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  1. Elliott Arnold (September 13, 1912 – May 13, 1980) was an American newspaper feature writer, novelist, and screenwriter. Born in Brooklyn, New York, he became a feature writer with the New York World-Telegram and authored dozens of novels.

  2. Elliot Arnold was an American newspaper feature writer, novelist, screenwriter, and became a feature writer with the New York World-Telegram. Among his books, Elliott Arnold is probably best known for his novel Blood Brother that was made into the acclaimed 1950 motion picture Broken Arrow and an ensuing 1956 television series of the same name.

    • (59)
    • May 13, 1980
    • September 13, 1912
  3. BLOOD BROTHER is Elliott Arnold's compelling read dealing with an infamous time in our western United States heritage. The story depicts the struggles of two legendary figures describing their bonding during a time of growth and conflict.

    • (80)
    • Paperback
    • Elliott Arnold
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  5. Elliott Arnold. This novel tells the story of a magnificent exploit: the feat of the Danish Underground in 1943 when, in the space of two weeks, virtually all of the eight thousand Danish Jews were smuggled to Sweden.

    • (91)
    • Hardcover
    • Elliott Arnold
  6. Apr 1, 1979 · Arnold's rendering of the friendship between Cochise and Tom Jeffords is a triumph of historical fiction. No poetic detail of communion - between these men and the desert, the mountains, the women they love, and each other - goes unsung by Arnold's tempered, lyrical prose.

    • (53)
    • University of Nebraska Press
    • $21.46
    • Elliott Arnold
  7. A NIGHT OF WATCHING. by Elliott Arnold ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 10, 1967. Arnold, who gave the Indians back to America in Blood Brother, now pays tribute to the nationals of Denmark in a Uris type novel about Denmark's resistance to the extermination of its Jews by the Nazis.

  8. May 14, 1980 · Elliott Arnold, author of more than 25 novels and other books on such themes as the Western Indian frontier and World War II confrontations, died yesterday after a brief illness in Mount Sinai...

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