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* [[Jonny Bowden]] - American nutritionist; author of ''The 150 Healthiest Foods on Earth'', ''The Most Effective Natural Cures on Earth'', ''Living the Low Carb Life: Choosing the Diet That's Right for You from Atkins to Zone''
* [[Jonny Bowden]] - American nutritionist; author of ''The 150 Healthiest Foods on Earth'', ''The Most Effective Natural Cures on Earth'', ''Living the Low Carb Life: Choosing the Diet That's Right for You from Atkins to Zone''
* [[Mary DeGarmo Bryan]] (1891–1986) - American nutritionist; author of ''The School Cafeteria'', second president of the [[American Dietetic Association]]; third president of the [[American School Food Service Association]]; Department Chairman, [[Columbia University]]
* [[Mary DeGarmo Bryan]] (1891–1986) - American nutritionist; author of ''The School Cafeteria'', second president of the [[American Dietetic Association]]; third president of the [[American School Food Service Association]]; Department Chairman, [[Columbia University]]
* [[Christine Bullock]] (Health and Fitness Expert. Creator of Evolution 20 Fitness Series <ref>http://evolution20.com</ref> Co-founder of KAYO Better Body Care <ref>https://kayobetterbodycare.com</ref> Judge and Trainer on Season 1 and 2 of Fit for Fashion TV <ref>http://fitforfashion.tv</ref> )
* [[Leslie Burger]] - librarian at Princeton University; 2006 president-elect of the [[American Library Association]]
* [[Leslie Burger]] - librarian at Princeton University; 2006 president-elect of the [[American Library Association]]
* [[Courtney B. Cazden]] ([[Courtney Borden Cazden]] (1925–)) - Emerita professor, Harvard Graduate School of Education; colleague of Dell Hymes, Roger Brown, and others; author of ''Classroom Discourse,'' co-author and author of other books and numerous articles; has consulted widely on multi-cultural education throughout the US, Australia, New Zealand, and Singapore; active in many professional organizations. BA Radcliffe '46, MA Columbia, EdD Harvard (1970?).
* [[Courtney B. Cazden]] ([[Courtney Borden Cazden]] (1925–)) - Emerita professor, Harvard Graduate School of Education; colleague of Dell Hymes, Roger Brown, and others; author of ''Classroom Discourse,'' co-author and author of other books and numerous articles; has consulted widely on multi-cultural education throughout the US, Australia, New Zealand, and Singapore; active in many professional organizations. BA Radcliffe '46, MA Columbia, EdD Harvard (1970?).

Revision as of 18:33, 27 February 2017

Add your request in the most appropriate place below.

Before adding a request please:

Biography requests are organized by profession and nationality; add your request to both categories if possible. Keep requests in order by the person's last name.

Information to include
  • Name – be certain of the spelling; alphabetize by last name in each section.
  • Date requested – so that older requests can be more easily tracked.
  • Identifying information – For, example, there are lots of James Smiths in the world; so specify which one are you asking about — the Scottish architect, the American rapper, or who?
  • Notability – if it isn't already obvious from the identifying information, describe precisely what makes them notable. Be concise.
  • Reference – add a link to a reference which identifies the person and/or highlights their notability

Also, when adding a request, please include as much information as possible (such as webpages, articles, or other reference material) so editors can find and distinguish your request from an already-created article.

Please place in the appropriate section below, or at another Wikipedia article request venue:

Academics

Activists

Adventurers, explorers and pioneers

  • Richard Boothby Australia (1617), Madagascar
  • Clark Carter - Australian adventurer. (Victoria Island, North Pole, Southern Ocean, Sepik River, Bass Strait) [177][178][179][180][181][182]
  • Adam M. Casey Former Division 1 college football player for the University of Missouri, U.S. Marine Infantry Officer, advanced Stage-IV cancer survivor, founder of the non-profit 'I Do It For Her', and TEDx speaker setting out to change the world because of a girl he fell in love with at the age of 20 [183], [184]
  • Arthur William Costigan Sketches of Society and Manners in Portugal, 1787
  • Baltasar Obregón - soldier-explorer in Colonial Mexico; author of Obregon's History of 16th Century Explorations in Western America; subject of Capturing the Landscape of New Spain: Baltasar Obregon and the 1564 Ibarra Expedition by Rebecca A. Carte, 2015, University of Arizona Press
  • al-Omari (traveler) - 1301–48, wrote about medieval Africa
  • Xavier Rosset - French adventurer recreating Robinson Crusoe [185]
  • Richard Siddins (1770–1846) - sometimes spelled as Siddons. He arrived in Australia in 1804 aboard the English whaler Alexander. He had an adventurous life and captained ships in the sealing and sandalwood trade. There is a location in Antarctica named after him (Siddins Point). Captain Richard Siddons, visits the Bounty Islands and finds the sealing gang, including Ruatara, left there by the Santa Anna the previous year. 3 of the gang have died from hunger and thirst. The King George provides some provisions. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1808_in_New_Zealand#cite_note-Salmond-1). Also captained the Campbell Macquarie. Biographical information is available from http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/siddins-richard-2661 and http://www.jenwilletts.com/richard_siddons.htm
  • Vernon Starr Smith - world travel journalist [186]
  • Jaan Streys traveler in 17th c.: Russia, Persia, Madagascar, Java
  • Marie Robinson Wright - American author and historian who made record trip across the Andes; listed in [187]; [188]; "Occupations for women", Frances Elizabeth Willard, 1897, pp. 330−332 [189]
  • Manohar Prahlad Awati Vice Admiral (Retd.) Indian Navy. Inspiration behind Indian Navy's sailing circumnavigation mission "Sagar Parikrama", which has so far had two successful solo circumnavigations (Cdr. Donde in 2009), (non-stop, unassisted Cdr. Tomy in 2013) by the ocean-going sailboat INSV Mhadei, in addition to other adventures. An all-woman naval crew has also been created for ocean adventure and will soon undertake missions using the new INSV Tarini.

[23] [24]Cite error: There are <ref> tags on this page without content in them (see the help page). Wikwiki (talk) 18:45, 18 February 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Ambassadors and other diplomatic personnel

To distinguish the professions listed here from e.g. political figures read the article Diplomatic rank explaining their official status.

  • Nasser Haji Al-Muzayen - Kuwaiti ambassador to Russia - Bio
  • A. Gopinathan - Current permanent Indian representative to UN offices in Geneva. Elected to serve in United Nations Joint Inspection Unit from January 2013. [190]
  • Francis Joseph Meehan - Former U.S. Ambassador to East Germany (1985-1988), Poland (1980-1983), Czechoslovakia (1979-1980). U.S. State Department (various roles) 1947-1978. Ex - Professor of Diplomacy. Lives or lived in Glasgow. [191] [192]
  • Abdul Minty - South African anti apartheid activist, then diplomat, ambassador of his country to the IAEA - (de)
  • Noureddine Sefiani - Moroccan ambassador to Russia - Bio
  • Daniel Bennett Smith -- Current Assistant Secretary of State for Intelligence and Research and former Ambassador to Greece. Daniel B. Smith was sworn in as Assistant Secretary of State for Intelligence and Research on February 14, 2014. A member of the Senior Foreign Service with the rank of Career Minister, Ambassador Smith served most recently as Ambassador to the Hellenic Republic from 2010 to 2013. Prior to that assignment, he served as Executive Secretary of the State Department. He has held other senior positions in the Department, including Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Consular Affairs and Deputy Executive Secretary. In addition to Greece, his overseas service includes tours in Bern, Istanbul, Ottawa and Stockholm. He also taught Political Science at the U.S. Air Force Academy. Ambassador Smith is a recipient of the Arnold L. Raphel Memorial Award, the Secretary’s Distinguished Service Award, a Presidential Distinguished Service Award, and several Superior and Meritorious Honor Awards. Ambassador Smith received his Ph.D. and M.A. from Stanford University, and his B.A. from the University of Colorado at Boulder. His foreign languages are German, Turkish and Swedish. Source: State.gov website User:169.253.194.1 12:10, 7 August 2014 (UTC)[reply]
  • Yogeshwar Varma - High Commissioner of India to Nairobi, Kenya, concurrently Ambassador of India to the Federal Republic of Somalia [193] [194] [195]

Anthropologists

Archaeologists

Architects

Artists

Designers

Graphic artists

Illustrators

  • Ann Adams (1937–1992) - Famous American polio stricken artist; Best known for her many sketches of animals and children, drawn by holding a pencil in her teeth. [348] Note cards depicting her art were very popular in the 1970s, and can be found for sale on quite a few websites. Photos of her do exist online [349] as well as examples of her art [350]
  • Marcia Bakry (born 1937) - American artist, illustrator and sculptor; Best known for her many works published in through the Smithsonian Department of Anthropology. First Woman Masters Degree Candidate graduated from the Corcoran School of Art at George Washington University (unconfirmed). The sole remaining illustrator in the Department of Anthropology at the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of Natural History, [351] she pioneered use of digital technology for preparation of illustrations and photography in NMNH Anthropological research publishing. Photos of her do exist online [352] as well as numerous examples of her illustrations. [353] [354] [355] [356] A collection of her sculpture is on permanent installation at Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church, in College Park, MD. [357]
  • Drew Christie (born 1984) American animator, illustrator and filmmaker; [358] Best known for The New York Times animation Hi! I'm a Nutria [359] Caused a fair amount of controversy pertaining to invasive species and was called a "pioneer of the opinion pages" by the Nieman Journalism Lab at Harvard University [360]. Also known for the short animated film Song of the Spindle, which premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival [361].
  • Laurent Coderre - Canadian animator, winner of the Vulcan Award at the Cannes Film Festival for his 70s-era cut out animation, Zikkaron.[362], also see this book cite
  • Jay Fosgitt - American comic book illustrator (b. 7 Oct 1974), currently working for Marvel, IDW, and Source Point. Known for his work on My Little Pony, Sesame Street, Betty and Veronica, Avengers, and Deadpool as well as his original creations Dead Duck and Zombie Chick, and Bodie Troll. [363], [364], [365], [366], [367], [368], [369]
  • Alana Dee Haynes - a mixed media artist from Brooklyn, usually working with illustrations on photographs, but dabbling with fashion, sculpture, photography, and murals.[370] [371]
  • Kyle Lambert - Best known for his use of technology and photorealistic artwork created on Apple's iPad. His 2013 work featuring Morgan Freeman, based on a photograph by Scott Gries international attention, becoming viral and gaining over 11 million views in a week [372]. Kyle studied Fine Art at Manchester Metropolitan University. He has a chapter in the book: Mobile Digital Art: Using the IPad and IPhone as Creative Tools By David Leibowitz [373]. He has Illustrated the cover of Le Temps Viendra: a Novel of Anne Boleyn by Sarah Morris [374]. He has been featured in international news including BBC [375]. He was born in Manchester, England [376]. He has worked with Apple, Adobe, IDG & Paramount Pictures. He is featured in the iPad 2 launch video that Steve Jobs presented on stage. He has written a series of tutorials for Macworld [377]. He has given guest speaker presentations at Apple stores including Covent Garden and San Francisco [378]
  • Peter Loewer - botanical illustrator and author of Bringing the Outdoors In and thirty books on plants
  • Ola Liola (born 7 August 1979) birth name Olga Kushnir is a contemporary illustrator, artist, storyteller, designer. Olga was born in Ukraine, Poltava in 1996 moved to Israel with family. Current residence Berlin, Germany. Graduated form industrial design facility Shenkar College of Engineering and Design. Main motive in her creations is animal world, which appear in vivid colours layered with dense patterns. Medium: watercolour, ink. [379][380][381]
  • Master of Rolin - 15th-century French illuminator; creator of many medieval manuscripts; employed by Jean Rolin, predecessor of the Maitre Francois; [382]
  • Ton Smits (born 18 February 1921) Full name Antonie Gerardus Smits (Ton Smits) a cartoonist and postcard illustrator from the Netherlands. Died 1981. Short article on him can be found on Netherlands Wikipedia: nl:Ton Smits

