- Look up
bookman in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Bookman may
refer to:
Bookman (Caribbean folklore), one of
several traditional representations of the...
-
Books and
Bookmen was a
literary magazine founded in 1955 by
publisher Philip Dossé. It was
known for the
vigour of its writers,
especially the vituperative...
-
engage in
bookselling are
called booksellers, bookdealers, bookpeople,
bookmen, or bookwomen. The
founding of
libraries in c. 300 BC
stimulated the energies...
-
retrieved 7
November 2011 Lord Kinross, Love
conquers all in
Books and
Bookmen, vol. 20 (1974), p. 50: "He
indeed remarked to me, some twenty-five years...
- "Malcolm v Oxford:
settlement agreement 1/7/92". www.akmedea.com.
Books and
Bookmen column,
Private Eye, 15
January 1993
Dalya Alberge, 'Anger over Dead Poets...
-
religious orders of Catholicism. Likewise, in
Gelug monasteries, the '
bookmen'
monks have a
similar position within the
monastery to the
Catholic choir...
-
admiration of Hitler. She was also a
regular book
reviewer for
Books and
Bookmen and
later at The
Evening Standard in the 1990s. A
family friend, James...
-
another major influence. In May 1963
Fleming wrote a
piece for
Books and
Bookmen magazine in
which he
described his
approach to
writing Bond books: "I write...
-
continued into the
early 16th century,
despite later claims of
Muscovite bookmen that the
indecisive standoff at the Ugra in 1480 had
signified "the end...
- and
Robert Louis Stevenson in
Bournemouth "loved to talk of
books and
bookmen: Stevenson,
unlike James, was an
admirer of
Thomas Hardy, but
agreed that...