Event class: published, death, book, work, years, last, volume, two, works, wrote
normalize
de-normalize
Events with high posterior probability
David J. Whittaker | Whittaker is coeditor of volumes one and two of the Histories series of the Joseph Smith Papers Project (volume 1 was published in the spring of 2012). |
James Purdy | Shortly after his death in 2009, a book of plays, Selected Plays of James Purdy including Brice, Ruthanna Elder, Where Quentin Goes and The Paradise Circus, was published by Ivan R. Dee. |
Grace Stone Coates | After Coates's death, she took it upon herself to collect as many letters and unpublished work as she could find and publish it in a biography, Honey Wine and Hunger Root, which was published in 1985. |
Santosh Kumar Ghosh | During his last days, when suffering from cancer at the Breach Candy Hospital, Mumbai, Santosh Kumar wrote some letters, maintained a diary and also wrote his last short story,' Cholar Pathe' which was published collectively posthumously in 1996. |
J. B. Steane | His final contribution to Gramophone, an appreciation of a vintage recording of The Barber of Seville with Maria Callas and Tito Gobbi, was published posthumously in May 2011. |
Cyprien Tanguay | Its seven large volumes, more than 4,400 pages, have been published in a facsimile edition by in 1975, with a bonus volume by l'Abbé Tanguay, À travers les registres. |
John K. Fairbank | Fairbank finished the manuscript of his final book, China : A New History in the summer of 1991. |
William Hope Hodgson | Many of his poems were published by his widow in two posthumous collections, but some 48 poems were not published until their appearance in the 2005 collection The Lost Poetry of William Hope Hodgson. |
David Fleming (writer) | It was completed just before his death and published posthumously on 7 July 2011. |
Thomas Hardy | After giving up the novel form, Hardy continued to publish poetry collections until his death in 1928. |
M. N. Roy | A total of 4 volumes were published through 1997, gathering Roy's writings through his prison years. |
Rodger Kamenetz | Kamenetz continued to add to the book, and a new edition, nearly double in size, appeared in 1991 asThe Missing Jew : New and Selected Poem (Time Being, 1991). |
Qian Zhongshu | A 13-volume edition of Works of Qian Zhongshu (錢鍾書集 , 钱锺书集) was published in 2001 by the Joint Publishing, a hard-covered deluxe edition, in contrast to all of Qian's works published during his lifetime which are cheap paperback s. |
Benjamin Disraeli | He had throughout his career written novels, beginning in 1826, and he published his last completed novel, Endymion shortly before he died at the age of 76. |
Robert Erskine Childers | With the help of his sisters, who cross-checked the new manuscript pages against the existing material, Childers produced the final version in time for publication in May 1903. |
Manuel II of Portugal | But the project was terminated prematurely in 1932, when Manuel died unexpectedly : the third volume was posthumously published under the supervision of his librarian, Margery Winters. |
Spalding Gray | In 2005, Gray's unfinished final monologue was published in a hardcover edition entitled Life Interrupted : The Unfinished Monologue. |
Nicolas Calas | Unpublished at the time, Calas' French poems finally appeared in a bilingual edition (French-Greek) in 2002 in Greece. |
Chilakamarti Lakshmi Narasimham | At the request of his friends, despite his blindness and old age (75 years), Chilakamarti wrote his 646 pages long autobiography Sweeyacharitamu in 4 months and 24 days from 18 March 1942 to 12 July 1942. |
D'Arcy Niland | She also completed his research into the life of Les Darcy, releasing it in the form of a biography, Home Before Dark (1995), that was written with her son-in-law Rafe Champion. |
James Russell Lowell | In 1855, Lowell oversaw the publication of a memorial volume of his wife's poetry, with only fifty copies for private circulation. |
Alexandre Benois | Benois published his Memoirs in two volumes in 1955. |
Kay Sage | In addition to her autobiography, China Eggs, and three dramatic sketches (the latter published in 2011 by the Gallery of Surrealism, New York, in the book called Kay Sage : the Biographical Chronology and Four Surrealist One-Act Plays - see footnote no 1. |
Marie Bonaparte-Wyse | In 1881 she edited Rattazzi et son Temps, and in the last two or three years of her life published two volumes of her own memoirs, and edited the Nouvelle Revue Internationale, to which she also contributed a significant amount. |
Dorothy Porter | Since her death, The Bee Hut (2009) has been published posthumously, as has her final completed work, an essay on literary criticism and emotions and literature entitled On Passion. |
W. K. C. Guthrie | The venture remained, however, unfinished at his death aged 74 in 1981 the year in which he published the sixth volume in the series, devoted to Aristotle. |
John Forster (biographer) | Towards the close of 1875 the first volume of his Life of Swift was published ; and he had made some progress in the preparation of the second at the time of his death. |