Painters

  • Timur Akhriev (painter)- Russian-American oil painter; [383]; Born in Vladikavkaz, Russia in 1983 and moved to Chattanooga, Tennessee as a teenager; studied art in Russia, UT Chattanooga, and the Florence Academy of Art; he has been featured in various media outlets; popularity is gaining; please include photograph and biography from his official website; is the son of world-renowned painter, Daud Akhriev. Timur is most recently known for his collection 17-piece collection, Drifter. He now lives in Chattanooga.
  • Steven Alexander (painter) - American contemporary abstract painter; [384]; [385]; [386]; [387]; [388]
  • Alex Andreyev - Russian or Ukrainian surrealist painter; lives in St. Petersburg; [389]; [390]
  • Andrew Atroshenko Russian painter. Born in 1965, in the City of Pokrovsk, Russia. [391]
  • Marion Boddy-Evans - contemporary South African-born Scottish painter and art teacher/writer; [392], [393], [394]
  • Peter Brook (painter) (1927–2009) – British landscape artist; biography at artnet.com
  • Bryce Brown (artist) (Requested June 09, 2015) New Zealand exhibiting artist, international, born march 1971. Painting since 1999 with many solo exhibitions, work in the John Deere International Art Collection. References; [395] [396]
  • Johnna Bush Alabama Portrait, Wildlife and Landscape Artist. Currently resides in Grove Hill, Alabama. [397] [398]
  • Jane Cartney (born 1951) - contemporary Scottish expressionist painter and musician; based in Weston-super-Mare, near Bristol, England; [399], [400]
  • Thomas Chambers (painter) (1808–1869)]]-02-13-2014-; American/English Folk Artist known for landscape and marine scenes, especially of the Hudson River from Albany and from New York City, all in a naive, primitive style with bold color and strong contours; Fenimore Art Museum
  • Sue Coleman - Canadian wildlife painter; lives in Duncan, British Columbia; one of the first artists to visually translate First Nations art; [401]; [402];[dead link] [403]; [404]; [405]; [406]; comment at 2012-02-10, all links belong to subject or sites closely affiliated with subject; needs mainstream reliable sources (WP:RS)[407];[408];[409]; Summerwild Productions; comment at 2012-02-14, new links and resources added
  • Matt Dangler (born 1984) - Painter and Illustrator; [410]; [411]; [412]
  • Peter Dean (artist) (born in Berlin 1934, Died Elizaville, NY 1993) Socially conscious expressionist artist known for his colorful, aggressively painted works that tended to be crowded with figures and often depicted allegorical or political themes [413]. In 1969 Dean co-founded another group, the iconoclastic Rhino Horn, which included Peter Pasuntino, Nick Sperakis, Benny Andrews, Leonel Gongora Ken Bowman. , Mike Feuerbach, and sometimes, Jay Milder and Red Grooms. This socially critical expressionist outpost, with its unashamedly phallic intentions (the rhinoceros horn) considered an aphrodisiac, did not succeed in penetrating the Minimal/Conceptual strongholds, but it did raise the temperature of the art against the Vietnam war [414]
  • Pierre Dubreuil (painter) fr:Pierre Dubreuil (peintre)
  • Victor Dubreuil - American trompe l'oeil painter; active 1886–c. 1900; WikiCommons features his Barrels of Money (c. 1897)
  • Reg Gadney - British portrait artist and author; [415]; [416]; [417]; [418]; [419]
  • Carne Griffiths British watercolour painter - autobiography found at http://www.carnegriffiths.com/about/
  • H. Helmick - Genre Painter; Etcher; Illustrator 1845–1907. alias Heinz Helmick. Specialized in figure painting, was active in exhibiting between 1880 and 1889. Born: Zanesville, Ohio, 1845; Died: Washington, District of Columbia 1907 Active in: Paris, France and London, England <http://americanart.si.edu/collections/search/artist/?id=6434>< http://www.trocadero.com/stores/studio/items/1135928/item1135928.html><http://www.arcadja.com/auctions/en/helmick_howard/artist/35053/ef>
  • Kyle Holbrook: Kyle Holbrook is the founder of MLK Community Mural Project, and has helped complete several murals with the company and independently. These murals are located all around the world, in London, Haiti, The US, Bahamas, and Brazil, as well as other locations. MLK Community Mural Project About Page Sources for Research
  • Edith Junghans - de:Edith Junghans, German painter, husband to Otto Hahn. She has been described shortly here but deserves an own article.
  • Alan Lachman American born painter. Contemporary Expressionist Artist. Born 1936 in New York City. Has been painting for 60 years.Alan Lachman studied at Syracuse University, the School of Visual Arts and the Art Students League in New York City. Parents: Irving Lachman & Molly Lachman (ne: Applebaum). Siblings: Diane Lachman Calmis & Andrea Lachman Wasser. Two children: April Lachman Vassaro (born 1961, now deceased) and Lawrence Lachman. [420], [421][422]
  • Chau-Chin Lee (painter) (born 1941)  – Kaohsiung-based abstract painter;[423]
  • Ling Jian – Chinese oil painter [424]
  • Master of the Blue Jeans  – newly discovered painter who is thought to have been active in 17th-century Italy (1650s) [425][426][427][428][429] (and fr | de)
  • Winston Megoran  – English artist of maritime and naval themes; noted for book-jacket illustrations of the Mariners Library series (1948–1963); [430]
  • Leo Mes Start Source: https://www.facebook.com/Leo-Mes-1928-1974-186513854717348/ Inventor, Painter, Etcher. Born in the Nederlands, Died in Kingston, ON: (1928-1974)
  • Vincenzo Molaroni (1859–1912)  – Italian pottery painter; [431]; [italianpotterymarks.freeforums.org/molaroni-pesaro-t530.html]
  • John Pelham Napper (1916–2001)  – English experimental artist; known for radiance of colour and precision; wide variety of styles; [432][433]
  • Patrick Gorman Pettis  – Italian American Fine Arts Modern Impressionist from Saratoga NY [434]; collections (not authoritative): [435]
  • Paul Plaschke (1878–1954)  – cartoonist and painter; notable works: Nocturnes, Ohio River Shanty Boats, Southern Indiana Hllsides and Fishing Craft at Biloxi; [436]
  • Tana Powell  – Canadian graphic artist living in San Francisco, former art director for San Diego newspaper; won a Grammy Award for Best Music Festival Poster (2001); Jammin poster is one of the largest sellers ever; [437] [438]
  • Jordi Rodríguez-Amat - Catalan artist, painter and sculptor born 1944; rodriguez-amat.cat
  • Angelo Romano - Spanish painter; known for his angels, small protective talismans and for his murals that decorate many public spaces in Europe and the U.S.; [439]
  • Gene Speck American landscape painter. Born 1936 in South Dakota. [440]
  • Edward Tabachnik - Canadian (Ontario) painter; founder of Romantic Expressionism; born in Russia; subject matter frequently refers to fantastic juxtaposition of peripatetic flying temple of Jerusalem and enchanted landscapes (... reliable sources???; pre-2012-10-15)
  • Jane Wooster Scott Style: Americana. Named by Guinness World Records as the most reproduced artist in America, beating out runner-up Pablo Picasso.[441] [442]
  • Eric Waugh (painter) Born in Montreal, November 21, 1963. Resides in Austin, Texas. Eric Waugh is one of the most recognizable and collected artists throughout North America, selling more than over 45,000 original works in the past 27 years. Charitable work is an integral part of Eric Waugh the artist. Waugh created Hero, the Guinness Book of World's Records holder for the world's largest painting on canvas (41,400 square feet) by a single artist; proceeds benefit Camp Heartland and the Starlight Children's Foundation. [443], Eric Waugh at Nan Miller Gallery. Eric Waugh at Peabody Fine Art Gallery. Eric Waugh Art Gallery at Prints.com.
  • Nancy Woland (Requested April 9, 2015) Christina (Christie) Botkoveli (Georgian: ქრისტინა (ქრისტი) ბოტკოველი), more commonly known as Nancy Woland, is a Georgian surrealist painter and graphic designer, born in October 27, 1991, Tbilisi. She is known for her cosmic themed paintings, that give you a sense of tranquility. Her first exhibition was on March 1, 2015, named Second Star to the Right, which took place in the Saakashvili Presidential Library. It was televised on Imedi TV [444]. You can see her artwork on her Facebook page: [445], and a short video biography: [446], [447] [448].

Photographers

Please read the Notability Criteria for Photographers before submitting a request.
  • Ruven Afanador - Colombian-born American photographer with three books and many international exhibitions; es:Ruven Afanador
  • Douglas Barkey - American-born photographer, raised in Argentina, multiple international exhibitions, originated intentional camera movement as mode of photographic expession; [449][450] [451]
  • Andrew Brooks - (born July 25, 1977) British photographer and artist based in Manchester, uses digital post production to create detailed landscapes and imagined views. Exhibited in Museum Het Domein, Sittard [452]Stads Museum Zoetermeer [453] URBIS Manchester [454]; Interviewed for Wired Raw File [455] The Atlantic [456] Fast Company Design [457] Creative Review [458] Published in the Guardian, NCR.nl ; graduated from Stockport collage in 1996 ; [459] ; [460] ; [461] ; [462]
  • River Clark - fashion photographer; in permanent photography collection at the Guggenheim; numerous books and publications including Vogue, Elle, Marie Claire, Sports Illustrated, Cosmopolitan, Bazaar, Playboy; [463]; [464]
  • Richard K. Dean American Photographer, world traveled and most well-known for his photography work in the Glens Falls and Lake George New York area. His photographs from the ground and air are the largest collection of photos of the Adirondack Mountains. [465]
  • Bryan Denton - photojournalist based in Beirut, Lebanon; notable for his extensive coverage of the Libyan Revolution for The New York Times; first solo exhibition will be at New York University's Gulf and Western Gallery ([466]); [467]; [468]
  • Benjamin Donaldson - American fine-art photographer; work has been exhibited nationally and internationally, including at Jen Bekman Gallery; [469]; work featured in The New Yorker, Details, Nylon and Sueddeutsche Zeitung magazines; photography lecturer, Yale School of Art; ([470])
  • Tim Freccia - American born photographer and film maker with numerous exhibitions (Portrait series "Yirol" at New York Armory Show/Contemporary 2012/2013; Chicago Expo 2012; and noted assignments from conflict and crisis areas: Dispatches from South Sudan for George Clooney, Indian Ocean Tsunami, Haiti, Eastern Congo, Mogadishu, Nuba Mountains, Roma refugees, etc. Published/broadcast in Time; VICE Magazine; The Washington Post; Global Post; CNN; BBC; Al Jazeera; France 24 and most major international outlets. [471]; represented by [472]; contract assignments for Die Zeit; Zeit Magazin; VICE guide to Congo; Vice Guide to Libya; The Most Interesting Men in America; [473]; [474]
  • Trevor Godinho (born December 18, 1982) - Indian-born Canadian celebrity and fashion photographer; published in many international magazines including Maxim, Playboy (French and U.S. editions); Alfa Norway, Elle Canada, Zoo Weekly Australia, Che Belgium, UMM Canada; has photographed celebrities including Michael Douglas, Nicolas Cage, Edward North, Jeff Bidges, Clive Owen, et al.; interviewed for ROOM100 ([475]) interviewed for PRUVOLOGY.com ([476]) interviewed for Woman.ca ([477])and Fashion One TV in Los Angeles; graduated from Sheridan College and University of Toronto (2008); [478]; works internationally out of New York City and other locations
  • Hikaru Iwasaki (1924) Only Japanese-American photographer to work for the War Relocation Authority. (Existing Wikipedia article in Czech: cs:Hikaru_Iwasaki), Iwasaki, [479]
  • John Kippin - [480]; [481]
  • Troy Lilly - nature photographer; author of ForestWander Nature Photography; File:Elakala_Waterfalls_Swirling_Pool_Mossy_Rocks.jpg; [482]; [483]; [484]; [485]; [486]; [487]
  • Marc McAndrews American Photographer, most known for his book 'Nevada Rose' with large format photographs from 33 legal Nevada brothels; [www.marcmcandrews.com]; [488]; [489]
  • Bertil Nilsson (artist) (born 1981) - Swedish art photographer living in England [490]; Known for unique work with dance and circus; First monograph Undisclosed: Images of the Contemporary Circus Artist [491] published in 2011; exhibited internationally in both galleries and public institutions including museums; extensive coverage of work online and in international press [492]
  • Ron O'Donnell (born 1952) - Scottish photographic artist; [493]
  • Kenneth Parker - American fine-art landscape photographer; represented in multiple galleries nationally including the Weston Gallery ([494]); assistant to Eliot Porter; praise by Paul Caponigro; [495]; [496]; [497]
  • Stuart Pilkington - British photographer and curator. Street portrait photographer documenting the people of Cheshire, Lancashire, Merseyside and Manchester. Photographed film directors such as Terry Gilliam, Alan Parker and Peter Greenaway for the BFI, London. A member of Documenting Britain and Fèis, his work is to be exhibited at Street Level Photoworks, Glasgow and French Institute for Scotland in 2015. Known as a curator in the photography community bringing together the unknown with the well known. His projects have been featured by the BBC, Esquire, National Public Radio, PDN, Huck Magazine, Professional Photographer and many more; [498];[499];[500];[501];[502]
  • Rosamond Wolff Purcell — artful photographer of decayed animals and technological artifacts; published several books [503]
  • Jake Rajs (born 1952) - landscape and architectural photographer; published 16 coffee table books by Rizzoli, Monacelli Press and Random House; [504]; [505]
  • Mike Rosenthal (photographer) - American director and photographer, has been featured on numerous seasons of America's Next Top Model as a photographer and guest judge (cycles 9, 11, 5, 7, 13, 8, 16, 12, 10, 17), and is the resident photographer and judge of Asia's Next Top Model [506] Asia's Next Top Model (cycle 2)
  • Rukes (Drew Ressler) - Worldwide EDM photographer for artists such as Zedd, Deadmau5, Swedish House Mafia, Avicii, Martin Garrix and festivals around the world like Ultra Music Festival [507]; multiple exhibitions including W Hotel New York, covered by Wall Street Journal [508]; Named #1 in top 50 music photographers right now by Complex [509]; Large social media following including Twitter verification [510];[511];[512]
  • Allen Russ - landscape and architectural photographer; [513]; [514]; [515]; [516]; publications/reviews: [517]; [518]; [519]
  • Rainer W. Schlegelmilch (born 1941) - Formula 1, sports car and automobile photographer; 50 years of consistent motorsport archive since 1962; 42 editorial books published by 2012; international exhibitions; [520]; [521]; [522]; [523]; [524]
  • Percy Loomis Sperr - better known as P.L. Sperr - awarded the honorary title of official photographer for the city of New York; took 17,815 of the photos in the New York Public Library's photography collection; shot decades' worth of street scenes and buildings throughout NYC to document the City's physical evolution. E.g.,[525]; [526]
  • Guy Tal - landscape photographer and author; [527], Ultimate Guide to Digital Nature Photography; [528]; [529]; published articles including in Outdoor Photographer, Popular Photography
  • Ed Tangen - Notable American Photographer. Landscape, Nature, Stereographic, Commercial and Life Photographer. Pioneering Forensic Photographer and Investigator. Sheriff's Identification Officer. Also known as "The Pictureman". Born in Elverum, Norway, 1873, Died in Boulder, Colorado, 1951, age 78. Established Photography Studio in Boulder, Colorado in 1903. From 1906 to 1951, Tangen is known to have taken more than 16,000 photographs of the Boulder region and Rocky Mountains. Member and unofficial photographer of the Rocky Mountain Climber Club. Took photographs of the front range of the Rocky Mountains. Pioneered forensic techniques. Photographer's mark, copyright logo or "bug" is a capital "T" within a diamond. Tangen's "bug" can be found on his landscape and life photographs and some of his crime photographs. [530] [www.evidencemagazine.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=71] [531] [Ed Tangen, the Pictureman: A Photographic History of the Boulder Region, Early Twentieth Century, Boulder Creek Press, 1994, Thomas J. Meier (Author)]
  • Waldemar Titzenthaler - German photographer; de:Waldemar Titzenthaler; [532]
  • Max Waldman (1919–1981) - American photographer; specialized in dance and theatre photography; images in collections including the Museum of Modern Art and the George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film; [533]; [534]; [535]; [536]
  • A.D. Wheeler, New York-based photographer and writer. Notable for photos of historically significant abandoned and non-abandoned sites, for example [537], Official Website, [538], PBS feature video, [539], Magazine article
  • Alice Wheeler, Seattle-based photographer. Notable for photos of musicians, the countercultural scene, street protests, etc. See, for example Art Zone: Alice Wheeler, Seattle Channel

