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After reading 2272 websites, we found 15 different results for "Who wrote Memoirs of an Imaginary Friend"
Matthew Dicks
Matthew Dicks is the internationally bestselling author of the novels Memoirs of an Imaginary Friend,
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The Perfect Comeback of Caroline Jacobs by Matthew Dicks Matthew Dicks
The Perfect Comeback of Caroline Jacobs by Matthew Dicks Matthew Dicks wrote a wonderful book called Memoirs of an Imaginary Friend a few years ago and an Imaginary Friend so moved me
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Patricia McCormick
In Memoirs of an Imaginary Friend an autistic little boy is taught to stand up for himself by Patricia McCormick's imaginary friend Budo.
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a very unusual book, a very unusual book’s a cross between Emma Donaghue’s powerful novel Room and Mark Haddon’s ground-breaking The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time
Memoirs of an Imaginary Friend is a very unusual book, a very unusual book’s a cross between Emma Donaghue’s powerful novel Room and Mark Haddon’s ground-breaking The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time.
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Laura Meckler and Kate Rabinowitz
Laura Meckler and Kate Rabinowitz writing about their imaginary friend.
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Harlan Coben and James Patterson
My usual reading list includes books by Linda Fairstein, Harlan Coben and James Patterson so Memoirs of an Imaginary Friend was something different and a pleasant surprise.
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Ben Edlund
Anything put to paper by former writer Ben Edlund far exceeds this humorous but not totally out there imaginary friend tale.
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Karissa Miller
Karissa Miller has written Imaginary Friend, a project about an unmotivated woman with a unique way to get through life.
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Heinrich Wilhelm
Heinrich Wilhelm was of course the author of the memoirs and went by the name of Wilhelm, and Wilhelm's younger brother, the one with the three middle names, was Hermann (logically, as Wilhelm's other two names were already taken by Wilhelm's older brothers!)
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the first lady-in-waiting to Queen Marie Antoinette of France
First published in 1823, these memoirs were written by the first lady-in-waiting to Queen Marie Antoinette of France.
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written by Henry’s teacher Edwin Dwight
The Memoirs, a short book published shortly after Obookiah’s death, was a neat hagiography written by Henry’s teacher Edwin Dwight, and it disseminated the convenient, groomed arc of Henry’s life: a noble savage, orphaned by the cruelty of Henry's native people and taken in to God and learning by the grace of benevolent white men (one of the most commonly repeated stories puts Henry literally sitting on the steps of a Yale building, weeping for want of education).
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Mary Ellen Stelling's son, Peter James Stelling
Later, Mary Ellen Stelling's son, Peter James Stelling would novelize the memoirs, bridging the vignettes into a cohesive narrative and creating a roman a clef which has, like all good family histories: humor, pathos, and an occasional skeleton.
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