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Esther and Friesner
* E. Godz ( March 2005 ) with Esther M Friesner, ISBN 0-7434-9888-7
* Esther Friesner
* Chicks in Chainmail: A series of anthologies centered around this theme, edited by Esther Friesner.
* Esther Friesner: Sphinx's Princess.
* Split Heirs ( in collaboration with Esther Friesner ) ( 1993 )
* 2001 ( January 26-28 ): Pete Abrams, James Ernest, Paul Levinson, Margaret Weis, Don Perrin, Michael A. Burstein, Jeffrey Carver, Esther Friesner, Peter Heck, James Morrow, Donna Jo Napoli
* Grain — Esther M. Friesner
* Child's Play — Esther M. Friesner
* Edra's Arrow — Esther M. Friesner
Past Writer Guests of Honor include David Brin, Orson Scott Card, Harlan Ellison, Esther Friesner, James P. Hogan, Barry Longyear, Larry Niven, Spider and Jeanne Robinson, Harry Turtledove, and Gene Wolfe.
Honored guests included writer Esther Friesner, artist Baron Engel, fan Dave Clark, and toastmaster Kent Brewster.
Honored guests included writer Michael Swanwick, artist Jael, fan Elayne Pelz, and toastmaster Esther Friesner.
de: Esther Friesner
fr: Esther Friesner
* Warchild ( Star Trek ), a 1994 novel by Esther Friesner
*“ The Source of It All ” in Alien Pregnant by Elvis ( 1994 ) edited by Esther M. Friesner
* New York by Knight ( 1987 ) Esther Friesner
* Esther M. Friesner

Esther and wrote
Berlin quotes a series of scholars who suggest that the author of Esther did not mean for the book to be considered as a historical writing, but intentionally wrote it to be a historical novella.
* The Italian Renaissance poet Lucrezia Tornabuoni chose Esther as one of biblical figures on which she wrote poetry.
* In 1689, Jean Baptiste Racine wrote Esther, a tragedy, at the request of Louis XIV's wife, Françoise d ' Aubigné, marquise de Maintenon.
* In 1718, Handel wrote the oratorio Esther based on Racine's play.
Other scholars suggest that at the time Josephus wrote, such books as Esther and Ecclesiastes were not yet considered canonical.
He was trained for college by his father and elder sisters, all of whom received an excellent education and one of whom, Esther, the eldest, wrote a semi-humorous tract on the immateriality of the soul, often mistakenly attributed to Jonathan.
In addition to her acting career, Russell also wrote the story for the film The Unguarded Moment, a story of sexual harassment, released in 1956, starring Esther Williams.
In 1714, he wrote a poem styled Esther, Queen of Persia, which was received with applause, and in 1719 – 1721, he published The Compleat Linguist ; or, An Universal Grammar of all the Considerable Tongues in Being.
In an interview in September 2011, Joan Collins chatted about a Dynasty revival-" I've been in constant contact with Esther Shapiro, who wrote it, and apparently they've written a script.
Jean Racine wrote Esther and Athalie for the girls at Saint-Cyr, and Chamillart became controller-general of the kingdom's finances because he had managed Saint-Cyr so well.
* Irishman George Moore also wrote an " English " novel mainly set in London, Esther Waters ( 1894 ).
He made his name on the BBC television teatime programme Nationwide, followed by Esther Rantzen's That's Life !, a light-hearted consumer affairs programme for which he wrote comic songs satirising various minor domestic misfortunes, often to the tune of Oh!
Margaret Louisa Woods wrote a novel inspired by her life titled Esther Vanhomrigh ( 1891 ).
Williams wrote in her autobiography, " If it took nine months for a baby to be born, I figured my ' birth ' from Esther Williams the swimmer to Esther Williams the movie actress would not be much different.
Esther Pereira wrote in the Mountain Enterprise, however, that the Ralphs family " founded the school originally as the Quail Lake District.
After Eva's death, Esther collected many of her poems for publication and wrote a biographical introduction to them.
He was a childhood friend of Darius Milhaud, and wrote the librettos of Milhaud's operas Esther de Carpentras (" Esther of Carpentras ," 1938, based on Shuadit folklore ) and Les malheurs d ’ Orphée (" The Misfortunes of Orpheus ," 1924 ).
In her article referring to the " Parallel Channel ," PC Forum host Esther Dyson wrote, " around that point, the audience turned hostile.
Wendy Sanford wrote about abortion, Jane Pincus and Ruth Bell about pregnancy, and Paula Doress and Esther Rome about postpartum depression.
In 1984, Oliver also wrote the words for a musical called Swan Esther which was performed at London's Young Vic and on BBC radio.