Sculptors

Astronomers

Authors

Fiction writers, dramatists and poets

Non-fiction writers

A–B
  • John Allyn (author) - author of 47 Ronin; former film and music editor in the motion picture and television industries and was also a writer and director of industrial films in the aerospace field; attended the Army Specialized Training Program at Stanford University in 1944, majoring in the Japanese language, and also attended the Army Intensive Japanese Language School at the University of Michigan in 1945, receiving a B.A. degree from the latter. During the first four years of the U.S. occupation of Japan, he worked as Pictorial Censor of the Civil Censorship Detachment of G2, SCAP, in Osaka and Tokyo. After his return to the United States he entered UCLA where he received his master's degree in Theater Arts in 1951. He continued at UCLA where he specialized in Japanese theater, and received a PhD in Theater History.
  • Kenn Amdahl - American author of both fiction and nonfiction. Books include: There Are No Electrons: Electronics for Earthlings; The Land of Debris and the Home of Alfredo (novel); Joy Writing: Discover and Develop your Creative Voice; Jumper and the Bones (novel); Revenge of the Pond Scum: searching for the causes of ALS, Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Disease; Algebra Unplugged (with Jim Loats, Ph.D.); Calculus for Cats (with Jim Loats, Ph.D.) and The Wordguise Alembic (essays).
  • Richard J. Anobile - television producer; notable for creating the "movie within a book" of which he edited numerous in the 1970s; created (wrote?) The Marx Brothers Scrapbook with Groucho Marx
  • Benjamin G. Armstrong - translator; and son-in-law of Chief Buffalo (Kechewaishke) of the Chippewa Nation; author of Early Life Among the Indians; in 1852, he accompanied the Chippewa chief Great Buffalo, to Washington, D.C., to plead against cancellation of the treaty of 1842; their trip was a success; [554]
  • Imtiyaz 'Ali Khan 'Arshi – Urdu scholar; commonly read when studying Urdu poet Ghalib; Template:Worldcat id
  • Stephen Asbury - author of Health and Safety, Environment and Quality Audits - A Risk-based Approach; [555], Do the Right Thing - The Practical Jargon-free Guide to Corporate Social Responsibility [556] and over 30 other journal articles and papers on safety and risk management
  • Ernest Backes - Author of several critical books about international money transaction
  • Camille Bacon-Smith - academic (Temple University), author of Science Fiction Culture, Enterprising Women, and other studies of science-fiction fandom and its interaction with science fiction and popular culture; has written some minor fantasy fiction
  • Mikhail Davidovich Baitalsky (1908–1978) - Trotskyist journalist, writer, and publisher in Samizdat, author of Notebooks for the Grandchildren - Recollections of a Trotskyist Who Survived the Stalin; [557]; Template:Worldcat id
  • Calvin D. Banyan - author of the book Hypnosis and Hypnotherapy
  • Kevin Barbieux - author of The Homeless Guy, a blog he began writing in 2002; chronically homeless; featured in media including USA Today, Associated Press, Salon.com [558]; [559]
  • P. Shaun Barbour (American author of A Conscious Effort, gay, US Navy veteran, diverse life) [560]
  • Lawrence Beesly - passenger aboard the RMS Titanic; author of The Loss of the SS Titanic, Its Story and Its Lessons; first survivor to write a book about the disaster
  • James Scott Bell - Plotting method LOCK, mentioned in a few articles already in Wikipedia
  • Ken Berglund - Author of the best sellers Small Town Evil, Interstate 10 and An American Teacher in Taiwan. Author of popular blogs "An American Teacher in Taiwan" and "From Taiwan to Texas: Life in Mid America"
  • J. M. Berger - Author of Jihad Joe: Americans Who Go to War in the Name of Islam (Potomac Books, 2011), the only definitive history of American involvement in jihadist movements, and co-author of ISIS: The State of Terror (Ecco, 2015), with Jessica Stern. J. M. Berger is a nonresident fellow in the Project on U.S. Relations with the Islamic World in the Center for Middle East Policy. With roots in newspaper journalism, Berger is an author and analyst studying extremism. http://www.brookings.edu/experts/bergerjm?view=bio http://www.intelwire.com/ (request made 08-25-2015)
  • Cintra L. Best - author of Enlighten My Senses, A path to open your heart and illuminate your soul's purpose (Halo Publishing; 2013) Cintra Best is a writer, seeker, business owner and creator of Enlighten My Senses. Her extensive background in, along with her bachelor's and doctorate in natural health, helps her in coaching and writing worldwide. [561]
  • Kurt W. Beyer - author of best seller Grace Hopper and the Invention of the Information Age (MIT Press; 2009); Brigade Commander and distinguished graduate, United States Naval Academy ([562]
  • Robert M. Blevins - Science fiction author and managing editor for Adventure Books of Seattle. ([563]) Author of The 13th Day of Christmas, Say Goodbye to the Sun, and The Corona Incident. Published the controversial book Into The Blast, which names Kenneth Christiansen and Bernard Geestman from Washington state as the men who pulled off the DB Cooper hijacking. He later appeared on the Christiansen episode of History Channel's Brad Meltzer's Decoded in January 2011 to defend his findings and to cooperate in the investigation by the show. He has edited over fifty books for other authors and is the secretary for the nonprofit Washington Literacy Organization. ([564] Born: March 17, 1954. Age: 61.
  • Michael Bluejay - web author (http://michaelbluejay.com/); work is referenced in various magazines, although he is primarily a web author, as opposed to a print author
  • Zoë Boccabella (Author) - Italian-Australian author of Mezza Italiana: An Enchanting Story About Love, Family, La Dolce Vita and Finding Your Place in the World and Joe's Fruit Shop & Milk Bar published by ABC Books/ HarperCollins; [565]; [566]; [567]; [568]; [569]; [570]; [571]; [572]; [https://bellaink.files.wordpress.com/2015/02/courier-mail-article-7-2-15.pdf
  • Robert Boissiere (Born in Paris in 1914)- The author of several books on Hopi religion, culture, and folklore, including Meditations with the Hopi and The Hopi Way: An Odyssey
  • Michal Borwicz - Polish documentarian of The Holocaust (hard to research)
  • Greg Boudonck - Freelance writer and author of over 50 books including Grandpa's Mission,' 'Kayro's Key, Escaping Hades, American Cacique, San Juan, Puerto Rico: The Walled City, La Ciudad Amurallada, Puertorriquenos Who Served With Guts, Glory, and Honor: Fighting to Defend a Nation Not Completely Their Own, and many more. Writes as froggy213 at Hubpages.com.
  • Reb Bradley - author of Child Training Tips and Born Liberal Raised Right; alleged to advocate a controlling and possibly abusive style of parenting
  • Robert Bray (writer) - academic; writer on Tennessee Williams, etc.; Robert Bray is about the actor who appeared on the television series Lassie;
  • Lee Brickley - Paranormal investigator and author of UFO's Werewolves & The Pig-Man; born in Staffordshire, England, and shot to fame after making headlines all over the world due to numerous sightings of black-eyed children on Cannock Chase in September and October 2014; has been interviewed on hundreds of radio stations and television shows including ITV's This Morning with Eamonn Holmes. 2.221.164.19 (talk) 00:07, 23 October 2014 (UTC) [573]; 2.221.164.19 (talk) 00:07, 23 October 2014 (UTC) [574]; 2.221.164.19 (talk) 00:07, 23 October 2014 (UTC) [575]; 2.221.164.19 (talk) 00:07, 23 October 2014 (UTC) [576]; [577][reply]
  • Albert Marie Bros - theologian, La Religion Des Peuples Non Civilises
  • Robert Buccellato - Author, Historian; [578],[579], [580], [581], [582], [583]
  • Ann Budd - knitting designer and writer; associated with Interweave Press; has published several knitting books; [584]
  • Henry Burton (clergyman) (1840–1930) - English Methodist clergyman and author; wrote poem "Pass It On" ([585]) as well as several books[586]. Short bio here.
C–D
  • Dale Campisi (born 1979), Australian writer, editor, educator and publisher. He studied at Deakin University, where he also obtained his first lectureship under the mentorship of Jenny Lee. He later taught in the Publishing and Communications program at the University of Melbourne. He is a writer of guidebooks for Explore Australia and Hardie Grant Books, is a publisher at boutique history and event publishing house Arcade Publications, proprietor of Melbournalia and currently the editor of Tasmanian literary magazine, Island.
  • Guillaume Caoursin, 15th century author associated with Rhodes; translations such as Hospitaller Piety and Crusader Propaganda: Guillaume Caoursin's Description of the Ottoman Siege of Rhodes, 1480 by Theresa M. Vann and Donald J. Kagay, 2015, Ashgate Publishing Company
  • Montgomery Carmichael (1856–1936), author of In Tuscany: Tuscan towns, Tuscan types and the Tuscan tongue (1902), The Life of John William Walshe, F. S.; translator, Rosmersholm: a play in four acts / by Henrik Ibsen (1890), Francia's masterpiece; an essay on the beginnings of the Immaculate conception in art (1909); editor and translator, The Lady Poverty: a XIII. century allegory (1901); co-author, Sketches on the old road through France to Florence (1905); [587]
  • Sara C. Charles, MD - author of several titles in the field of counseling, psychology and psychiatry. She was a coauthor with Eugene Kennedy.
  • Sheldon Charrett - author of several Paladin Press titles, including several in their New ID category ([588]) with titles going back all the way to 1997.
  • Onur Cinar - Author of several books on application development on Android platform, such as Android Quick APIs Reference, Pro Android C++ with the NDK, Android Apps with Eclipse, Android Best Practices, by Apress. [589] Onur Cinar also works for Skype. [www.linkedin.com/in/cinar].
  • Chelsey Clammer - Author and editor. Clammer has over 75 publications consisting of lyric essays, personal essays, short stories and reviews. She is also the Managing Editor and Nonfiction Editor of The Doctor TJ Eckleburg Review. ([www.chelseyclammer.com])
  • Jonas Clark (author) - Florida Christian author and publisher of several Christian Living books; publishes The Voice, a quarterly Christian magazine
  • Elliot D. Cohen - philosopher and author [590]; co-founder, in 1992, of the Society for Philosophy, Counseling and Psychotherapy (ASPCP), the first association of philosophical counseling in the U.S. ([591]); inventor of logic-based therapy (LBT), a philosophical counseling variant of rational emotive behavior therapy ([592]); founder and editor-in-chief of the International Journal of Applied Philosophy; blogger for Psychology Today ([593]); ethics editor of Free Inquiry ([594]); contributing writer and freelance journalist for political news sites ([595]); inventor of artificial-intelligence technology for checking reasoning for fallacies ([596])
  • Mary Ann Crenshaw - author of non-fiction such as The Natural Way to Super Beauty and Dogspeak. Would like DOB and DOD if deceased.
  • Armand V. Cucciniello III - Former U.S. diplomat and press officer for the Department of State. Iraq veteran. Media personality, writer, political commentator, policy specialist. Wrote for Time magazine, http://time.com/author/armand-v-cucciniello-iii/ Also on CNN, here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKVxyxSlm8A
  • Subhorup Dasgupta (req. 2014-11-30) - DOB: November 2, 1965. Hyderabad-based writer, educator and activist, social media evangelist, creator of SoCh, a platform for connecting local changemakers with needed support, part of several community based initiatives like Our Sacred Space, a cultural center in Secunderabad, Writers' Carnival, a bi-annual training workshop for writers, and the annual Hyderabad Bloggers' Meet, now in its fourth edition. Writes on simplicity, responsibility and frugality as the key components of preserving what is good about societal development. Tea and Jazz educator, conducts tea appreciation programs and jazz listening sessions. Heads Eight Winds, a business solution suite that aims to correct the imbalanced approach to consumption based economies. Personal philosophy appears to a mix of Buddhism and atheism. Popular blogger, among topranked Indian bloggers in several categories (Source: www.indiblogger.com.),; [597]; [598]; [599]; [600]; [601]; [602]
  • Maria Dismondy - award-winning children's book author and public speaker, Spaghetti in a Hot Dog Bun, The Juice Box Bully, Pink Tiara Cookies for Three and The Potato Chip Champ; [603]
  • Janine Driver – author of books on non-verbal communication.
  • Baz Dreisinger - author, journalist, professor & founder of the prison to college pipeline (a program that mentors prisoners and educates them to be ready spots in college allocated to them when released). Dreisinger's second book Incarceration Nations is set to be released in February 2016, her first book; Near Black was released in October 2008. As a journalist and critic, Dr. Dreisinger writes about Caribbean culture, race-related issues, travel, music and pop culture for such outlets as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and ForbesLife, and produces on-air segments about music and global culture for National Public Radio (NPR). Together with Oscar-nominated filmmaker Peter Spirer, Professor Dreisinger produced and wrote the documentaries Black & Blue: Legends of the Hip-Hop Cop, which investigates the New York Police Department's monitoring of the hip-hop industry, and Rhyme & Punishment, about hip-hop and the prison industrial complex. [25][26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34][35]
