Frado's father. Seth Shipley - Jim's partner, later Mag's common-law husband. Frado - The protagonist of the novel. Mary Bellmont - Most active daughter in the household. Jack Bellmont - The youngest of the three sons belonging to the Bellmont household.
Mary must overcome her Patternist father/lover. In this novel Mary shows that being a loner can make you a more independent person. During Mary's transition from "latent" to "active" telepath, Mary creates the first Pattern by mentally latching onto six active telepaths. Mary eventually adds fifteen hundred people to her Patternist community.