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  1. Katkov, Norman. – Papers, 1930-1968. Papers of a journalist and writer of short stories, novels, screenplays, and teleplays. Included are scripts primarily relating to his television work, non-theatrical writings, and correspondence. Although Katkov has written for many dramatic television series, most of these programs are represented only ...

  2. Norman Katkov is the author of Blood and Orchids (3.87 avg rating, 76 ratings, 6 reviews, published 1983), The Judas Kiss (3.00 avg rating, 23 ratings, 3...

  3. Norman Katkov, writer of short stories, novels, screenplays, and teleplays, was born July 26, 1918, in the Soviet Union, to Hyman and Milia (Radovolsky) Kateekoffsky. He has three brothers: Morris and Harold, both doctors; and Robert, an aerospace technologist. The Kateekoffsky family immigrated to St. Paul, Minnesota, when Norman was two years ...

  4. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 42316383. Source citation. Screenwriter, Author. From the late-1940s until the early-1980s, he wrote scripts for scores of popular television series among them Wanted: Dead or Alive, Ben Casey and Mission: Impossible. He immigrated to the United States as a child with his family where they settled in St. Paul, Minnesota.

  5. Jan 22, 2010 · Norman Katkov was born near Kiev in the Ukraine in 1918 and came to Saint Paul with his parents around 1921. He graduated from the University of Minnesota in 1940 with a journalism degree. During World War WII, he was in the Army and put out a post newspaper, sometimes sending stories to the Pioneer Press.

  6. Mar 26, 1983 · Norman Katkov. 3.87. 76 ratings6 reviews. An assault on the wife of a Navy lieutenant shatters the idyllic facade of American life on the Hawaiian Islands in the 1930s, as four local boys are falsely accused of the crime. Genres Historical FictionFictionSuspensePulp.

  7. Eagle At My Eyes, by Norman Katkov. The Word is HysteriaEagle at My Eyes by Norman Katkov. New York, Doubleday, 1948. 252 pp. $2.75. This book begins with the story of a pogrom and ends with the line, “All right, you bastards [the Gentiles], here I come.”. The hero, named Joe, tells his story in the first person, in a series of flashbacks.

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