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memoir and became
Quayle authored a 1994 memoir, Standing Firm, which became a bestseller.
His son, Raymond Bernard became an influential French filmmaker ( using as scripts a number of works authored by his father ) while his son Jean-Jacques Bernard published a memoir of his father in 1955 titled Mon père Tristan Bernard ( My Father, Tristan Bernard ).
Juliette Kinzie, in her 1856 memoir, stated that he was a native of Santo Domingo ( now the Dominican Republic ), and this became generally accepted by scholars as his place of birth.
In the previous decade she had become one of the century ’ s most famous feminist writers with three more novels, and a series of essays including the moving late memoir “ Sketch of the Past ”, It was also in the 1930s that Desmond MacCarthy became perhaps the most widely read – and heard – literary critic with his columns in The Sunday Times and his broadcasts with the BBC.
In 1875, ten years after the end of the Civil War, Sherman became one of the first Civil War generals to publish a memoir.
Regaining freedom in 1853, he published his memoir that year, became nationally known and lectured on the abolitionist circuit.
) and later wrote in her memoir that she became absorbed in motherhood and considered ending her career.
Pola ( Paul Rollon ) became an artist and art critic and wrote a memoir, My Father, Paul Gauguin ( 1937 ).
The character became best known from the fictional memoir Tevye and his Daughters ( also called Tevye the Milkman or Tevye the Dairyman ), about a pious Jewish milkman in Tsarist Russia, and the troubles he has with his six daughters: Tzeitel, Hodel, Chava, Shprintze, Bielke, and Teibel, as well as from the musical dramatic adaptation Fiddler on the Roof.
According to her son's memoir, Hemings became pregnant by Jefferson in Paris and agreed to return with him to the United States after he promised to free her children when they came of age.
'" Drucker related that for 20 years after that meeting, Sloan and Drucker had a good relationship, in which Sloan would invite Drucker to lunch once or twice a year to discuss Sloan's philanthropic plans and the memoir that Sloan was working on assembling ( what became My Years ).
Charles Elton ( ecology ), Alister Hardy ( marine biology ) and John Baker ( cytology ) all became highly successful, and Baker eventually wrote Huxley's Royal Society obituary memoir.
Out of this grave and menacing experience, he was later able to write the memoir Darkness Visible ( 1990 ), the work Styron became best known for during the last two decades of his life.
Bertie ' Berlin ' Marshall became a writer, publishing a novel, Psychoboys in 1999 and a memoir Berlin Bromley in 2001 which received favourable reviews from The Guardian and Time Out London magazine.
The posthumous memoir A Genius in the Family by Hilary and Piers du Pré later became the subject of the 1998 film adaptation Hilary and Jackie, directed by Anand Tucker, that in turn promoted the popularity of the memoir.
He became fellow and tutor of his college and succeeded to the work of TH Green ( 1836 – 82 ), whose writings he edited with a memoir ( three volumes, London: Longmans, Green & Co., 1885-8 ) He left an unfinished work on Plato, part of which was published after his death, together with his lectures on logic and some essays.
The Pianist is a memoir of the Polish composer of Jewish origin Władysław Szpilman, written and elaborated by the Polish author Jerzy Waldorff, who met Szpilman in 1938 in Krynica and became a friend of his.
Bois became a teacher, he lived and worked near Washington DC, as a noted amateur expert on dinosaurs he contributed to the BBC TV series Walking with Dinosaurs ; he wrote an unpublished memoir of his time in The Dingoes, entitled The Dingoes ' Lament ( named after his track on their debut album ).
In 1984 Koch published his first memoir, Mayor, which became a best-seller.
* Thomas James, a former slave who became a minister in upstate New York, and published a well-regarded memoir.
Howell Davis became a writer after the American Civil War, completing her husband's memoir.
In 2002 Wax wrote her memoir, How Do You Want Me ?, which became a bestseller according to The Sunday Times best-seller list.
The new, scandalous memoir, entitled Naked Came I, became a bestseller in the Bloom County universe, leading Opus to even more notoriety than he had as Bill the Cat's running mate.

memoir and cause
In his memoir, Marshall's only negative comment towards Wilson was, " I have sometimes thought that great men are the bane of civilization, they are the real cause of all the bitterness and contention which amounts to anything in the world.
Garbo also ended their friendship at this time but there some evidence that the memoir was not necessarily the cause.
The king of France was in fact, when once the pope was deprived of the temporal power, to become the suzerain of the Western nations, and in a later and separate memoir Dubois proposed that he should cause himself to be made emperor by Pope Clement V.

