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After reading 1896 websites, we found 20 different results for "Who wrote The Official Story"

by Puenzo and Aída Bortnik

The Official Story () is a 1985 Argentine drama historical film directed by Luis Puenzo and written by Puenzo and Aída Bortnik.

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James Holland

The Official Story was published by Carlton Books last month and is written by leading historian James Holland.

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Debra

The official story goes that The official story was written by Clapton as a love song, but as we shall see, the song was not written by Eric Clapton at all, but Debra wrote The official story for Clapton on Debra's request.

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by bestselling author Ed Greenwood

The story was written by bestselling author Ed Greenwood, creator of the Forgotten Realms fantasy world for Dungeons and Dragons, which served as the basis for games like Baldur’s Gate and Neverwinter Nights, as well as about 170 fantasy books.

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by George Eliot –

The story, first published in 1863, was written by George Eliot – the male pen name of Mary Ann Evans (1819–1880) – travelling between the brand new Kingdom of Italy and the United Kingdom.

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by James Huber

The story was written by James Huber and is viewable at James Huber's website;[2]

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by Judge John van Dyke

The story was written by Judge John van Dyke, a grandson of John Honeyman, using oral accounts told to John Honeyman by John Honeyman's Aunt Jane, the daughter of John Honeyman.

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by Robert Hamilton Mathews *

The story was written down by Robert Hamilton Mathews (*1841–1918), an Australian surveyor and self-taught anthropologist who studied the Aboriginal cultures of Australia.

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by Antonio Gramsci

The story was written down in 1931 by Antonio Gramsci, the Marxist philosopher and political activist, in a letter to Antonio Gramsci's children.

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by frequent Twilight Zone contributor Charles Beaumont

The story was written by frequent Twilight Zone contributor Charles Beaumont, although interestingly, several elements of the story resemble the novel and movie

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by Elliott Abrams

The story itself was written by Elliott Abrams, Israeli apologist, neoconservative, previously convicted in the Iran-contra affair, ran Reagan’s Central American policy where hundreds of thousands died, and all around nice guy.

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by Coudrette

The story was first written down in French by Coudrette in the late fourteenth century, although the more famous version is the slightly later one recorded by Jean d’Arras.

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by Larry Bell ...

The story was authored by Larry Bell (http://www.forbes.com/sites/larrybell/2011/0...) and says the UN treaty could 'override our national sovereignty, and in the process, provide license for the federal government to assert preemptive powers over state regulatory powers guaranteed by the Tenth Amendment in addition to our Second Amendment rights.'

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and Joe Robert Cole

The story was written by Ryan Coogler and Joe Robert Cole but drew heavily from The story's many comic book sources including Howard alum, Coates.

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by Hollywood scribe Marc Guggenheim

The story was written by Hollywood scribe Marc Guggenheim, which set Batman against various adversaries in the present as well as the past and introduced the super-hero team known as Zhuguan - a forerunner to the Justice League of America.

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by Ambrose Bierce

The story was written by Ambrose Bierce (an equally adventurous and talented man) in 1888 and is an incredibly powerful piece of American fiction that led to a stunning (and now, a rather uncomfortable) directorial dÃ

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by Alfred Uhry

The story was written by Alfred Uhry and later adapted into the Oscar-winning movie starring Morgan Freeman, Jessica Tandy and Dan Aykroyd.

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by Dwight 'DJ' Yarotsky

The story was written by Dwight 'DJ' Yarotsky, the majority of the story is told through a series of flashbacks and conjectures with a conversation Brian is having with a drug dealer/philosopher by the name of Marley Burroughs (played by Maye Hunta) and a music executive and manager for the band by the name of Darrell Franks (played by Christopher Phipps)

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by Norwegians Terje Nordberg

The story was written by Norwegians Terje Nordberg and Eirik Ildahl under the pseudonym Johann Vlaanderen (a version of Ian Fleming).

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by Kim Ki-Duk

The story was written by Kim Ki-Duk, one of the biggest names in contemporary Korean cinema, and Kim Ki-Duk's influence is strongly felt in the finished project; however there's a certain lack of subtlety in writer-director Juhn's screenplay that reminds us at every turn that Kim Ki-Duk's never made a feature before

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