  • David Drum (req. 2015-06-15) - American author of eight nonfiction books in the health area, a novel, a book of poems, and artist's books. Wikipedia contributor and registered user. www.daviddrumthewriter.com
E–G
  • Peter H. Eichstaedt - award-winning journalist and author of books on war and human rights issues in some of the world's most dangerous places, including If You Poison Us: Uranium and Native Americans (Red Crane Books 1994), First Kill Your Family: Child Soldiers of Uganda and the Lord's Resistance Army (Lawrence Hill Books 2009), Pirate State: Somalia's Terrorism at Sea (Lawrence Hill Books 2010), Consuming the Congo: War and Conflict Minerals in the World's Deadliest Place (Lawrence Hill Books 2011), and Above the Din of War: Afghans Speak About Their Lives, Their Country, and Their Future, and Why America Should Listen (Lawrence Hill Books 2012). Website: http://www.petereichstaedt.com
  • * E. R. Emmet - English author of Learning To Philosophize, An Introduction To Economcs (with R. C. Lyness), The Use of Reason, Learning To Think, 101 Brain Puzzlers, Puzzles For Pleasure (published in the U.S.),The Puffin Book of Brainteasers, A Diversity of Puzzles, and other books. E. R. Emmet was born in 1909 and educated at Rossall and at Brasenose College, Oxford. After taking Honour Moderations in Mathematics he spent his last two years at Oxford reading Philosophy, Politics, and Economics. Since 1932, except for a break of two years for writing, he has been teaching mathematics, economics, and philosophy at Winchester, where he was a housemaster from 1947 to 1963. He has contributed to philosophical journals. E.R. Emmet died in March 1980.
  • Ron Emmons - A successful British travel writer/photographer based in Chiang Mai, Thailand. Published about a dozen books, including Portrait of Thailand (New Holland, UK) - a glossy photo-driven overview of the country, Top Ten Bangkok (DK Books), AA Spiral Guide to the Dominican Republic, Frommer's Thailand (last 2 editions), Rough Guide to Vietnam (last 4 editions), National Geographic Traveler Guide to Vietnam and Walks along the Thames Path. Further details of publications can be found at http://www.ronemmons.com, which has been maintained for over a decade.
  • Sarah Erdreich - Feminist writer and author of Generation Roe: Inside the Future of the Pro-Choice Movement. Contributor to Lilith, On the Issues, and elsewhere.
  • Hannah Faye – self-published author; has published sixteen titles including A Rapper's College, White Like the Rainbow, Occupy the World From the Heart of the Protesters; [604]
  • M. John Fayhee — American writer, reporter, editor, public speaker and publisher. Author of 10 books, including Smoke Signals: Wayward Journeys through the Old Heart of the New West (Colorado Book Awards finalist 2012), and Along the Colorado Trail (in print for almost 20 years). Fayhee is best known for resurrecting the Mountain Gazette magazine, the only magazine besides Rolling Stone that published work by both Edward Abbey and Hunter S. Thompson. Long-time contributing editor at Backpacker magazine.
  • Tewodros Fekadu - author of biography No One's Son (forward by Phillip Adams; Gold Coast, Queensland: Moonface Entertainment; 2009; ISBN 978-0980650808); [605]
  • Maude M. C. Ffoulkes - late-19th- and early-20th-century writer; ghost wrote several books; wrote My Own Past; granddaughter of John Chester Craven, a locomotive designer
  • Barbara Fischkin - author of Muddy Cup: A Dominican Family Comes of Age in a New America, a book expanded from a Newsday series, which won the Livingston Award for International Reporting (1996) (Livingston Award); [606]; (search The New York Times, The New Yorker ("Letter from Mexico City"))
  • Mary Barelli Gallagher (or Mary Gallagher) - biographer, secretary of Jackie Kennedy, author of Kennedy biography; [607]
  • Keith Giles - author of various books on Christian ethics, non-violence, social justice, and following Jesus in daily life. See blog at http://www.keithgiles.com; Founder of Pacifist Fight Club [a collaborative group of nonviolent Christians who meet several times a year to discuss issues of nonviolence, social justice, immigration, etc. from a Christian perspective. See http://www.pacifistfightclub.com; Interviews published and referenced here on Wikipedia include S. Scott Bartchy, Channel Zero (comics), Paul Pope
  • Philip A. Goduti, Jr. - American author of Kennedy's Kitchen Cabinet and the Pursuit of Peace: The Shaping of American Foreign Policy, 1961–1963 Jefferson, NC, McFarland and Co., Inc, 2009 and Robert F. Kennedy and the Shaping of Civil Rights, 1960–1964 Jefferson, NC. McFarland and Co., Inc, 2013. His books are used as references in the following Wikipedia articles: Baldwin–Kennedy meeting, Foreign policy of the John F. Kennedy administration, Coretta Scott King, October 1962, June 1963; [608]; [609]
  • Edmund Gordon - prolific literary critic, biographer of Angela Carter, and winner of Jerwood Award for non-fiction.[36][37][38][39][40][41][42][43][44]
  • Carol Hurd Green - author of biographies, especially on women's writers; English professor at Boston College (http://www.bc.edu/schools/cas/capstone/faculty/green.html)
  • Barbara Kaye Greenleaf – author of America fever: The Story of American Immigration and Children through the Ages: a History of Childhood
  • John Gruen - Author of 15 books including biographies on conductor/composer Leonard Bernstein, composer Gian Carlo Menotti, dancer Erik Bruhn, and artist Keith Haring. Also a published photographer and author of three photography books. Writer for The New York Herald Tribune and The New York Times, chief art critic for New York magazine, arts columnist for Vogue, contributing editor to ArtNews, writer for Architectural Digest, and senior editor at Dance Magazine. Three hundred of his artist portraits are in the permanent collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art. 1926-2016. (http://archives.nypl.org/dan/22672)
  • Michelle M. Guilbeau- syndicated columnist, most well known for her column: CBS "Best of Chicago"
H–M
  • Jane Haapiseva-Hunter (also known as Jane Hunter) - American historian, political scientist and author; [610]
  • Emily Hatoyama - Australian-born Japanese essayist; former Japanese actress; wife of Japanese politician Kunio Hatoyama [611]
  • Dr. David R. Hawkins, psychologist, author, lecturer, scientist; involved with the work of Linus Pauling; contemporary of Wayne Dyer and Deepak Chopra; author of best-selling book Edition Power vs Force, Hay House Publishing, 1995; 9 other books; involved in kinesiology work; considered skeptical by many
  • Mehmet Salih Özalp (born September 1990, Van) is a Kurdish origin, Turkish researcher and author. ISBN-3 978-9756130629
  • George William Helon - (born 1965) Polish, Australian and Aboriginal author, etymologist, ethnographer, historian, genealogist and political aspirant. Lives Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia. Refer: People with the name Helon for reference links; also Arnold, et al., John (2004). The Bibliography of Australian Literature: F-J. St Lucia: University of Queensland Press. p. 401. ISBN 0-7022-3500-8; AUSTLIT [612]; National Library of Australia [613]; TROVE - National Library of Australia [614]; Polish Genealogical Society of America [615]; RootsWeb [616] ; Wikipedia Candidates of the Australian federal election, 1990; Constitutional Convention Candidate: Australia [617]; [618]; Who's Who Australian Writers and Who's Who Australian Childrens' Writers; search Google
  • Nancy Grass Hemmert - author of Public Speaking in American English, (Allyn & Bacon, 2008) and co-author of Relationships Inside Out (Kendell Hunt, 2014). Foremost expert in training non-native English speakers in the art of public speaking for American English speaking audiences. Also, an expert in intercultural communication training and education. Santa Monica College (http://www.smc.edu) Los Angeles County Training Academy (www.losangelescountyacademy.org/Bios/NancyHemmert.html). Also known for her service work she conducts with students. (http://santamonica.patch.com/articles/smc-class-taps-into-5000-for-water-well-in-africa) (http://santamonicacloseup.com/photo-du-jour/2009/5/23/governor-arnold-schwarzenegger.html)
  • Henry Hemming - British author and artist published by John Murray (publisher); works include In Search of the English Eccentric, Misadventure in the Middle East and OffScreen; [619].
  • Booton Herndon (1915–1995) - writer; wrote histories of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, the Junior Chamber of Commerce, the Ford empire, wrote biographies on Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford, Guy Lombardo, Fulton Lewis, Desmond Doss, Bergdorf Goodman, and a work on The Humor of JFK; [620]; [621]
  • Amanda Howard - (born 1973) Australian true crime author of fifteen books. Works include Murder on the Mind: An Insight into the Minds of Serial Killers and Their Crimes, A Killer in the Family: When Murder Waits at Home, Predator: Killers Without A Conscience, Innocence Lost: Crimes that Shocked a Nation, published by New Holland Publishers. Lives Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Has appeared in international documentaries including: Prime Suspect: Jack the Ripper, Crimes that Shook the World: The Backpacker Killer. Refer: National Library of Australia [622]; Amazon: [623]; imdb: [624]
  • James L. Howgego - author of two books: London in the 20's and 30's from Old Photographs, and The City Of London Through Artists' Eyes
  • Michael A. Hughes - information architect, senior user-experience design professional, author, columnist and speaker
  • Trevor Gervase Jalland - author of The Church and the Papacy: An Historical Study
  • Stephen Jimenez - Freelance reporter, screenplay writer (including work for ABC's 20/20), and published author.; author of The Book of Matt: Hidden Truths About the Murder of Matthew Shepard; [625]
  • Charlotte Russell Johnson - author of A Journey to Hell and Back, Daddy's Hugs, A Journey to Hell and Back the Flipside, Grace under Fire: The Journey Never Ends, Mama May I, In the Lords Eyes Mama's Pearls, Breaking the Curse and Kissing Hell Goodbye; Template:Worldcat id
  • Gregory Paul Johnson - author of Put Your Life on a Diet: Lessons Learned Living in 140 Square Feet ([626]), published by Gibbs-Smith ([627]); interviewed by numerous international media outlets; [628]
  • M. Tim Jones - author of several books in the computer-science field as well as many articles covering GNU/Linux, artificial intelligence, embedded systems, and general topics in computer programming
  • George Gheverghese Joseph - Author who wrote biographies, and on history of Indian Mathematics. His books are Women at Work, The Crest of the Peacock: Non-European Roots of Mathematics, Multicultural Mathematics: Teaching Mathematics from a Global Perspective, A Passage to Infinity: Medieval Indian Mathematics from Kerala and its Impact, and George Joseph: Life and Times of a Kerala Christian Nationalist (Orient Longman, 2003). The last named book is a political biography of his grandfather, George Joseph, a close associate of Mahatma Gandhi, Jawarhalal Nehru and other leaders of modern India. He is also the author of about 75 articles and chapters in books. In October 2000, he was called to the Bar of the Middle Temple, London. At present he holds joint positions at the University of Manchester, United Kingdom and at McMaster University, Canada. A bio at Amazon Author page [629].
  • Mike Joyner - author of Hills Of Truxton, Stories And Travels Of A Turkey Hunter, Tales from the Turkey Woods, Mornings Of My Better Days
  • Mark Kantrowitz - author of Secrets to Winning a Scholarship and other books about paying for college, publisher of FinAid and Fastweb web sites (among the first 100 commercial web sites), leading student aid policy advocate. Writes columns for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post and Time. Previous career as a research scientist with expertise in statistical language modeling and digital typography. Holds 7 patents on novel statistical methods, with applications including spelling correction, duplicate detection, language identification, text summarization and cancer treatment.
  • Evan Keliher (also known as Grandpa Ganja) - American writer; cannabis culture
  • A. C. Kermode (Alfred Cotterill Kermode) - books include Mechanics of Flight (1932) and Flight Without Formulae (1940); Template:Worldcat id
  • Howard Eldred Kershner (Howard E Kershner) (Howard Kershner)(1891−1991) - Books include The Elsworth Family (1930), Quaker Service in Modern War (1950), God, Gold and Government (1957), On Humanity (1943), Dividing the Wealth (1971), A Saga of America (1976), How to Stay in Love with One Woman for Seventy Years (1977) and Depression, unemployment, inflation: Causes and Solution (1982). His most famous quote: Kershner's First Law: "When a self-governing people confer upon their government the power to take from some and give to others, the process will not stop until the last bone of the last taxpayer is picked bare."
  • Jude Kessler - author of The Beatles trilogy Shudda Been There