Charles Bukowski | According to ECCO, the 2007 release The People Look Like Flowers At Last will be his final posthumous release as now all his once-unpublished work has been published. |
Abdurrahman Baswedan | In February 1986, AR Baswedan finished his draft for his autobiography in Jakarta. |
J. G. Ballard | In October 2008, before his death, Ballard's literary agent Margaret Hanbury brought an outline for a book by Ballard with the working title Conversations with My Physician : The Meaning, if Any, of Life to the Frankfurt Book Fair. |
P. G. Wodehouse | His last novel, Sunset at Blandings, was unfinished at his death and was published posthumously in 1977. |
M. N. Roy | Project editor Sibnarayan Ray died in 2008, however, and the Roy works publishing project was therefore prematurely terminated. |
Koldo Mitxelena | The first volume of the General Basque Dictionary was finally published in 1987, but Mitxelena was unable to see it, as he had died shortly before, in that same year. |
Archie Green | When Neuhaus died of cancer in 1958, he gave his unique collection of songbooks, sheet music and other materials to Green, who vowed to carry on Neuhaus's vision of a complete edition of IWW songs. |
Zelda Fitzgerald | In letters Scott berated her and fumed that the novel had drawn upon the autobiographical material that he planned to use in Tender Is the Night, which he'd been working on for years, and which would finally see publication in 1934. |
Tom Anderson (fiddler) | Two volumes of the Tom Anderson Collection are in print, while the third and final volume will appear before the end of 2013. |
Shirley Brooks | He did so then as the author of a new serial fiction, the Gordian Knot, in January 1858 ; but this work, although illustrated by John Tenniel, and consisting of twelve numbers only, remained unfinished for upwards of two years. |
Bismil Saeedi | A detailed appraisal of his life and works titled Bismil Saeedi-shakhs aur shair compiled jointly by Gopal Mittal, Makhmoor Saeedi and Prem Gopal Mittal was published by Nishanil Akademi, New Delhi, in 1976. |
William Hepworth Dixon | In 1869 Dixon brought out the first two volumes of Her Majesty's Tower, which he completed two years afterwards by the publication of the third and fourth volumes. |
Paul-Henri Spaak | In 1969, he published his memoirs in two volumes titled Combats inachevés ('' The Continuing Battle'' ; literally,'' unfinished fights''). |
Charles Murray (poet) | After his death a final volume of poetry, Last Poems was published by the Charles Murray Memorial Trust in 1969. |
Sylvia Plath | Hughes has been condemned from some quarters He lost another journal and an unfinished novel and instructed that a collection of Plath's papers and journals should not be released until 2013. |
Henry George Smith | After his retirement he continued working with Baker and in 1924 they brought out another volume, Wood-fibres of Some Australian Timbers. |
Gerold Tietz | The translation of Böhmische Grätschen could not be finished any more before his death, but was published posthumously in 2012 with the title České Kotrmelce. |
Don Blanding | When his privately published 2000 copies quickly sold out, he followed it with a commercially published edition the same year, and with additional verse and prose books. |
Preah Botumthera Som | In 1935, three years after his death, another monk, Venerable Oum, copied Botumthera Som's Tum Teav manuscript on a new set of palm leaves. |
Elinor Brent-Dyer | She died there in 1969, and her final book was published posthumously the same year. |
William Faulkner | This came as a huge shock to Faulkner, but he eventually allowed his literary agent, Ben Wasson, to significantly edit the text and the novel was finally published in 1928 as Sartoris. |
Valentin Bulgakov | After the death of Leo Tolstoy, Bulgakov remained for several years in Yasnaya Polyana and worked on his notes which were published in 1911 under the title'' The last year of Leo Tolstoy'' and'' The conception of life by Leo Tolstoy in his letters to his secretary''. |
Jean-Fran?ois Millet | At the beginning of the decade, he contracted to paint 25 works in return for a monthly stipend for the next three years and in 1865, another patron, Emile Gavet, began commissioning pastels for a collection that would eventually include 90 works. |
Ivan Kakovitch | Residing in Cypress, California, Ivan finally finished writing the story he was obsessed with from birth, writing the novel Mount Semele in 2001. |
Don Scott (Ontario author) | He launched another new publication in 2003, with the title able. |
Ida Husted Harper | In 1922, she updated the History of Woman Suffrage, adding fifth and sixth volumes. |
Hans Kelsen | The Hans-Kelsen-Forschungsstelle publishes, in cooperation with the Hans Kelsen-Institut and through the publishing house Mohr Siebeck, a historical-critical edition of Kelsen's works which is planned to reach more than 30 volumes ; as of July 2013, the first five volumes have been published. |
Pavel Ulitin | The first post-Soviet publication of his works took place in the 1990s, and three more have been published since 2000 by Ivan Akhmetev. |
