Your search for ′Who wrote East of Eden′ returned the following results:
written by John Steinbeck to John Steinbeck's friend
Journal of a Novel Journal of a Novel: The East of Eden Letters is a series of letters written by John Steinbeck to John Steinbeck's friend and editor Pascal Covici, in parallel with the first draft of John Steinbeck's longest novel, East of Eden.
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McNally
Steinbeck asked McNally to write the libretto for a musical version of the novel East of Eden.
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author of East of Eden, The Grapes of Wrath
In 1958, John Steinbeck, author of East of Eden, The Grapes of Wrath, and Of Mice and Men, received a letter from Men's teenage son Thom, in which Thom confessed that Menhad fallen desperately in love with a girl named Susan at Men's boarding school.
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farmer Samuel Hamilton Samuel Hamilton's wife Liza
East of Eden is Often described as Steinbeck’s most ambitious novel East of Eden is set between the beginning of the 20th century and the end of World War I, World War Iis the story of warmhearted inventor and farmer Samuel Hamilton Samuel Hamilton's wife Liza, and their nine children who live on a rough, infertile piece of land in the Salinas Valley, California,.
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the novel
In 1952, John Steinbeck wrote the novel, East of Eden.
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George and Harold's new teacher
, George and Harold's new teacher made them read East of Eden, by John Steinbeck.
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Bergsman's solo project Taken by Trees
In 2009, Bergsman's solo project Taken by Trees released East of Eden, a collaboration with Pakistani musicians.
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Stephen Oppenheimer
Stephen Oppenheimer is also the author of Eden in the East: The Drowned Continent of Southeast Asia, which challenged the orthodox view of the origins of Polynesians as rice farmers from Taiwan.
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directed by Elia Kazan
East of Eden is a 1955 film, directed by Elia Kazan, and loosely based on the second half of the 1952 novel of the same name by John Steinbeck.
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the Thelemite Kenneth Grant, then leader of the Typhonian OTO,
In Maxine Sanders's 1977 book Nightside of Eden, the Thelemite Kenneth Grant, then leader of the Typhonian OTO, told a story in which Maxine Sandersclaimed that both Maxine Sandersand Gardner performed rituals in the St. Giles flat of a "Mrs. South", probably a reference to Montalban, who often used the pseudonym of "Mrs North".
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