  • Robert Kiely - (Requested Dec. 17, 2014) Literary Critic, author of Robert Louis Stevenson and the Fiction of Adventure, and The Romantic Novel in England
  • Simon Kingsnorth - (Requested October 2015) Author of Digital Marketing Strategy: An integrated approach to online marketing and contributing author to the books Understanding Digital Marketing and Understanding Social Media by Damian Ryan. Brother of award-winning author Paul Kingsnorth. Also a senior digital marketing businessman and speaker. [630]
  • Charlotte Matheny Kirkwood (1838–1926) – author of Into the Eye of the Setting Sun about her travels on the Oregon Trail
  • Erik Kolbell - author of several books on spirituality and philosophy; several appearances on US national TV; contributor to The New York Times and Family Circle.
  • Funke Koleosho (2009) – author of Gourmand Award Winning Cookbook Contemporary Nigerian Cuisine First of its type Nigerian all colour cookbook JOK Publishing
  • Kathy Krajco - author of 'What Makes Narcissists Tick' and prominent blogger on the topic of Narcissistic Personality Disorder
  • Phyllis & Eberhard Kronhausen - sexuality researchers and authors of numerous popular, somewhat controversial books in the 1960s and 1970s
  • Brett Lark (Brett was diagnosed with cancer and was forced to figure out how to cure it naturally, he has written a book, Divine Healing, on his experience and is coming out with a second, The Cure for Cancer in Spring 2016) (www.thecureforcancer.com.co)
  • Justin Leivars (born 1974) - military historian and militaria expert, author, comedian and comedy drama/sitcom writer; born in Derby, United Kingdom
  • Charles de Leusse (born 1976) - French writer (born in Paris); author of the book of aphorisms, Le Sablier (in French text) (2006; ISBN: 2-7481-7934-X; EAN: 9782748179347); [631]). Style ans feature : he writes his maxims and aphorisms in French, but in verse, so that rhyme (which is unique in the world ???). => fr:Charles de Leusse
  • Ronda Lee Levine (Roberts) (born 1977) - American writer and social and political philosopher; author of Success in Life through Personality Engineering (2011; isbn 1463730845); contributor to What Philosophy Can Tell You about Your Lover (2012; isbn 0812697634); author of over 1000 articles on philosophy, film, political theory, project management, and education; born in California
  • Amy Licence (born 3/9/1973) - author of 6 books of medieval and Tudor history, journalist and reviewer, with focus on the female experience through history.
  • Joseph Ligé (born 05/12/1980) - author of A Mile A Day, American writer, motivational speaker, athlete, inventor, spokesperson and master salesman. born in St. Louis, Missouri, on the north side, into poverty and became successful. Mentored by his blind grandfather Joe W. Wiley (Papa Joe), a St. Louis historical figure. www.josephlige.com, www.amileaday.com
  • Reeve Lindbergh - author of Under a Wing - A Memoir, Forward from Here - Leaving Middle Age - and Other Unexpected Adventures, et al., as well as numerous children's books; the daughter of Charles and Anne Morrow Lindbergh
  • Lloyd A. Luna, motivational speaker, author, lecturer [632]
  • Ibtihal Mahmood - (February 13, 1983) Palestinian/Jordanian writer, translator, journalist, poet, feminist and human right's activist [633]
  • Floyd Shuster Maine - Floyd Shuster Maine (Author) known as Lone Eagle, the white Sioux
  • Carlos Malvar - author of Not Quite Unreal; toured with a speechless project for the British Council Literature Department ([634]); Korea Literature Translation Institute's writer-in-residence (a one-week program);[635]; [636]; [637]
  • Danine Manette - author of Ultimate Betrayal-Recognizing, Uncovering and Dealing with Infidelity; media pundit on HLN's Dr Drew On-Call; professional model; criminal investigator; [638]; [639]; [640]; [641]; [642]
  • Drew Manning - American fitness and diet author. Wrote book titled Fit2Fat2Fit. Drew voluntarily decided to stop eating correctly and working out in an attempt to gain so that he may better understand the psyche of his overweight/obese clientele. Drew also has a website that tracked his journey of gaining and losing weight.[643] and [644] and [645]
  • Steve Maraboli - American author, behavioral science academic. Wrote, Unapologetically You (ISBN:0979575087), Life, the Truth, and Being Free (ISBN: 1496086244), The Power of One (ISBN: 097957501X), La Vida, La Verdad, y Ser Libre (ISBN: 0979575044) He is the creator of Psycho-Neuro-Actualization™; a counseling/coaching methodology. [646] [647]
  • Sondra Marshak - science-fiction author; wrote about the Star Trek franchise, wrote several novels as well as co-wrote Shatner - Where No Man - The Authorized Biography of William Shatner; 10+ mentions in Wikipedia articles; Template:Worldcat id
  • Ron Martinsen - (Requested August 19, 2015) Ronald Robert Martinsen (born May 6, 1970 Baton Rouge, Louisiana) co-author of Using Visual Basic 4, Special Edition (ISBN: 1-56529-998-1), Using Visual Basic 5, Special Edition (ISBN: 0-7897-0922-8) [648], and Printing 101 Notebook: An Introduction to Fine Art Photography Printing [649]. Ron is also an internationally renown photographer with images published in magazines around the world including GQ France, Robb Report Russia and more [650] and blogger [651]. Ron's also contributed articles on photography [652] and data protection [653] on Scott Kelby's blog Scott Kelby. Ron is also a featured photographer for NEC [654] and is a successful engineer / inventor at Microsoft for 21 years who has six patents issued by the US [655]] Finally Ron is mentioned in MSDE and referenced in Noiseware.
  • Ben Mattlin - born November 22, 1962, New York City; author of "Miracle Boy Grows Up: How the Disability Rights Revolution Saved My Sanity" (Skyhorse: 2012); NPR commentator and op-ed contributor to The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, CNN.com, WashingtonPost.com, and others; wrote one episode of "Biker Mice from Mars." Google "Ben Mattlin" for more.
  • Kevin Maurer - (Requested August 21, 2015) (born October 2, 1974) - journalist and best selling co-author of No Easy Day, a first-hand account of the raid to kill Osama bin Laden. Author of eight books [656]. His work has also appeared in national magazines. He wrote two issues of the Punisher for Marvel [657] and contributed stories to two anthology stories. A graduate of ODU and Frank W. Cox High School, Maurer covered both the Iraq and Afghan wars kevinmaurer.net.
  • D.J. MacLennan - Writer and cryonicist. Featured in New Scientist magazine, June 2016 - 'Why I signed up to have my head cryogenically frozen'. Author of cryonics book Frozen to Life: A Personal Mortality Experiment (Anatta Books, 2015). Contributor of chapters 'The Wonder of Indeterminacy'​ and 'Buddhism and Cryonics' to cryonics anthology The Prospect of Immortality - Fifty Years Later (Ria University Press, 2014).
  • Danielle McLaughlin - New Zealand born, U.S.-based lawyer [658] and author of The Federalist Society: How Conservatives Took The Law Back From Liberals (2013), with Michael Avery. Her published work has been reviewed by The New York Times [659], the Washington Independent Review of Books [660], the L.A. Review of Books [661], and The Daily Beast [662] among others, and examines the strategies employed by conservative and libertarian lawyers, academics, judges and policy makers, grounded in theories of constitutional originalism and small government, in various areas including international law and policy, privacy rights, and economic and property rights. Danielle has appeared as a guest on the Sean Hannity Show, discussing the IRS 501(c)(4) ideological profiling scandal [663], as well as various radio outlets including This Is Hell! with Chuck Merz [664], the Jim Bohannon Show and David Alpern's For Your Ears Only. Danielle has co-authored articles on the federal courts and marriage equality for the Chronicle of Higher Education [665] and Truthout [666] with Michael Avery. Danielle honed her writing skills early in her career as a public relations consultant and marketing manager in London, England and in Vail, Colorado. Prior to that, Danielle was a consulting engineer in her native New Zealand.
  • Melisa Mel - author of The Great Wall of POPAT: The adventures of a lesbian getting through police academy (2013) and author of Mel's Adaptive Physical Education Program (2014). Born 1969. Lives in Mesa, Arizona. Woman who focuses on assisting those belonging to vulnerable populations (i.e. special needs, LGBT community, crime victims, etc) in her professional and personal life.
  • Jeffrey Meyers- author of 850 articles and 52 books, half of them biographies. FRSL. Guggenheim fellow. Lectured on biography at National Libraries of Australia in 2012. Award in Literature from American Academy of Arts and Letter, 2005. 31 translations in 14 languages, published on 6 continents.
  • Bryan Miller (food writer) (req. 2015-07-15) - former restaurant critic and food writer, The New York Times; magazine writer; Template:Worldcat id; [667]; [668]; [669]; [670]
  • Stephen M. Miller (born August 3, 1952, Oakland, MD) -author; easy-reading Bible reference books: The Complete Guide to the Bible (Amazon's #1 bestselling Bible Handbook), How to Get Into the Bible, Who's Who & Where's Where in the Bible, Illustrated Bible Dictionary, The Bible: A History. Awards: Christian Broadcasting Council non-fiction book of the year; CBA [Christian Bookseller's Association] non-fiction book of the year; Evangelical Press Association Award of Excellence in magazine editing. stephenmillerbooks.com.
  • Mary Pamela Milne-Home -author; Mamma's Black Nurse Stories: West Indian Folklore (1890); translator of Daughter of the Commandant
  • Robert Mole - author; British civil servant; twice Mentioned in Despatches; awarded a Burma Star; wrote The Temple Bells Are Calling, an autobiography of his posting in Burma incorporating the politics of Burma from 1824 to 1948 during the Japanese occupation of Burma; [671]; Template:Worldcat id; [672]
  • Alain Montadon - French author of several books on etiquette, perhaps equivalent to Letitia Baldridge or Debrett's
N–S
  • Amy Newmark - Co-Author, Editor-In-Chief, Publisher of the Chicken Soup for the Soul book series.
  • Jon Niccum - Author of The Worst Gig (http://www.amazon.com/The-Worst-Gig-Psycho-Musicians/dp/1402284950), screenwriter (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1425638/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1), and Kansas City Star film critic (http://www.rottentomatoes.com/critic/jon-niccum/).
  • Jeffery Nyquist - Policy analyst and writer; writes about the decline of the West due to Communist influence. He has written many articles for news sites and appeared on radio shows. He has also written books such as Origins of the Fourth War (1998).
  • The Office Hobo - Nom de plume of the contemporary writer whose experiment of living in his Los Angeles office for nearly two years gained him notoriety as a social agitator. The Office Hobo got his start on his blog [www.theofficehobo.com] and published subsequent articles in L.A. Weekly [673]; [674]. An interview with the anonymous writer appeared in the June 2014 issue of Germany's Business Punk Magazine [print version only]. In 2014, The Office Hobo moved out of his office and into his truck camper. Though the actual identity of the author is unknown, his blurred image has been on national television, featured on the Fusion TV channel in September of 2014 [675]. The Office Hobo is reporting to be completing a memoir titled Home-Free: My Life as The Office Hoboon his time living in his office, though no report of its publication has been mentioned yet.
  • Keston Ott-Dahl - an American memoirist, blogger and activist living in the San Francisco Bay Area. Co-Author of Saving Delaney (www.amazon.com/Saving-Delaney-Keston-Ott-Dahl/dp/1627781684). Has written many articles for newspapers and magazines including The Washington Post (www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2014/11/12/disneys-next-movie-should-have-a-disabled-princess/) and whose activism for Down syndrome equality has been covered world wide in the media.
  • Decker Peters - very popular author of gay erotica, who lives in Provincetown, Massachusetts. His work has appeared in the magazines Mandate and Playguy and in the print anthologies Skin & Ink and Latin Boys. His website has received over half a million readers since 2002, and his blog has been cited by Cybersocket and Unzipped magazine as one of the "hottest" examples of gay erotica on the web. From Cybersocket, Kurt von Behrmann writes of Deckerotica: "Merging the literate with the erotic doesn't mean you have to check your brain at the bedroom door.
  • Morse Peckhsm - c. 1913 – 1993 Distinguished social, aesthetic, and literary theorist. Author of Man's Rage for Chaos: Biology, Behavior, and the Arts, Beyond the Tragic Vision, Romanticism and Ideology, The Romantic Virtuoso, Explanation and Power, and numerous other seminal works. Ph.D. in literature from the University of Pennsylvania with dissertation (still in print) being an annotated edition of Darwin's Origin of Species. Distinguished Professor of Humanities at University of South Carolina for last 20 or so years of his life, before that Professor of English at University of Pennsylvania.
