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. and Milne's
Christopher Robin Milne's stuffed bear, originally named " Edward ", was renamed " Winnie-the-Pooh " after a Canadian black bear named Winnie ( after Winnipeg ), which was used as a military mascot in World War I, and left to London Zoo during the war.
Christopher Robin Milne's own toys are now under glass in New York.
Several of Milne's children's poems were set to music by the composer Harold Fraser-Simson.
After Milne's death in 1956, his widow sold her rights to the Pooh characters to the Walt Disney Company, which has made many Pooh cartoon movies, a Disney Channel television show, as well as Pooh-related merchandise.
* Two People ( 1931 ) ( Inside jacket claims this is Milne's first attempt at a novel.
The 1963 film The King's Breakfast was based on Milne's poem of the same name.
A. Milne's profile at Just-Pooh. com
Shepard modelled Pooh not on the toy owned by Christopher Robin, Milne's son, but on " Growler ", a stuffed bear owned by his own son.
* October 14 – Alan Alexander Milne's book Winnie-the-Pooh is released.
A. Milne's poem " In the dark ", in Now We Are Six, has been noted for its emulation of crib talk, a form of monologue word play used by infants to practice phonology, syntax and conversation skills
A. Milne's Winnie-the-Pooh books and the Disney spin-offs
A. Milne's book The House at Pooh Corner.
Like other Pooh characters, Tigger is based on one of Christopher Robin Milne's stuffed animals.
Like most of the characters in Winnie-the-Pooh, Tigger was based on one of Christopher Robin Milne's stuffed animals, in this case a stuffed-toy tiger.
The first took place during the 1930s, triggered by Dingle's criticism of E. A. Milne's cosmological model and the associated theoretical methodology, which Dingle considered overly speculative and not based on empirical data.
A. Milne's The Red House Mystery ( 1922 ), by the author of the Winnie the Pooh books.
A. Milne's own son, Christopher Robin Milne, who in later life became unhappy with the use of his name, writing in one of a series of autobiographical works: " It seemed to me almost that my father had got where he was by climbing on my infant shoulders, that he had filched from me my good name and left me nothing but empty fame ".
He is somewhat less caustic and sarcastic in the Disney version than in Alan Milne's original stories.

. and Winnie-the-Pooh
A collection of short stories for children Gallery of Children, and other stories that became part of the Winnie-the-Pooh books, were first published in 1925.
The real stuffed toys owned by Christopher Robin Milne and featured in the Winnie-the-Pooh stories.
Milne is most famous for his two Pooh books about a boy named Christopher Robin after his son, Christopher Robin Milne, and various characters inspired by his son's stuffed animals, most notably the bear named Winnie-the-Pooh.
Winnie-the-Pooh was published in 1926, followed by The House at Pooh Corner in 1928.
* Winnie-the-Pooh ( 1926 ) ( illustrated by Ernest H. Shepard )
A. Milne, after whom the character Christopher Robin in the Winnie-the-Pooh books was named, used to own the Harbour Bookshop.
He was known especially for his human-like animals in illustrations for The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame and Winnie-the-Pooh by A.
Happy with the results, Milne insisted Shepard illustrate Winnie-the-Pooh.
A. Milne ( author of Winnie-the-Pooh ) and the person on whom Christopher Robin was based, lived with myasthenia gravis for several years before his death in 1996.
* 1926 – The children's book Winnie-the-Pooh, by A.
* E. H. Shepard ( who also illustrated Winnie-the-Pooh )
A. Milne, granting Stephen Slesinger U. S. and Canadian merchandising rights to the Winnie-the-Pooh works.
* Piglet ( Winnie-the-Pooh ), the fictional character from A.
The real stuffed toys owned by Christopher Robin and featured in the Winnie-the-Pooh stories.

. and stories
Like his late colleague, Mitropoulos, he reads mystery stories, in particular Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
The dramatic construction of his stories characteristically turns on a situation in which someone is simultaneously compelled and forbidden to love.
Finally, the theatrical ( and perversely erotic ) notions of dressing up, cosmetics, disguise, and especially change of costume ( or singularity of costume, as with Cipolla ), are characteristically associated with the catastrophes of Mann's stories.
that is, he is suspect, guilty, punishable, as is anyone in Mann's stories who produces illusion, and this is true even though the constant elements of the artist-nature, technique, magic, guilt and suffering, are divided in this story between Jacoby and Lautner.
In a certain perfectly definite way, the method and the theme of his stories are one and the same.
he tells stories of the Thousand and One Nights, and conjures up before us the bazaars of Damascus.
The Charles Men consists not of a connected narrative but of a group of short stories, each depicting a special phase of the general subject.
The basic premise of all mystery stories is that the distinction between good and bad coincides with the distinction between legal and illegal.
A similar tone of underlying futility and despair pervades the spy thrillers of Eric Ambler and dominates the most famous of all American mystery stories, Dashiell Hammett's The Maltese Falcon.
Dashiell Hammett resolved this contradiction by ceasing to write mystery stories and turning to other pursuits.
Shakespeare did not usually invent the incidents in his plays, but borrowed them from old stories, ballads, and plays, wove them together, and then breathed into them his spark of life.
Rather than from a first-hand study of Jewish people, his delineation of Shylock stems from a collection of Italian stories, Il Pecorone, published in 1558, although written almost two centuries earlier.
There is probably some significance in the fact that two of the best incest stories I have encountered in recent years are burlesques of the incest myth.
But The Holy Sinner is not simply a retelling of old stories for an old man's entertainment.
The ingredients of Faulkner's novels and stories are by no means new with him, and most of the problems he takes up have had the attention of authors before him.
The first news stories had it that this blaze was started by a bolt of lightning, as though Miriam could call down fire from heaven like a prophet of the Old Testament.
Outside the office windows, twenty-four stories above Wall Street, a light rain was falling.
`` I've been in government and I can tell some pretty hairy stories about personnel difficulties, so I know what a problem he was ''.
Most of my stories were obtained by simply seeking out the person who could give me the facts, and not as a rule by playing clever tricks.
The Hetman's `` ideas '' for news stories or editorial campaigns were by no means always fruitless or lacking in merit.
Finally they went off to file their stories, after the photographers had taken pictures of my latest vigil.
He composed songs and set them to music and sang them in a soft, melodious voice, and when his audience had had enough of music he would discourse on politics or tell stories of his western adventures guaranteed to excite the emotions of men and women alike.
In the ideal state, for instance, he argues that the young citizens should hear only the most carefully selected tales and stories.
His assignment was not a new one because Baker had sent him to the Mexican border in 1916 to investigate lurid newspaper stories about lack of discipline, drunkenness, and venereal disease in American military camps.
These rumors of permanent separation started up a whole crop of stories about her.

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