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Topic: Fanny Craddock


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In the News (Sun 3 Jun 12)

  
  Fanny Cradock @ Famous.y2u.co.uk
Her temperament was wont to get on top of her and on another occasion, an anonymous correspondent to the "Delia Online" message board relates, "Fanny Craddock was, alas, a ghastly snob who had her come-uppance when she humiliated a woman, an audience member, on her live TV show.
Fanny tore into her like a lioness disembowelling a zebra.
It was not without reason that one of her obituaries in the UK broadsheets began with the words, "Fanny Cradock was a preposterous character".
famous.y2u.co.uk /F_Fanny_Cradock.htm   (889 words)

  
 Eighteenth-Century Resources -- Literature   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
Frances Fanny Burney d'Arblay (Barbara Darby, Dalhousie) -- A brief chronology, extensive bibliographies, critical resources, and links.
The World of London Theater, 1660-1800 (Patricia Craddock, Florida) -- A general view of 18th-c.
The Other Eighteenth Century: Women's Poetry and the Canon (Patricia Craddock, Univ. of Florida) -- A course page, with links and original materials for many women poets, including Behn, Montagu, Carter, Leapor, Mulso (Chapone), Lennox, Baillie, and Robinson.
www.c18.net /li/lit.html   (5304 words)

  
 [No title]
Emma, the daughter of James Phare Goltra and Fannie C. Cross, was born 18 Jul 1838 in NJ.
Fannie died in 1942 and Will died in 1953.
In the earlier census records his wife is listed as "Labarda" later as Fanny.
www.sutton.org /issue17.htm   (6037 words)

  
 AMERICAN FEAST
The connection between cookery and progress has been continually asserted in the history of the American cookbook.
In her 1896 Boston Cooking- School Cook Book, Fannie Farmer observed that "Progress in civilization has been accompanied by progress in cookery."
American Cookery was the first printed cookbook written by an American, and the first cookery title in which the word "American" appeared.
www.lib.udel.edu /ud/spec/exhibits/american.html   (8872 words)

  
 Welcome to Piano Press
Mickey Gilley, Alabama, Barbi Benton, Melanie Ayers, Tommy Overstreet, Linda Darrell, Mary Lou Turner, Brenda Pepper, Susan Lea, Mike Wells, Billy Crash Craddock, and a host of independent artists have recorded her songs.
Her poems have appeared in publications, including: Spirits, North Coast Review, White Pelican Review, Alembic, Anthology, Sierra Nevada Review, Nanny Fanny, Small Brushes, Hard Row to Hoe, Limestone, Zillah, Free Fall, Thought Magazine and Into the Teeth of the Wind, The Advocate, Omnific, and 360 Degrees.
Bonny Barry Sanders (Jacksonville, FL): Her poems have appeared in many literary magazines and journals throughout the country, including Blueline, California Quarterly, Ginger Hill, Hayden's Ferry Review, Kalliope, The Louisiana Review, Midwest Quarterly, Negative Capability, Pig Iron, Plainsong, Red Owl, Red Rock Review, South Dakota Review, White Pelican Review, and several others.
www.pianopress.com /writerbios.htm   (17553 words)

  
 Eighteenth-Century Resources -- Literature
The World of London Theater, 1660-1800 (Patricia Craddock, Florida)
It is an archive of texts by or relating to the eighteenth-century British Bluestocking Circle and the second generation Blues, including predecessor texts, and literature of sensibility as it is derived from the Bluestockings' concerns with aesthetics, and with women's aesthetic achievements."
The Other Eighteenth Century: Women's Poetry and the Canon (Patricia Craddock, Univ. of Florida)
andromeda.rutgers.edu /~jlynch/18th/lit.html   (4958 words)

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