  • Richard Plunz - Well known in the world of urban planning and architecture, he is a pioneer in his field. He is the director of the Urban Design Lab and the director of the Urban Design Program at Columbia University's Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation. He has written, A History of Housing in New York City (1990), Urban Climate Change Crossroads (2010), Two Adirondack Hamlets in History: Keene and Keene Valley (1999), Housing Form and Public Property in the U.S. (1980), New Urbanisms: Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina (1998), Naples: New Urbanisms : Centro Direzionale = Napoli : Urbanismi : Centro Direzionale (1997), Geothermal Larderello: Tuscany, Italy (2005), Caracas Litoral, Venezuela (2005), Design and the Public Good. Selected Writings, 1930–1980, by Serge Chermayeff (1982), The Urban Lifeworld (2001), After Shopping (2003), among other novels and publications. A brief biography can be found at: [676] and [677].
  • Shane G. Poplawski - golf-course architect and historian; has written about golf-course architects, especially Hugh Irvine Wilson; native to the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, area; (?alma mater: University of Pennsylvania?)
  • Josephine Powell - filmmaker and producer; consultant for Tito Puente; author of Tito Puente - When the Drums are Dreaming (Authorhouse, 2007); film consultant, including The Mambo Kings (1992); dance and Cuban-music historian; [678]
  • Bob Powers - comedian and humor writer; author of You Are a Miserable Excuse for a Hero and Happy Cruelty Day!
  • Edward Rasor - author of The Journey of a Modern Mystic: The Battle for The Kingdom of God (2006)
  • J. Godfrey Raupert - 1858–1929, books on spiritism, e.g., Christ and the Powers of Darkness
  • Dean Ravenola - author of Aether Warriors: The Hidden War Series (2013)
  • Crystal Renaud - author of Dirty Girls Come Clean (Moody Publishers, 2011). Founder of Dirty Girls Ministries assisting women addicted to pornography and sexual addiction ([679]; [680]; [681])
  • Carey Roberts - American columnist, men's-rights activist and anti-feminist; conservative commentator on political correctness; [682]
  • Steve Rogowski - author of: Social Work: the rise and fall of a profession, Critical Social Work with Children and Families: theory, context and practice and Social Work with Children and Families:reflections of a critical practitioner (due March 2016). He has practiced social work, mainly with children and families, across four decades, mainly with Oldham Council, until 2014. He obtained his PhD in 2002. Apart from his books he has published widely about his experiences in various social work/policy journals. He is also a passionate pike angler and has edited two books and and just had one published - The Incompleat Piker
  • Shawn Roop - author of Pathways to Love: 28 Days to Self Love (2010); tantra teacher and spiritual guide since 2000
  • Martin Rosenbaum - freedom-of-information journalist; blogger for the BBC (since 2006); [683]; [684]; [685]
  • Neil P. Ruzic - author of Where the Winds Sleep - Man's Future on the Moon, a Projected History (1970; Garden City, New York: Doubleday; OCLC 73907); innovator; part of Operation Paperclip (NASA's Von Braun group)
  • SARK (writer) (also known as Susan Ariel Rainbow Kenedy) - author of books on creativity and how to release it; SARK is a knife
  • Carolyn & Sean Savage - authors of Inconceivable, an account of carrying another couple's IVF-implanted (by mistake) baby to term and placing him with his biological parents. Carolyn is also a blogger and has a radio program in Toledo, Ohio.
  • Susan Schaller - author of A Man Without Words, the first book in English about a language-less adult
  • Phillip C. Schlechty - founder of Schlechty Center and author of many books; [686]; [687]
  • Herbert Schlossberg - author of Idols for Destruction: Christian Faith and Its Confrontation with American Society, and other books
  • Robert Sheard (b. March 9, 1960) - The New York Times bestselling author of The Unemotional Investor (1998, Simon & Schuster), and Money For Life (2000, HarperCollins). Also director of Speech and Debate at Durham Academy (Durham, NC), and coach of the NFL National Champions in Public Forum Debate in 2008.
  • Takeo Shimizu, Ph.D. - author of Fireworks: The Art, Science, and Technique, a major resource for the fireworks industry
  • Colin Shindler - producer of a variety of films and television series, as well as an author of a variety of books and articles, see [688]
  • Amit Singh - author, technical writer, columnist, etc., see [689]
  • Manuel J. Smith - author of assertiveness-training bestseller When I Say No, I Feel Guilty (1975)
  • P. D. Smith (or Peter D. Smith) - British author of scientific and cultural history, most recently of Doomsday Men (2007) ([690]); also writes for The Guardian; [691]
  • Bud Steed - Paranormal investigator, photographer and published author of the Haunted Natchez Trace (2012) and the Haunted Mississippi Gulf Coast (2012), both of which are in the Library of Congress. Conducted the first televised paranormal investigation of the historic Ray House at the Wilson's Creek National Battlefield for the Travel Channel (2011). Author, lecturer, photographer and paranormal investigator
  • Don R. Steele - author of Office Politics and How to Date Young Women for Men Over 35. Former psychologist who studied under Nathaniel Branden and worked in Family Therapy for 14 years before writing books on business and dating. Has extensive media exposure on radio and TV. Also leads an Internet discussion group.
  • Glenn Stout - author of Young Woman and the Sea: How Trudy Ederle Conquered the English Channel and Inspired the World, Red Sox Century, Nine Months at Ground Zero and other books; editor of The Best American Sports Writing series
  • Susan Rubin Suleiman or Susan Suleiman - literary and cultural critic and theorist; Harvard professor; author
  • Zena Sutherland - reviewer of children's books; editor of The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books for almost thirty years; namesake of the Zena Sutherland Prizes in Children's Literature
T–Z
  • Gina M. Tabasso, poet, journalist and educator from Cleveland, Ohio, with three poetry chapbooks published on academic or literary presses, including From Between My Legs in 1992 by New Spirit Press, Disrobing in 2003 by Pavement Saw Press, and Front Lines in 2009 by Pudding House Publications. She has been published in literary journals and anthologies around the world and has taught writing at the college level since 1995 for Cuyahoga Community College as well as community-based creative writing courses. She also has given poetry readings throughout the Midwest.
  • Unto Tähtinen - philosopher; author of Ahimsa - Non-Violence in Indian Tradition; Template:Worldcat id
  • Kerrin J D Tarr - British author of Reminiscence of Chaos, Escape the Labyrinth, The 30th of February, and 501 Questions You've Never Been Asked; [692]
  • Saba Tekle - Publisher, creator, and co-author of best selling book, 20 Beautiful Women; [693]
  • Jack Terry, MD (born Jakub Szabmacher) - Holocaust survivor; co-author (with Alicia Nikecki) of the book Jackub's World: A Boy's Sory of Loss and Survival in the Holocaust; [694]
  • Isabel Thomas, author of more than 100 non-fiction books for children, published around the world in 20 languages. Shortlisted for the Blue Peter Book Awards 2011. [695]; [696] [697]; [698]; [699] [700] [701] [702] [703] [704]
  • J. Douglas Thompson - doctor and diet-book author; based in Oakland, California; namesake of early-20th-century building in Oakland
  • Milo L. Thornberry - Author of Fireproof Moth: A Missionary in Taiwan's White Terror. Resides in Bend, Oregon. Born 1937. Retired Methodist minister. Helped Peng Ming-Min escape from Taiwan in 1970.
  • Lionel Spencer Thornton, 1884–1961. Wrote Conduct And The Supernatural: Being The Norrisian Prize Essay For The Year 1913 (1915), The Incarnate Lord: An Essay Concerning the Doctrine of the Incarnation in its Relation to Organic Conceptions...(1928), Revelation In The Modern World Being The First Part Of A Treatise On The Form Of The Servant (1950), The Dominion Of Christ : Being The Second Part Of A Treatise On The Form Of The Servant (1952), and other titles.
  • Phillip Torres (born 1982). Wrote A Crisis of Faith: Atheism, Emerging Technologies and the Future of Philosophy, which gained significant critical praise. Phil attended Harvard, Brandeis and the University of Maryland, and has published numerous academic papers in top journals under his given name and pseudeonum (Philippe Verdoux). He also was a researcher / writer for the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies as Philippe Verdoux, who's already mentioned in the Wikipedia article on transhumanism. In addition, Phil is the sole member of the band Baobab, which recently had a song featured in a GoPro commercial that now has over 3 million views. Other Baobab songs were sold to MTV (which also re-released the first Baobab album) and have ended up in commercials and shows around the world.
  • Charles E. Trimble (also known as "Chuck") (born 1935) - Native-American writer; columnist for Indian Country Today; former Executive Director, National Congress of American Indians, a founder of the American Indian Press Association; not associated with Trimble Navigation
  • Patricia Volk - Author of "Stuffed: Adventures of a Restaurant Family," "Shocked: My Mother, Schiaparelli, and Me," and four works of fiction. She is also a frequent contributor to The New York Times. [705]
  • Richard G. Walsh - Author of "Three Versions of Judas," and other books, Professor of Religion; Co-Director, Honors Program. B.A., Baylor University; M.Div., Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary; Ph.D., Baylor University.[706]
  • Tara Washburn - author of "Crossing Bridges" (2014), diagnosed with Aspergers Syndrome at age 28, advocate for a new view of Autism, Founder of Hearts that Feel<http://www.heartsthatfeel.com/2011/10/dont-touch-me.html>, guest of Autism Warriors <http://sayitproductions.com/shows/autism-warriors-023-autism-from-the-inside-out-tara-washburn/> published in "Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought", claims a blog reader base of 12,000 in 82 countries
  • Helen Waterford - Holocaust survivor; author of Commitment to the Dead: One Woman's Journey Toward Understanding; paired up with former Hitler Youth Alfons Heck to teach people that peace and understanding can come to two sworn enemies
  • Aidan Watson-Morris - self-published author of To Flee or Not to Be, has been featured on Google News, Newsguide, Having a Laugh, et al.; [707]
  • Seth Weintraub, Author, Web Publisher, 9to5mac.com, 9to5google.com, 9to5Toys.com, https://electrek.co/about/
  • Linda K. Wertheimer - author of Faith Ed: Teaching About Religion in an Age of Intolerance (August 2015, Beacon Press). Recent journalistic work includes [708]. Print journalist, not to be confused with the noted NPR correspondent Linda Wertheimer.
  • Jacob Whittingham - author of What Being Black Is and What Being Black Isn't
  • Marion Winik - Born 1958. American personal essayist, book reviewer, NPR commentator. Author of nine books (including First Comes Love, Lunch Box Chronicles, The Glen Rock Book of the Dead) Several refs and quotes on Wikipedia.
  • Margret Wittmer (1904–2001) - German author of the book Postlagernd Floreana (1959, Germany; later translated into 13 languages) a narration of the pioneering Wittmer Family in Galapagos Archipelago
  • Burton Wohl - novelist, The China Syndrome (1979), ISBN 978-0553130171; the novel upon which the 1979 film The China Syndrome is based
  • Randall Wood - author of Moon Nicaragua, Living Abroad in Nicaragua, Dictator's Handbook: a practical manual for the aspiring tyrant; [709]; [710]
  • Chris Woodford (author) - author of Cool Stuff and How it Works, www.explainthatstuff.com
  • Caroline A. Zimmermann (born 1944) - American non-fiction writer; wrote The Super Sneaker Book, Your Child Can Be a Model and How to Break into the Media Professions
  • David Zweig (born 1974) - American journalist and fiction writer. Author of Invisibles: The Power of Anonymous Work in an Age of Relentless Self Promotion based on his widely read article for The Atlantic "What Do Fact-Checkers and Anesthesiologists Have in Common?" Invisibles has been translated into five languages and received coverage in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The New Republic, The Wall Street Journal, Slate, Salon, Wired, Fortune, Forbes, and the author was interviewed on numerous public radio programs and TV shows, including CBS This Morning, CNBC, MSNBC, FOX, and the CBC. Zweig is also a well known writer on technology, media and psychology for outlets such as The Atlantic and The New York Times. His 3,000 word takedown in Salon on errors in the David Brooks book "The Road to Character" was widely read and cited, including a citation in the Sunday New York Times itself, by Margaret Sullivan, the paper's Public Editor, where it was noted that Zweig's piece led to Brooks's publisher altering the text of the book for future editions and the Times making corrections on past Brooks columns. (The piece is also linked to in David Brooks (journalist)#Criticism.) Zweig's 2,000 word feature on the front page of The New York Times real estate section on his move from the city to the suburbs was widely read and cited as well, and also generated backlash on social media.