Esther and novel
Other sources include Sylvia Plath's 1963 novel The Bell Jar, in which the protagonist, Esther, reacts with horror to the " perpetual marble calm " of a lobotomized young woman named Valerie.
The problem he has to face towards the end of the novel would be considered rather severe by the average person, but Edek Zepler just laughs it off: Henia's two sons want him to sign a pre-nuptial agreement so that he would not inherit anything if Henia died first ( and so that he would not be able to bequeath the Borenstein fortune to Esther and his grandchildren ).
When the novel opens they have just moved to New York City, and Esther starts working as a writer of obituaries.
Other books set in Southwold include Esther Freud's novel Sea House ( 2004 ), with Southwold as Steerborough.
* To the Last Man ( film ) is a 1933 Henry Hathaway film based on the Zane Grey novel starring Randolph Scott, Esther Ralston, Buster Crabbe, Barton MacLane, Noah Beery, Shirley Temple, and Eugenie Besserer.
) His other novel, published under the nom de plume of Frances Snow Compton, was Esther, whose eponymous heroine was believed to be modeled after his wife.
In Sylvia Plath's novel The Bell Jar, the protagonist Esther Greenwood attends Smith College.
* Fleur Beale ( born 1945 ), New Zealand teenage fiction writer best known for her novel I am not Esther
* In George Moore's novel Esther Waters, the eponymous heroine works as a wet nurse after the birth of her son while leaving him in the hands of a baby farmer.
Hideous Kinky is an autobiographical novel by Esther Freud, daughter of British painter Lucian Freud and great-granddaughter of Sigmund Freud.
In March 1993, he maintained the veracity of his novel to The New York Times Esther B. Fein: "' Operation Shylock ,' Roth insists with a post-modern straight face, is a ' confession ,' not a novel, and he means for us to take this every bit as seriously as the contents labels demanded by the strictures of the Food and Drug Administration.
The novel centers on four archetypal characters: Miss MacIntosh ; Vera's mother, the Opium Lady ; her trustee, Mr. Spitzer ; and Esther Longtree, the waitress.
This occurs in the fourth chapter of the novel, " In which Esther gets a nose job ".
The patriotic spirit of the Sons of Liberty has been immortalized in modern times by Walt Disney Pictures through their film adaptation of Esther Forbes's novel Johnny Tremain.
The village is the setting for Esther Freud's novel, The Sea House, thinly disguised as ' Steerborough ' - presumably a coded reference, or in-joke, towards one-time resident, Philip Wilson Steer ( see above ).
She is the author of several books including an autobiography, Esther, a book on growing old disgracefully, If Not Now When, a novel A Secret Life and " Running Out of Tears ",( published by the Robson Press ) interviews with young adults who had rung ChildLine when they were children, to celebrate ChildLine's 25 years, royalties to ChildLine.
Johnny Tremain is a 1943 children's novel by Esther Forbes set in Boston prior to and during the outbreak of the American Revolution.
* Esther ( novel ), a novel by Henry Adams ( 1884 )
* Esther Greenwood, the protagonist in Sylvia Plath's semi-autobiographical novel, The Bell Jar
One of the books that the children burn in the school's library is the 1944 children's novel Johnny Tremain by Esther Forbes.

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