Lee Tulloch | |
---|---|
Born | Melbourne, Australia |
Occupation | Journalist, novelist |
Spouse(s) | Tony Amos (photographer) |
Children | Lolita |
Lee Ann Tulloch (born 12 January 1954) is an Australian-born journalist and author.
She was born in Melbourne, and has a degree in English literature from Melbourne University. She has worked as a researcher in federal politics. She was arts features editor for Vogue Australia from 1978 to 1982, and editor-in-chief of Harper's Bazaar Australia. After moving to New York in 1985, she wrote her first novel, Fabulous Nobodies , which was published in 1989. [1] With her photographer husband, Anthony Amos, she chose a bohemian life, moving between Australia, New York and Paris for more than a decade with their young daughter, Lolita. In Paris, she began her second novel, Wraith, a gothic tale of a dead supermodel who comes back to haunt her personal assistant. She completed it in New York and it was published in 1999. In 2001 she published her third novel, Two Shanes, a comedy of errors about an Australian surfer in Manhattan. On 11 September 2001 she was evacuated from her Tribeca home and left her beloved Manhattan for the relative peace of a Sydney beach. Her fourth novel, The Cutting, a murder mystery set on the Australian coast, was published in 2003. A collection of her fashion essays, Perfect Pink Polish, was published in 2005. Her latest work is a darkly erotic novel, The Woman in the Lobby (May 2008.)
Picnic at Hanging Rock is an Australian historical fiction novel by Joan Lindsay. The novel, set in 1900, is about a group of female students at an Australian girls' boarding school who vanish at Hanging Rock while on a Valentine's Day picnic, and the effects the disappearances have on the school and local community. The novel was first published in 1967 in Australia by Cheshire Publishing and was reprinted by Penguin in 1975. It is widely considered by critics to be one of the greatest Australian novels.
Elizabeth "Lee" Miller, Lady Penrose, was an American photographer and photojournalist. She was a fashion model in New York City in the 1920s before going to Paris, where she became a fashion and fine art photographer. During the Second World War, she was a war correspondent for Vogue, covering events such as the London Blitz, the liberation of Paris, and the concentration camps at Buchenwald and Dachau.
Nelle Harper Lee was an American novelist best known for her 1960 novel To Kill a Mockingbird. It won the 1961 Pulitzer Prize and has become a classic of modern American literature. Lee has received numerous accolades and honorary degrees, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2007 which was awarded for her contribution to literature. She assisted her close friend Truman Capote in his research for the book In Cold Blood (1966). Capote was the basis for the character Dill Harris in To Kill a Mockingbird.
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Fabulous Nobodies is the first novel by Australian author and fashion journalist Lee Tulloch. It is described as a lighthearted yet devastatingly accurate social satire about the hip young fashion slaves of New York City's East Village in 1983.
Holly Peterson is an American producer, journalist and novelist. The daughter of Peter George Peterson, she was a contributing editor for Newsweek magazine, an editor-at-large for Talk magazine and an Emmy award-winning producer for ABC News, where she covered global politics. She is the author of the New York Times bestseller The Manny.
Birgitte Caroline "Nena" von Schlebrügge is a Mexican-born Swedish-American fashion model from the 1950s and 1960s. She started her high-fashion modelling career in London in 1957. She then continued her career in New York City in 1958 at the Ford Modeling Agency. In New York, she worked at Vogue and Harper's Bazaar. She is now the Executive Chairwoman of Menla Mountain Retreat and Managing Director of Tibet House US.
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Therese von Hohoff Torrey was an American literary editor with the publishing firm J. B. Lippincott & Co.. Strong-willed and forceful, she worked closely with author Harper Lee over the course of nearly three years to give final shape to her classic novel To Kill A Mockingbird. After the commercial and literary success of the novel, she shielded Harper Lee from the intense pressure to write another one. She retired from a senior editorial position at the firm in 1973 and died the following year.
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