Susan (Bogert) Warner (11 July 1819-17 March 1885), prolific novelist, is remembered today as the author of a single best-seller, The Wide, Wide World. Indeed, the publishing history of that book rivals its interest as a literary production. It was an ou...
Susan Bogert Warner, who wrote under the pseudonym Elizabeth Wetherell, wrote twenty-seven novels, four volumes of biblical history, one biblical study, various religious tracts, a prize-winning essay on patriotism, and, with her sister, Anna Bartlett Wa...
Susan Warner, best remembered for her popular first two novels, The Wide, Wide World (1850) and Queechy (1852), was one of the few American women to write successfully for a living during the antebellum period. Attempting both to support her family and t...
Hill, McGraw combine for 4 music awards Toni Braxton, Creed each go home with 2 fan-picked honors Associated Press Tuesday, January 9, 2001 Los Angeles -- The country husband-and-wife team of Faith Hill and Tim McGraw dominated the American Music...
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The Officer
To The Hill! 03/01/2004: 898 words, approx. 3 pages
Given the weather during the 2004 Mid-Winter Conference, you may wonder why ROA doesn't choose Miami, San Antonio, San Diego-or any place where it's warm-instead of Washington, D.C.! The choice, however, is deliberate. The nation's capital is the locale for Mid-Winter so that ROAs...
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