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Her and historical
Her films of the early and mid 1950s were generally lightweight romantic dramas, some historical, in which she was cast as ingénue or siren, often in varying states of undress.
Her seminal works among laypeople are her memoir An Unquiet Mind, which details her experience with severe mania and depression, and Night Falls Fast: Understanding Suicide, providing historical, religious, and cultural responses to suicide, as well as the relationship between mental illness and suicide.
Her figure permeates historical, cultural, and social dimensions of Latin American cultures.
Her role during the Cultural Revolution is still a subject of historical debate.
Her historical novel Comme un vol de gerfauts ( 1947 ) was translated into English as A Flight of Falcons, and extracts from her essay ' Feminism or Death ' appeared in the 1974 anthology New French Feminisms.
Her father is named as Beli Mawr, and her brother is Caswallawn ( the historical Cassivellaunus ).
Her historical novels were noted for how extensively she researched the historical facts, and some of them were best-sellers: Dragonwyck ( 1944 ) and Foxfire ( 1950 ) were both made into Hollywood films.
Her deeds are recorded in the oral tradition and mentioned incidentally in various historical accounts.
Her house, near Ekatontapiliani church, is today a historical monument.
Her historical existence has been questioned ; she was declared apocryphal by Pope Gelasius I in 494, but devotion to her revived in the West with the Crusades.
Her daughter Marie Laveau II ( 1827 — c. 1895 ) also practiced Voudoun, and historical accounts often confuse the two.
Her initial roles were ingenues based on characters from historical literature, for example in Scaramouche opposite Stewart Granger.
Her story would become the inspiration for the Hollywood movie Anna and the King of Siam and the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical The King and I, which, because of their incorrect historical references and disrespectful treatment of King Mongkut, were initially banned in Thailand as the Thai government and people considered them to be lèse majesté.
The action of the story follows Sybil Gerard, a political courtesan and daughter of an executed Luddite leader ( she is borrowed from Disraeli's novel Sybil ); Edward " Leviathan " Mallory, a paleontologist and explorer ; and Laurence Oliphant, a historical figure with a real career, as portrayed in the book, as a travel writer whose work was a cover for espionage activities " undertaken in the service of Her Majesty ".
* Tilly is mentioned in Bertolt Brecht's Mother Courage and Her Children in the chapter where his funeral is held and where Mother Courage, referring to it, says her famous lines " I don't care if this funeral is a historical event, to me the mutilation of my daughter's face is a historical event.
In her analysis, Emma Eckstein ' supplied Freud with the material that would allow him to theorize hysteric symptomology ... taught Freud about " the no-man's land between fantasy and memory, resonating with sadistic acts and fantasies of a former historical epoch "' Her ' eager collaboration in her analysis gave Freud much precious material ... contributed substantial changes and fundamental new elements to his theories: the wish theory of psychosis and dream ; the transferential reconstruction of her early pleasures ... fantastic scenes from her inner life '.
Her many years as a park ranger enabled her to work in a variety of natural and historical settings, from 300 feet below the surface of the Earth to 13, 000 feet above sea level on the Continental Divide ; and from the textile mills of the American Industrial Revolution to the homes of Americans who changed the course of history.
Her actual historical significance is disputed, although it is largely believed that Chen was pivotal in Wu Sangui's campaigns after the fall of the Ming.
Her attention to detail in the midst of all the struggles that surrounded her adds to her historical significance as an important rhetorician.
Her archive of historical, literary, art, tape, and extensive correspondence materials ( including many prominent literary correspondents, such as: William S. Burroughs, Robert Creeley, Diane Di Prima, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Allen Ginsberg, and Ken Kesey ) resides at the University of Michigan's Special Collections Library in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Her works generally fall into one of several categories of genre fiction, including historical murder mysteries and detective fiction.
Her true sex was discovered, and she would eventually be erased from the historical record because of this.

Her and novels
Her second and last novel, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, which is considered to be one of the first sustained feminist novels, appeared in 1848.
James Hadley Chase wrote a few novels with private eyes as the main hero, including Blonde's Requiem ( 1945 ), Lay Her Among the Lilies ( 1950 ), and Figure It Out for Yourself ( 1950 ).
Her classical education left its mark ; Christopher Stray has observed that " George Eliot's novels draw heavily on Greek literature ( only one of her books can be printed correctly without the use of a Greek typeface ), and her themes are often influenced by Greek tragedy ".
* " Her stories and novels are humanistic, while her deep concern for male-female ( even human-alien ) harmony ran counter to the developing segregate-the-sexes drive amongst feminist writers ; What her work brought to the genre was a blend of lyricism and inventiveness, as if some lyric poet had rewritten a number of clever SF standards and then passed them on to a psychoanalyst for final polish.
Her novels Wifey ( 1978 ) and Smart Women ( 1983 ) shot to the top of The New York Times best-seller list.
Her reputation has been altered over the years according to changing social and political perspectives, especially after the Mexican Revolution, when she was portrayed in dramas, novels, and paintings as an evil or scheming temptress.
Her portrait of messianic ( self -) sacrifices of these figures make for entertaining speculation, but they have not been taken seriously as history even by her staunchest supporters, though they have been used in novels ( e. g. Katherine Kurtz's Lammas Night, Philip Lindsay's The Devil and King John ).
Her mother read Mary Johnston's novels to her before she could read.
Her novels were especially popular and included the Pulitzer Prize-winning So Big ( 1924 ), Show Boat ( 1926 ; made into the celebrated 1927 musical ), Cimarron ( 1929 ; made into the 1931 film which won the Academy Award for Best Picture ), and Giant ( 1952 ; made into the 1956 Hollywood movie ).
* Elizabeth von Arnim's novels Elizabeth and Her German Garden and Solitary Summer
Her youngest daughter Sara Cassidy has published young adult novels including SLICK 2010 and WINDFALL 2011.
Her works include novels, plays, stories, libretti and poems written in a highly idiosyncratic, playful, repetitive, and humorous style.
Her class is to a large extent about their work in progress, mainly novels which they started during the preceding term.
Her most famous novels include Murder on the Orient Express ( 1934 ), Death on the Nile ( 1937 ), and the world's best-selling mystery And Then There Were None ( 1939 ).
Her novels were romantic stories of the time and concentrated on women in the marriage market ; either beautiful and superficial, or unattractive with no hope of joining it, and the person telling the story and observing them is often an independent woman.
Her two novels were Wise Blood ( 1952 ) and The Violent Bear It Away ( 1960 ).
Blofeld appears or is heard in three novels: Thunderball, On Her Majesty's Secret Service, and You Only Live Twice ; and six James Bond films from Eon Productions: From Russia with Love ( 1963 ), Thunderball ( 1965 ), You Only Live Twice ( 1967 ), On Her Majesty's Secret Service ( 1969 ), Diamonds Are Forever ( 1971 ) and For Your Eyes Only ( 1981 ) ( the pre-title sequence of which marks his final appearance and apparent death ).
Her novels and mysteries are set in England, France, and Wales, and are about English and Welsh royalty during the Middle Ages.
Her work is generally well received, with the more recent novels reaching the New York Times Bestseller List.
) Her critically acclaimed short stories and novels have secured her reputation as a major American writer.
Her bestselling Mitford series of novels is set in a small town based on Blowing Rock ; she calls the town " Mitford ".
Her cover is research into Sheridan Le Fanu, an Anglo-Irish writer of Gothic tales and mystery novels of the 19th century.
Her novels are often much darker than the film adaptation of Chocolat would lead us to suppose, and characters are often emotionally damaged or morally ambivalent.

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