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  1. 4 giorni fa · Caleb Carr, a military historian and author whose experience of childhood abuse drove him to explore the roots of violence — most famously in his 1994 best seller, “The Alienist,” a period thriller about the hunt for a serial killer in 19th-century Manhattan — died on Thursday at his home in Cherry Plains, N.Y. He was 68.

  2. 4 giorni fa · Such was the book’s pre-publication word of mouth that Hollywood producer Scott Rudin bought the film rights for a reported half-million dollars. Paramount Pictures soon joined the project, and while names such as director Curtis Hanson and playwright David Henry Hwang would become attached, the expensive film adaptation languished and eventually disappeared altogether.

  3. 2 giorni fa · Applied Machine Learning as a Driver for Polymeric Biomaterials Design, Nature Communications, 2023. Samantha McDonald, Emily K. Augustine, Quinn Lanners, Cynthia Rudin, L. Catherine Brinson, and Matthew Becker. Fast and Interpretable Mortality Risk Scores for Critical Care Patients. 2023.

  4. 2 giorni fa · Producer Allison Abbate, Scott Rudin, Wes Anderson, Jeremy Dawson. Production Company 20th Century Fox Animation, Indian Paintbrush, Regency Enterprises, American Empirical Pictures.

  5. 1 giorno fa · Hollywood producer Scott Rudin paid $500,000 for the film rights, although a movie was never made, and a paperback deal totaled $1 million. In 1997, Mr. Carr published a best-selling sequel with the same characters, “The Angel of Darkness,” about a mother who kills her own children, then begins to kill others.

  6. 4 giorni fa · Caleb Carr, whose bestselling 1994 novel The Alienist made the author a household name and was adapted into a 10-episode limited series on TNT, died of cancer Thursday at his home in Cherry Plains, New York. He was 68. His death was announced by his brother Ethan Carr to The New York Times. Carr was …

  7. 4 giorni fa · Such was the book’s pre-publication word of mouth that Hollywood producer Scott Rudin bought the film rights for a reported half-million dollars. Paramount Pictures soon joined the project, and while names such as director Curtis Hanson and playwright David Henry Hwang would become attached, the expensive film adaptation languished and eventually disappeared altogether.