Biologists

Botanists

  • Carpology ()

Business people

Chefs

Chemists

Computer scientists

Earth scientists

Economists

Educators

A–M

N–Z

  • Keith Negus - British music scholar; author of Popular Music in Theory: An Introduction, et al.
  • Edward Bartlett Nitchie (1876–1917) - principal of the New York School for the Hard of Hearing; author of various works on lip-reading; see Dictionary of American Biography
  • Patrick Overton - American author of the "Faith" poem and many other things; [769]
  • Scott D. Pearson - Executive Director, District of Columbia Public Charter School Board; [770]; [771]; [772]; [773]
  • Kurt Penberg - President of Kid's Jukebox Inc.
  • Dr. Gerard Putz - President and Co-Founder of National Science Olympiad
  • Martha T. Roth - Dean of Humanities, University of Chicago; Professor of Assyriology, Oriental Institute, Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, Committee on Jewish Studies, and the College; Editor-in-Charge, Chicago Assyrian Dictionary; [774]
  • Constance Rulka - (1926–2014) Teacher, Examiner in English for the Oxford and Cambridge Joint Matriculation Board. Author of textbooks in English language and Poetry for Macmillan Publishing company, School Trustee for Squamish School district 48, wrote a regular weekly column titled "Sound Schools" for the Chief newspaper in Squamish as well as articles for Teacher Newsmagazine. Chief Examiner and Assistant Registrar for the West African Examinations Council. She was awarded The Educational Press Association of America "Distinguished Achievement Award" given for excellence in Educational Journalism (1992). In 2003 she was awarded the Golden Leaf Award - "Writing and Editing" Educational Issues Reporting from the Canadian Educational Press Association. On June 13, 2006, School District No. 48 honored Constance Rulka's contributions and renamed the Howe Sound Secondary School Library "The Constance Rulka Library"
  • Cheryl Ryne - speech, forensics, psychology and sociology teacher at Friendswood High School; winner of The Bernard and Audre Rapoport Teaching Award from the University of Texas in 2000
  • Edward B. Shils - founded the Entrepreneurial Center at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School (1973); Chair in Alternative Dispute and Arbitration at Penn's Law School (1991); Professor of Management
  • Beth H. Slingerland - pioneering dyslexia educator; creator of the Slingerland classroom adaptation of the Orton-Gillingham approach for teaching dyslexic children; [775]
  • Comfort Starr - Early Cambridge, Massacusetts, resident, first Harvard class convened in his living room, father of one of Danbury, Connecticut's eight founders
  • Susan Rubin Suleiman (Susan Suleiman) - literary and cultural critic, and theorist; Harvard University professor; author
  • Rupert Till - expert in sound technology at Huddersfield University; believes Stonehenge used as a place for dancing
  • Martha van Rensselaer (1864–1932) - Dean of Cornell University College of Human Ecology Biography
  • Priya Venkatesan - former Dartmouth College professor who achieved notoriety by threatening lawsuits against the school and some of her undergraduate students; [776]; [777] [778]
  • Neil L. Waters - Professor of History; Kawashima Professor of Japanese Studies at Middlebury College in Vermont; noted for speaking out against Wikipedia as a citable reference. Required subject of study at DeVry University Online..... [779] and [780]
  • Joshua Wolff - New York City media teacher and director at Nomading Films; produced the first online global classroom collaboration for Discovery Education
  • Patricia Zander (1943–2008) - British-American pianist and instructor; ARCM, LRAM, Royal College of Music, London; studied with Cyril Smith; longtime faculty member of the New England Conservatory; students included Yo-Yo Ma, Judith Gordon, and Max Levinson; toured and recorded with Ma; [781]
  • Jose R. Otaola (1945) - Basque-Spanish-American educator and biologist; UPRM, UIPR, a; [782]
  • James W. Walters (1945-)Professor of Religion and Bioethics at [Loma Linda University School of Religion]; [783] Co-founder of [Adventist Today] Author of several publications including but not limited to: [Living is Loving: Relationships Matter Most (Washington DC: Review and Herald Publishing Assoc., 1985)] [Bioethics Today, A New Ethical Vision (Loma Linda University Press, 1988), editor. [War No More? Options in Nuclear Ethics (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1989), editor] [Facing Limits: Ethics and Health Care for the Elderly (Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1993), edited with Gerald R. Winslow] [Choosing Who's to Live: Ethics and Aging (University of Illinois Press, 1996), editor] [What is a Person? An Ethical Exploration (University of Illinois Press, 1997)] [Martin Buber and Feminist Ethics, The Priority of the Personal (Syracuse University Press, 2003)] [The Predicament of Belief in Dialogue, Philip Clayton and Steven Knapp and 8 Discussants (in press), edited with Philip Clayton]
  • Rakesh Vohra George A. Weiss and Lydia Bravo Weiss University Professor at the [University of Pennsylvania]; [784]
  • M K Bashar Ln. M K Bashar is the founder and chairman of Cambrian Education Group [Cambrian College, Dhaka]; [785]

Engineers

Entertainers

Actors

A–M
N–Z

Choreographers

  • Robert Scevers - American choreographer and dancer; Premiere Danseur with The Harkness Ballet; [933]

Comedians

  • Tom Wang (Age 20) - Famous in Cambridge for his monologues among other things. [950]

Filmmakers

Place new filmmaker requests under the most-appropriate subcategory below.

Directors

Documentary filmmakers

Producers

  • MyithZ - American Producer, videographer; produces YouTube Videos, famous for various videos of the construction of the Apple Campus 2 project [1,027]
  • Mark Schulze (producer) - American video producer from San Diego, California, Director of Photography and videographer, noted for producing The Great Mountain Biking Video, Full Cycle: A World Odyssey and co-producing Massage for Relaxation. He was an early innovator of the helmet cam Helmet camera with some of the earliest known captured POV footage currently digitally accessible to the public [1,029]. Schulze is CEO of San Diego's oldest video production company Crystal Pyramid Productions [1,030] and originator of San Diego's first and largest stock footage library company, New & Unique Videos [1,031], Stock footage, [1,032] Schulze also has a presence at Imdb [1,033] In 2015 Schulze found himself in front of the video camera and not in his customary spot behind it after finding a lost Panasonic Lumix on the ocean floor off La Jolla. The story of how he and his wife reunited the camera with its family months after they had dropped it from their kayak appeared on Inside Edition and Local San Diego news stations [1,034], [1,035], [1,036]. In 1990 Schulze and his wife Patty Mooney traveled around the world to produce a mountain biking documentary Full Cycle: A World Odyssey. They brought mountain biking tourism to South Australia [1,037]. Schulze and Mooney were among the first documented underwater mountain bikers off the coast of Costa Rica in 1994. A clip appeared on Real TV [1,038]. A clip of Schulze riding a mountain bike underwater in the ocean was broadcast on a Pacman commercial [1,039] Patty Mooney (talk) 23:55, 20 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Screenwriters

Other filmmakers

(casting directors, cinematographers, special-effects people, et al.)

Magicians

Musicians

Performance artists

Radio personalities

See also the list of requests for Wikipedia:Requested articles/Biography/By profession#Disc jockeys.

