Louise Wareham Leonard

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Louise_Wareham_Leonard an entity of type: Thing

Louise Wareham Leonard is an American writer born in New Zealand. She is the subject of an essay by Amanda Fortini in the Los Angeles Review of Books in which she is said to herald a new group of women: "itinerant, deracinated, distant from their families, essentially alone in the world, and improvising as they go." She is "slyly, coolly observant and has transformed her experiences into art." rdf:langString
rdf:langString Louise Wareham Leonard
rdf:langString Louise Wareham Leonard
rdf:langString Louise Wareham Leonard
xsd:integer 47204816
xsd:integer 1121761021
rdf:langString Louise Wareham Leonard
rdf:langString American
rdf:langString August 2022
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Conflict of interest
rdf:langString Louise Wareham Leonard is an American writer born in New Zealand. She is the subject of an essay by Amanda Fortini in the Los Angeles Review of Books in which she is said to herald a new group of women: "itinerant, deracinated, distant from their families, essentially alone in the world, and improvising as they go." She is "slyly, coolly observant and has transformed her experiences into art." Leonard's work is also notable for the celebrities and quasi-celebrities who appear in it, for instance Michael Stipe, Jay Carney, Lou Reed, Jonathan Franzen and those who have died (including Carter Cooper, Gloria Vanderbilt’s son and Anderson Cooper’s brother).
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