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  1. In full this motto is 'Touch not the cat bot [without] a glove'. This is also the motto of the book's fictional Ashley family, from a Scottish ancestor . Mary Stewart admitted that the vicar in the novel, Mr Bryanston, 'is to some extent a portrait of my own father'. [4] Her father, Frederick Albert Rainbow (1886-1967), was an Anglican vicar in ...

  2. This Rough Magic. First edition. (publ. Hodder & Stoughton) Cover art by Val Biro. This Rough Magic is a romantic suspense novel by Mary Stewart, first published in 1964. The title is a quote from William Shakespeare's The Tempest. Like several other novels by Stewart, it is set in Greece and has an element of suspense. [1]

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mary_StuartMary Stuart - Wikipedia

    Mary Stewart (novelist) (1916–2014), British novelist. Mary Stuart (actress) (1926–2002), American actress, best known for her 35-year role in the soap opera Search for Tomorrow. Mary Stewart (swimmer) (born 1945), Canadian swimmer. Mary Downie Stewart (1876–1957), New Zealand political hostess and welfare worker.

  4. Aug 11, 2020 · Mary Stewart is a mid-century British author who helped establish the romantic suspense genre in the 1950s, and contributed to the resurgence of the fantasy novel in the 1970s with her Merlin trilogy. She is a gifted and classy writer with a long career, and I can’t wait for you to “meet” her now!

  5. Mary Stewart Doubleday Cutting was the daughter of Civil War Brevet Brigadier General Ulysses Doubleday and his wife, née Mary Stewart. She was the granddaughter of Ulysses F. Doubleday, who served in the War of 1812 and was elected to both the Twenty-second and Twenty-fourth Congresses. She was the niece of General Abner Doubleday .

  6. See this list of other authors named Mary Stewart. Lady Mary Stewart, born Mary Florence Elinor Rainbow, was a popular English novelist, and taught at the school of John Norquay elementary for 30 to 35 years. She was one of the most widely read fiction writers of our time.

  7. Mary Cholmondeley was born at Hodnet near Market Drayton in Shropshire, the third of eight children of Rev Richard Hugh Cholmondeley (1827–1910) and his wife Emily Beaumont (1831–1893). Her great-uncle was a hymn-writing bishop, Reginald Heber , and her niece a writer, Stella Benson .

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