memoir and for
Despite the lost memoir, Galois published three papers that year, one of which laid the foundations for Galois theory.
Harold Evans used the memoir as a source for a chapter about Kildall in the 2004 book They Made America, concluding that Microsoft had robbed Kildall of his inventions.
Chapman's memoir, A Liar's Autobiography, was published in 1980 and, unusually for a work of this type, had five authors: Chapman, his partner David Sherlock, Alex Martin, David Yallop and Douglas Adams.
Additionally, Ted Sorensen claimed in his memoir Counselor: A Life at the Edge of History ( 2008 ) to have had a hand in the speech, and said he had incorrectly inserted the word ein, incorrectly taking responsibility for the " jelly doughnut misconception ", below, a claim apparently supported by Berlin mayor Willy Brandt but dismissed by later scholars since the final typed version, which does not contain the words, is the last one Sorensen could have worked on.
First she invited him to her plantation in 1877 near Biloxi, Mississippi at a time when he was ailing, and gave him a cottage to use for working on his memoir.
A life for language: A biographical memoir of Leonard Bloomfield.
1927 saw the publication of Trader Horn, the memoir of Alfred Aloysius Smith, who had worked for a British trading company in what is now Gabon in the late 1800s.
His memoir of the first days of World War II, Strange Defeat, written in 1940 but not published until 1946, blamed the French military establishment, along with her social and political culture, for the sudden total military defeat and helped after the war to neutralize the traumatic memory of France's failure and to build a new French identity.
His work is notable for the use of the zeta function ζ ( s ) ( for real values of the argument " s ", as are works of Leonhard Euler, as early as 1737 ) predating Riemann's celebrated memoir of 1859, and he succeeded in proving a slightly weaker form of the asymptotic law, namely, that if the limit of π ( x )/( x / ln ( x )) as x goes to infinity exists at all, then it is necessarily equal to one.
He returned to New York, enrolling at Syracuse University, but he recalled in his 2006 memoir, Just One More Thing, that he was unsure what he wanted to do with his life for years after leaving high school.
The program was designed to train civil servants for the federal government, a career that Falk said in his memoir that he had " no interest in and no aptitude for.
In planning for a possible influenza pandemic the WHO published a document on pandemic preparedness guidance in 1999, revised in 2005 and in February 2009, defining phases and appropriate actions for each phase in an aide memoir entitled WHO pandemic phase descriptions and main actions by phase.
Some Native Americans captured Europeans and used them as both labourers and bargaining chips ; see for example John R. Jewitt, an Englishman who wrote a memoir about his years as a captive of the Nootka people on the Pacific Northwest Coast from 1802 – 1805.
A more recent example is the so-called Satanic ritual abuse scare of the 1980s — beginning with the memoir Michelle Remembers — which depicts Satanism as a vast ( and unproven ) conspiracy of elites with a predilection for child abuse and human sacrifice.
In his 2009 memoir, saxophonist Clarence Clemons said De Niro explained the line's origins when Clemons coached De Niro to play the saxophone for the movie New York, New York.
In Marshall's memoir, he wrote that when he approached Harrison to pay his bill, his lawyer informed him that he would not charge him for the service, but instead gave him a lecture on ethics.
In an unpublished memoir, Mars later explained the band's choice of name: " Like maybe the main act doesn't show, and instead the crowd has to settle for an earful of us dirtbags.
The Decemberists ' frontman Colin Meloy wrote a memoir centered around the album " Let it Be " for the 331 / 3 imprint in the early 2000s.
He received a medal from the Royal Society for his memoir of 1844, On A General Method of Analysis.
In the sixteenth and seventeenth chapters of the Differential Equations is an account of the general symbolic method, and of a general method in analysis, originally described in his memoir printed in the Philosophical Transactions for 1844.
He was continually called on for help in developing the agriculture and trade of the colony, and his influence was used in connection with the sending out of early free settlers, one of whom, a young gardener George Suttor, afterwards wrote a memoir of Banks.
Part memoir and part spiritual quest, Walden at first won few admirers, but later critics have regarded it as a classic American work that explores natural simplicity, harmony, and beauty as models for just social and cultural conditions.

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