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Author | Robert Hichens |
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Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Genre | Drama |
Publisher | Methuen |
Publication date | 1904 |
Media type |
The Woman with the Fan' is a 1904 novel by the British writer Robert Hichens. [1]
In 1921 it was adapted into a silent film The Woman with the Fan directed by René Plaissetty for Stoll Pictures. [2]
Midnight Club is a 1933 American pre-Code crime drama about a gang of London jewel thieves infiltrated by an undercover agent. The film was directed by Alexander Hall and George Somnes.
The Unloved Woman is a 1913 play by the Spanish writer Jacinto Benavente. It has been adapted a number of times for films and television including the 1921 American silent film The Passion Flower, the 1940 Spanish film The Unloved Woman and the 1949 Mexican film The Unloved Woman.
José María Seoane was a Spanish film actor.
Barbary Sheep is a 1907 novel by the British writer Robert Hichens. In common with much of the author's work, it has a North African setting.
The Call of the Blood is a 1906 dramatic romance novel by the British writer Robert Hichens.
The Woman with the Fan is a 1921 British silent drama film directed by René Plaissetty and starring Mary Massart, Alec Fraser and Paulette del Baye. It is an adaptation of the 1904 novel of the same title by Robert Hichens.
After the Verdict is a 1924 novel by the English writer Robert Hichens. It was published in London by Methuen and in New York by George H. Doran. The novel was listed as a mystery and a romance.
The Slave is an 1899 novel by the British writer Robert Hichens.
The Fruitful Vine is a 1911 novel by the British writer Robert Hichens.
The Knave of Diamonds is a 1913 romance novel by the British writer Ethel M. Dell.
The Top of the World is a 1920 novel by the British writer Ethel M. Dell.
Letty Lynton is a 1931 novel by the British writer Marie Belloc Lowndes. It is loosely inspired by the case of Madeleine Smith, a young woman accused of murder.
I Start Counting is a 1966 thriller novel by the British writer Audrey Erskine Lindop. With a strangler on the loose in her small English town, a British girl begins to suspect who it is.
The Tall Headlines is a 1950 thriller novel by the British writer Audrey Erskine Lindop. A middle-class British family are lest devastated and divided when the eldest son is arrested and hanged for murder.
I Thank a Fool is a 1958 novel by the British writer Audrey Erskine Lindop. In the United States it was published by Doubleday under the alternative title of Mist over Talla.
The Singer Not the Song is a 1953 novel by the British writer Audrey Erskine Lindop. It was published in the United States by Pocket Books under the alternative title of The Bandit and the Priest. A priest sent to a small Mexican town engages in a moral battle with a local bandit.
Ballerina is a 1932 novel by the British writer Eleanor Smith. It portrays the life of a great ballerina, and her eventual fall.
East Side, West Side is a 1947 novel by the American writer Marcia Davenport. Set in New York City immediately after World War II, an unhappily married woman's life comes to a crisis in a single week. As with her two previous novels it was a commercial success, making the Publishers Weekly annual list of bestsellers.
Moss Rose is a 1934 mystery novel by the British writer Marjorie Bowen, written under the pen name of Joseph Shearing. It is based on a real-life Victorian murder case. The title refers to Moss Rose, a flowering plant.
Blanche Fury is a 1939 mystery thriller novel by the British writer Marjorie Bowen, published under the pen name of Joseph Shearing. It was republished as a Armed Services Edition during the Second World War.