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Dorothy and Dunnett
Successful mass-market works included the action novels of Alistair MacLean, and the historical fiction of Dorothy Dunnett.
* Dunnett, Dorothy King Hereafter Knopf, 1982, ISBN 0-394-52378-4.
* Dorothy Dunnett: The Lymond Chronicles, The House of Niccolo series, King Hereafter
* Mary de Guise appears in volumes 1, 2, 3 and 5 of The Lymond Chronicles by Dorothy Dunnett.
* Queen's Play and Checkmate, Dorothy Dunnett.
* The Unicorn Hunt ( 1993 ) by Dorothy Dunnett.
* To Lie with Lions ( 1995 ) by Dorothy Dunnett.
* Gemini ( 2000 ) by Dorothy Dunnett.
The writer Dorothy Dunnett wrote a short story, " The Proving Climb ", set on St Kilda ; it was published in 1973 in the anthology Scottish Short Stories.
* The Lymond Chronicles and The House of Niccolò, Renaissance-set novel series by Dorothy Dunnett ;
Margaret Douglas plays a significant role in the historical fiction series the Lymond Chronicles by Dorothy Dunnett.
Successful mass-market works included the action novels of Alistair MacLean, and the historical fiction of Dorothy Dunnett.
Dorothy Dunnett OBE ( née Halliday, 25 August 1923, Dunfermline, Fife – 9 November 2001 ) was a Scottish historical novelist.
It is neither as a literary novelist nor as a historian, but as a writer of historical fiction that Dorothy Dunnett deserves recognition ...
In 2001 she founded the Dorothy Dunnett Society to promote interest in the historical periods about which she wrote and communication between her readers.
Dorothy Dunnett's archive was left to the National Library of Scotland and articles from it appear in Whispering Gallery, the magazine of the Dorothy Dunnett Society.
Dunnett helped in the compiling of the The Dorothy Dunnett Companion ( 1994 ) and The Dorothy Dunnett Companion II ( 2002 ), which were written by Elspeth Morrison.

Dorothy and was
Both church and graveyard were smaller than she remembered them ( how many things had lessened while she was gone away ) but the headstones had grown so thick in thirty years that to find one named `` Dorothy Tredding '' seemed suddenly impossible.
The chemical structure of penicillin was determined by Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin in 1945.
The property was restored and opened to the public in 1974, by the non-profit Babe Ruth Birthplace Foundation, Inc. Ruth's widow, Claire, his two daughters, Dorothy and Julia, and his sister, Mamie, helped select and install exhibits that depict the life and times of Babe Ruth.
Bush's daughter, Dorothy Bush Koch, was married there in 1992, the first ever to do so.
The first amateur railway detective, Thorpe Hazell, was created by Victor Whitechurch and his stories impressed Ellery Queen and Dorothy L. Sayers.
Although a majority of distributism's later supporters were not Catholics and many were in fact former radical socialists who had become disillusioned with socialism ; distributist thought was adopted by the Catholic Worker Movement, conjoining it with the thought of Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin concerning localized and independent communities.
Distributists such as Dorothy Day did not favor social security when it was introduced by the United States government.
Donald Campbell was born in Kingston-upon-Thames, Surrey, the son of Malcolm, later Sir Malcolm Campbell, holder of 13 world speed records in the 1920s and 30s in the famous Bluebird cars and boats, and his second wife, Dorothy Evelyn née Whittall.
While a graduate student, one of his teachers was Dorothy Arzner, whose encouragement Coppola later acknowledged as pivotal to his film career.
George Lucas was born in Modesto, California, the son of Dorothy Ellinore ( née Bomberger ) and George Walton Lucas, Sr. ( 1913 – 1991 ), who owned a stationery store.
Bush was born in Milton, Massachusetts, to Senator Prescott Bush and Dorothy Walker Bush.
George Herbert Walker Bush was born at 173 Adams Street in Milton, Massachusetts on June 12, 1924 to Prescott Sheldon Bush and Dorothy Walker Bush.
In 2006, a theatrical adaptation was created by Frances Limoncelli and directed by Dorothy Milne at Lifeline Theatre in Chicago.
Valiente's identification was based on references Gardner made to a woman he called " Old Dorothy " which Valiente remembered.
Dorothy might have believed that the company could not deliver CP / M-86 on IBM's proposed schedule, as the company was busy developing an implementation of the PL / I programming language for Data General.
One night in September 1939 they took him to a large house owned by " Old Dorothy " Clutterbuck, a wealthy local woman, where he was made to strip naked and taken through an initiation ceremony.
The film starred Louise Fazenda, Dorothy Phillips and Ethel Wales and was shot in early 1927.
Anti-treaty writer Dorothy Macardle has claimed that 70 to 80 percent of the IRA was against the Treaty.
However, in colonial America a delusional Dorothy Talbye was hanged in 1638 for murdering her daughter, as at the time Massachusetts's common law made no distinction between insanity ( or mental illness ) and criminal behavior.
Among those who were fascinated was Dorothy de Santillana, a senior editor at Houghton Mifflin, to whom Kosinski confided that he had a manuscript based on his experiences.
Hack notes that Hoover was romantically linked to actress Dorothy Lamour in the late 1930s and early 1940s, and that after Hoover's death, Lamour did not deny rumors that she had had an affair with Hoover in the years between her two marriages.
Janis Joplin was born in Port Arthur, Texas, on, to Dorothy ( née East ) Joplin ( 1913 – 1998 ), a registrar at a business college, and her husband, Seth Joplin ( 1910 – 1987 ), an engineer at Texaco.
One of the first modern major classifications was that of Dorothy Chaytor in 1937 at Kew.
" Eleven year-old Dorothy Talbot of San Francisco was reported to be ascendant to the throne on March 1, 1906, when the Palace of Oz was expected to be completed.

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