Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Carol_BlyCarol Bly - Wikipedia

    Carol Bly (April 16, 1930 – December 21, 2007) was an American teacher and an author of short stories, essays, and nonfiction works on writing. Her work often featured Minnesota women who must identify the moral crisis that is facing their community or themselves and enact change through empathy, or opening one's eyes to the ...

    • 1970s–2000s
    • American
  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Robert_BlyRobert Bly - Wikipedia

    Bly lived on a farm in Minnesota with his wife Carol (née McLean), whom he married in 1955, and their four children. Carol Bly was also a writer, winning awards for her short stories and novels. Robert and Carol divorced in 1979.

    • 1962–2018
    • 4, including Mary Bly
  3. An Interview with Carol Bly WE'RE ADMIRERS of Carol Bly's clear, wry short fiction, and of the urgent and compelling vision so apparent in her works of nonfiction. She is the author of two books of short stories, Backbone and The Tomcat's Wife; a book of essays, Letters from the Country; and a book on the craft of fiction, The Passionate ...

  4. 22 dic 2007 · (AP) - Carol Bly, one of Minnesota's notable literary figures known for writing essays and letters with a strong moral voice, has died of ovarian cancer. She was 77. She died Friday at the...

  5. 23 dic 2007 · True to form, Carol Bly stood stalwart against the dying of the light, dictating letters and thank-yous to friends, readers, well-wishers and fellow writers even in her final days. The lioness of ...

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Eloisa_JamesEloisa James - Wikipedia

    2. Relatives. Robert Bly (father) Carol Bly (mother) Website. eloisajames .com. Eloisa James is the pen name of Mary Bly (born 1962). She is a tenured Shakespeare professor at Fordham University who also writes best-selling Regency and Georgian romance novels under her pen name.

  7. Carol Bly (April 16, 1930-December 21, 2007) was an award-winning author of essays, short stories, and two nonfiction works on creative writing. She received her B.A. in English and History from Wellesley College in 1951 and went to graduate school at the University of Minnesota.