Susan Mitchell (Australian author)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Susan_Mitchell_(Australian_author) an entity of type: Thing

سوزان ميتشيل (بالإنجليزية: Susan Mitchell)‏ هي كاتِبة أسترالية، ولدت في 1945 في أديلايد في أستراليا. rdf:langString
Susan Mitchell (born 1945) is a writer, newspaper columnist, and public speaker. Mitchell has authored 15 books, including Tall Poppies (1984). She hosted a morning talk show in Adelaide and Brisbane on ABC radio, and a television interview program entitled Susan Mitchell: In Conversation which aired twice weekly on ABC. Most of her books have focused on the lives of women in politics, business, sports, literature and public life, including the biography, Margaret and Gough: The Love Story That Shaped a Nation (2014), which chronicled the life of the former prime minister Gough Whitlam and the love he shared with his wife and partner Margaret. Mitchell also wrote opinion pieces about political and social issues for The Australian, as well as feature articles for various media in Australia rdf:langString
rdf:langString سوزان ميتشيل (كاتبة)
rdf:langString Susan Mitchell (Australian author)
rdf:langString Susan Mitchell
rdf:langString Susan Mitchell
rdf:langString Adelaide, Australia
xsd:integer 54410017
xsd:integer 1085063911
rdf:langString سوزان ميتشيل (بالإنجليزية: Susan Mitchell)‏ هي كاتِبة أسترالية، ولدت في 1945 في أديلايد في أستراليا.
rdf:langString Susan Mitchell (born 1945) is a writer, newspaper columnist, and public speaker. Mitchell has authored 15 books, including Tall Poppies (1984). She hosted a morning talk show in Adelaide and Brisbane on ABC radio, and a television interview program entitled Susan Mitchell: In Conversation which aired twice weekly on ABC. Most of her books have focused on the lives of women in politics, business, sports, literature and public life, including the biography, Margaret and Gough: The Love Story That Shaped a Nation (2014), which chronicled the life of the former prime minister Gough Whitlam and the love he shared with his wife and partner Margaret. Mitchell also wrote opinion pieces about political and social issues for The Australian, as well as feature articles for various media in Australia and the U.S. She is an adjunct professor emeritus at Flinders University.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 7169

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