Television personalities

Environmentalists

Espionage and intelligence

Fashion

Feminist figures

  • Lucinda Cisler - author and women's-rights activist; involved with Second Wave Feminism, National Organization for Women, New York Radical Women and abortion-law repeal
  • Anna Coote, British co-author of various feminist books, writer and advocate on social policy Guardian profle
  • Lauren Kay - Founder of the Dating Ring and SmartSitting. 2011 graduate of Brown University]
  • Catherine Lundy - heroine from the Battle of Lundy's Lane (part of the War of 1812); [1,218]
  • Ella Wall Van Leer (or Ella Van Leer) - author of the Van Leer Papers; campaigned for women admissions and founded one of the first sororities at Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Rose Winslow born as Ruza Wenclawska was an NWP activist of the women's suffrage movement. Winslow represented the working class women. [1,219]
  • Vidyut Kale - Indian blogger and controversial social media commentator is a powerful voice for women's empowerment in India and is unique in being completely non-aligned with lobby groups or media - she also has nothing to sell. Her blog is among the leading Indian blogs by single authors and has served to draw attention to several important issues in the country. She also has very unique views on women's empowerment and the role a male controlled media plays in directing feminism to inconsequential issues in India. She claims to apply mass psychology approaches and treats real time social media commentary as group interventions.

Folklorists

Geographers

Historians

Inventors

Comment by PCR, changed name to correct spelling L3X1 My Complaint Desk 04:15, 6 February 2017 (UTC)[reply]
  • Justinian Caire (One of the investors in Santa Cruz Island in the late 1800's. He was a French immigrant and founder of a successful San Francisco hardware business that sold equipment to miners. By the late 1880s Caire had acquired all of the shares of the Santa Cruz Island Company.) (http://www.independent.com/news/2013/aug/15/justinian-caire/)
  • Alan Cocconi - engineer, inventor, and developer of technology needed for modern electric cars and airplanes; founder of AC Propulsion; has registered several patents [1,264][1,265][1,266]
  • Ariel R. Davis - inventor of the first slider multiple tap autotransformer dimmer and numerous other patents relating to stage lighting. Davis filed for the transformer patent (USRE23409 E)[82] in 1941. He also created the first slider cross connect panel for connecting lighting circuits to individual dimmers. Many schools, colleges, churches and buildings in the United States have had his products installed. He founded the Ariel Davis Mfg. Co. in Provo, Utah and later moved it to Salt Lake City, Utah. He sold the company around 1970 so he could focus on inventing when it was renamed ElectroControls. His inventions include one for solar heating (US 4136668 A).
  • Robert Edwin Dietz (or Robert E. Dietz) (1818–1897) - American businessman and inventor; founder of the R. E. Dietz Company; [1,267]
  • Riccardo Giraldi - Italian Inventor, Designer and Creative Director. Explores new technologies focusing on user experience and designed experiences that connect physical and digital. Award winner designer shaping the future of human computer interaction. Now Creative Director at Microsoft working on HoloLens [1,268]. Invented Escape Flight [1,269],[1,270],[1,271],[1,272],[1,273], Mind Controlled Scalextric (first mind controlled race game) [1,274],[1,275],[1,276], Creative Director of Google Web Lab[1,277],[1,278],[1,279], Honda The Experiment, EELs [1,280], and numerous other award winning projects [1,281],[1,282],[1,283]. Speaker at FITC [1,284], Cannes, Imagination Day, Kikk [1,285], Glugg[1,286][1,287]. [1,288],[1,289],[1,290],[1,291],[1,292],[1,293],[1,294],[1,295]
  • Johnathan Goodwin - co-founder of SAE Energy; [1,296]; [1,297]
  • William R. Pape - Co-Founder of Verifone, EVP and Co-Founder of TraceGains, Inc. Holder of multiple patents, professor, rancher, author, blogger, co-designer of the first commercial spell checker system for computers. [1,298]
  • Stephen M. Key - award winning inventor and patent holder of the SpinLabel Rotating Label Technology.[1,299] Licensed over 30 products in the past 30 years. Co-Founder of inventRight - Helping people bring ideas to market for over 10 years. Author of the One Simple Idea book series. [1,300];[1,301];[1,302]
  • Jan Vinzenz Krause - German businessman; director, Institute for Condom Consultancy; invented a spray-on condom; [1,303];[1,304]
  • Frank J. Richtig Blacksmith; regarded for much of the 20th century as among the greatest custom knifemakers in the United States.[83] Perhaps best known today for inventing a steel heat-treatment process that achieved exceptional results but was lost when he died; some of today's leading knife makers are still working to recreate it.[84]
  • Stephen L. Rush - inventor of organic hydrolysis and combination ethanol / bio-diesel plant [1,305], "Systems and Processes for Cellulosic Ethanol Production" application Ser. No. 12/014,090, filed January 14, 2008; [1,306]
  • Richard Sclafani - invented the see-through 0s New Year's Eve glasses; [1,307]
  • David Schurig - EE professor, inventing invisibility cloak; [1,308]
  • Charlie Sobcov - Ottawa student who invented window decals transparent to humans, but not to birds; [1,309], but his "invention" had been on sale for more than a year
  • Allan Thieme - Inventor of the Amigo in 1968, the world's first power operated vehicle, more commonly known as a mobility scooter. Thieme's company Amigo Mobility is still operating in Michigan. In 1977, the Social Security Administration added power operated vehicles (Amigos) to coverage under Medicare [1,310]. In 1982, Amigo Mobility was #212 on Inc.'s Fastest Growing Companies list [1,311] and Allan Thieme was named the US Small Businessman of the Year. In 2012, Allan Thieme of Amigo Mobility was named the Michigan Manufacturer of the Year [1,312].
  • Stanislav V'Soske - inventor of the tufted-wool rug in 1925; custom and museum-quality rug manufacturer with collaborations with 20th-century artists and architects; [1,313]; [1,314]
  • Raymond Wang - Internationally Acclaimed Canadian Inventor from Vancouver. He is one of Canada's Top 20 Under 20 for his various inventions: At the age of 17 he won the 2015 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair for designing a system of fin-like devices that can be installed in the air inlets of narrow body to reduce disease transmission aboard airliners by creating a virtual "wall of air" around each passenger. Wang estimates the modification, which can be installed overnight at a cost of $1,000 (USD) per aircraft, can reduce the concentration of airborne pathogens by 55 times and increase the availability of fresh air to passengers by 190 percent. Since the age of 12, Raymond also developed a Self-Cleaning Outdoor Garbage Bin, a Dynamically Supportive Knee Brace, and an Energy Harvesting Roof System, and was both a multi-time Canada Wide Science Fair Gold Medallist and Google Science Fair Top 90 Finalist. His inventions have been featured with TED, IEEE, NBC, Wall Street Journal, and CBC[85] [1,315] [1,316] [1,317] [1,318][1,319][1,320][1,321]

Journalists

See also the list of requests for Documentary Filmmakers.

Law

Criminals

Detectives and police

Lawyers

LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender) figures

Note - Other reliable sources that talk about Abby: Vocativ CNN New York Times

Linguists

Maritime figures

Mathematicians

Medical people

Military figures

American Medal of Honor recipients

Natural scientists, other

Ornithologists (birds)

Philosophers

Physicists

Political figures

Psychologists


Religious figures

Atheistic Satanism

Anglican/Episcopal

Baptist

Buddhism

Catholicism

Eastern Orthodox

Hinduism

Islam

Judaism

New-age spirituality

  • J. Sig Paulson - Minister, Author and Teacher; Unity School of Christianity;

Non-denominational Christian

  • Amelia Hudson Broomhall, sister of Hudson Taylor and wife of Benjamin Broomhall; all three key to the foundation of the China Inland Mission, but she got little attention. Source: Each to Her Post: Six Women of the China Inland Mission (1982) by Phyllis Thompson.
  • Margaret King (missionary), before and during the Boxer Rebellion; "one of the best-known and best-loved missionaries in central China" according to her bio in Each to Her Post: Six Women of the China Inland Mission (1982) by Phyllis Thompson.
  • Jessie Gregg, missionary and evangelist who travelled exceptionally widely in China, according to her bio in Each to Her Post: Six Women of the China Inland Mission (1982) by Phyllis Thompson.
  • Jessie McDonald (1888-1980), one of the first Canadian female doctors, missionary in China, one of the last to leave in 1952. Each to Her Post: Six Women of the China Inland Mission (1982) by Phyllis Thompson. A Missionary in China
  • Lilian Hamer (NB her birthplace honoured her by naming a care home after her, but WP doesn't have an article yet). Nurse and midwife to tribal people on the edge of China, and then post-1952 to the same people over the border in Thailand. Fierce the Conflict. The story of Lilian Hamer (1960). Each to Her Post: Six Women of the China Inland Mission (1982) by Phyllis Thompson.

Other

Pentecostal and charismatic

Presbyterian, Reformed and Calvinism

Protestant

  • William E. Gilroy, D.D. (Editor of The Congregationalist, Boston MA. Gilroy's articles were published nationally in newspapers for apparently decades. I have seen a brilliantly written article from Gilroy on page 4 the 16 November 1929 edition of The Clarksburg Exponent, Clarksburg West Virginia. The article urged new attitudes of kindness and love toward all racial groups. This article is as relevant today as it was in 1929. According to The American Missionary Volume 76, 1922, Gilroy took a tour of the South to get acquainted with the works of the A.M.A. and came back a profound believer in its value. Gilroy's articles were obviously still being published in the late 1950s as seen in the links below.)1 2 3 4
  • Enos Hitchcock - quoted in an Economist article as having said "The free access which many young people have to romances, novels and plays has poisoned the mind and corrupted the morals of many a promising youth."; may be the Enos Hitchcock (1745–1803) who was a well-known minister (not sure of denomination) during the American Revolution mentioned here
  • John Hunt (b. 1812) - A missionary to Fiji. He was born in England and was one of the first Methodists. He went to the Fiji Island, which was cannibalistic. He was the first person to write down the Fijian language. He translated the New Testament from Greek into Fijian. He died of a disease while on the island of Fiji but not before converting the entire island to Christianity and ending the cannibalism and human sacrifice. There are many books written about him including Rowe, George Stringer. A Missionary Among Cannibals; or, the life of John Hunt who was eminently successful in converting the people of Fiji from cannibalism to Christianity. New York: Carlton & Porter, 1859.; McLean, Archibald. Epoch Makers of Modern Missions. New York, Chicago [etc.] Fleming H. Revell company, 1912. Source of the image. There are also many websites devoted to him, [1,576] and [1,577] among many others. His name is also mentioned in the History of Fiji page.
  • Matthew Flannagan - new zealander christian, apologist and philosopher [1,578]
  • Thomas Munster - Swedish Christian reformist; sv:Thomas Munster
  • Edward R. Skane (or Edward Skane) - reverend, television evangelist, book author; father of high-profile murdered son, died February 2001
  • Thomas Thorowgood (c. 1600–1669) - English Divine; author of Jewes in America, or Probabilities that the Americans Are of that Race; influential to the writing and thought of John Eliot; intellectual peer to Menasseh Ben Israel
  • Adrian Bulley - United Reformed Church minister and Synod Clerk for the United Reformed Church synod of Wales, previously Moderator for the United Reformed Church synod of Wessex; outspoken supported of LGBT inclusion in the Church and supporter of asylum justice in the UK [1,579] [1,580] [1,581] [1,582]
  • Walker Railey - Requested November 12, 2015. Former First United Methodist minister accused and acquitted of having tried to kill his wife, Peggy Railey. [1,583]; [1,584]; [1,585]
  • Francis M. Craft (1852-1920) - Missionary to the Sioux [1,586]

Unitarian Universalist

Wicca and witches

  • Edain McCoy - author of Celtic Myth and Magick and other works published by Llewellyn Publications; purported founder of the Witta tradition
  • Agnes Snoth (1500s) - burned at the stake with four other women; preached against auricular confessions, stating that it was sinful to ask forgiveness from a man for what only God can grant There is a source on page 49 of this PDF, which may come in handy.

Sociologists

Sports figures

References

Most of the entries on this page use inline external links to keep the topic and its sources together. A few use <ref>...</ref> tags; their sources are displayed here.

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  2. ^ http://www.gc.cuny.edu/Page-Elements/Academics-Research-Centers-Initiatives/Doctoral-Programs/History/Faculty-Bios/Manu-Bhagavan
  3. ^ http://www.roosevelthouse.hunter.cuny.edu/?faculty=manu-bhagavan
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