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The Marriage of Meggotta

The Marriage of Meggotta( )
Author: Pargeter, Edith
Series title:A Common Reader Edition Ser.
ISBN:978-1-58579-029-6
Publication Date:Nov 2001
Publisher:Akadine Press, The
Imprint:Common Reader Editions
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:USD $16.95
Book Description:

Bringing together all of Stanley Hoffmann’s significant essays on the development and difficulties of European integration, this collection highlights the intractability of the divisions that plagued the European Union from its very beginning. Just as the process of integration has displayed the same ambiguities, hesitations, and failings over the years, so have Hoffmann’s general preoccupations and emphases remained constant.These essays provide a view of evolution and...
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Book Details
Pages:304
Detailed Subjects: Fiction / Historical / General
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):6 x 9 Inches
Author Biography
Pargeter, Edith (Author)
Edith Pargeter was born in Horsehay, Shropshire. She was a chemist's assistant from 1933 to 1940 and participated during World War II in the Women's Royal Navy Service. She adopted the pseudonym "Ellis Peters" to clearly mark a division between her mystery stories and her other work. Her brother was Ellis and Petra was a friend from Czechoslovakia, thus the name. She came to writing mysteries, she says, "after half a lifetime of novel-writing." Her detective fiction features well-rounded, knowledgeable characters with whom the reader can empathize.

Pargeter started writing seriously for publication while gathering useful information on medicines that she would draw upon later when tackling crime stories. Her first published novel was Hortensius, friend of Nero (1936), a rather dry tale of martyrdom that was not a great success but she persevered and The City Lies Foursquare (1939) was much more warmly received. Her most famous literary creation is the medieval monk Brother Cadfael.

Peters received the Mystery Writers of America's Edgar Award in 1963 and the Crime Writers Association's Silver Dagger Award in 1981.

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