Albert Jay Nock | In 1943, two years before his death, Nock published his autobiography, Memoirs of a Superfluous Man, the title of which expressed the degree of Nock's disillusionment and alienation from current social trends. |
Edith S?dergran | Junge Schwedischsprachige lyrik in Finnland was an anthology that Södergran also worked on during 1921 -- 22 and which she hoped to have published in Germany in order to be able to launch young Swedish language Finnish poetry there. |
Neville Cardus | In 1970 he published Full Score, the last of his autobiographical works and, in Daniels's view, the least substantial of all the Cardus books. |
Astrid Cleve | She did not produce another major work until 1951, when her comprehensive monograph on Swedish and Finnish diatoms, written over more than a decade, was published. |
Dmytro Yavornytsky | In 2004, the first volume of his Collected Works in Twenty Volumes was published. |
Yitzchok Isaac Krasilschikov | In 1976, Rabbi Bronstein was able to keep his word and printed the second volume of Tevunah, fifty years after the first volume had been published in Poltava. |
Erich von Manstein | The two remained in contact, and Liddell Hart later helped Manstein arrange the publication of the English edition of his memoir, Verlorene Siege (Lost Victories), in 1958. |
Gurusaday Dutt | His articles initially published in the 1930s in journals such as Prabashi, Banglar Shakti, Bangalakshmi and Aloka (in Bengali), have been republished in a book entitled Banglar Lokashipla o Lokanritya in August 2008. |
Virginia Woolf | Though at least one biography of Virginia Woolf appeared in her lifetime, the first authoritative study of her life was published in 1972 by her nephew Quentin Bell. |
Alexandre Dumas | Writing and publishing the novel serially in 1869, Dumas had nearly finished it before his death. |
William Falconer (translator) | The first six books by Hans Claude Hamilton, and the remainder by Falconer, with a complete index, appeared in Bohn's Classical Library in 1854 -- 7, in three volumes. |
James Edward Freeman | He increasingly devoted his energies to literary pursuits, beginning with Photographs from Recent Pictures by J. E. Freeman, N. A. (1870), in which he coupled photographs after his paintings with prose and poetry, and culminating with two volumes of memoirs. |
George Herbert Mead | More recently, Mary Jo Deegan published Essays in Social Psychology (2001), a book project originally abandoned by Mead in the early 1910s. |
Frederick Klaeber | Klaeber spent three decades on the project, finally publishing the first edition, Beowulf and the Fight at Finnsburg, in 1922. |
Parke H. Davis | The 1934 edition was Davis' last to include these compilations, as he died soon after its completion. |
Masami Kurumada | Saint Seiya, is collected in 28 volumes to date, and has been resumed by Kurumada with Saint Seiya Next Dimension, the continuation to his original manga, ending the hiatus the work remained in since 1991, and to date adds eight more volumes to the original Saint Seiya manga, for a total or 36 volumes. |
Otto Manninen | An anthology of his poems, Muistojen tie, was published posthumously from the poet's literary estate in 1951. |
Doris Mary Stenton | Up until Frank Stenton's death in 1967, both Stentons were engaged in numerous writing projects, but after her husband's death, Stenton concentrated on completing the third edition of his Anglo-Saxon England as well as issuing a collected edition of his papers. |
Francis Galton | In an effort to reach a wider audience, Galton worked on a novel entitled Kantsaywhere from May until December 1910. |
Raymond Knister | In 2003 After Exile, the first reprint of Knister's verse in over 20 years, was released by Toronto's Exile Editions. |
Walker Percy | While teaching at Loyola University of New Orleans, he was instrumental in getting John Kennedy Toole's novel A Confederacy of Dunces published in 1980, more than a decade after Toole committed suicide because he was despondent about not being able to get his book recognized. |
Sara Jane Moore | A biography of Moore was published in 2009 entitled Taking Aim at the President, by Geri Spieler, a writer who had a correspondence with Moore for twenty-eight years. |
Karl Friedrich Geldner | The three volumes of his monumental Der Rig-Veda aus dem Sanskrit ins Deutsche übersetzt were finally released in 1951. |
Nicholas Murray Butler | In 1940, Butler completed his autobiography with the publication of the second volume of Across the Busy Years. |
Samir Kassir | A special edition of l'Orient Express was published in November 2005 to celebrate its tenth anniversary under the title'' The Unfinished Spring'' and was dedicated in memory of Kassir. |
Benedikt Taschen | SUMO is also the company's most successful title of the last ten years and the precursor to Benedikt Taschen's most ambitious personal project : GOAT - Greatest of All Time, a tribute to Muhammad Ali, shipping in Spring 2004. |
Benjamin Fondane | In 1938, he was working on a collected edition of his Ferestre spre Europa, supposed to be published in Bucharest but never actually seeing print. |
Grete Sultan | In spring 2012, Schott Music, Germany, published the first biography on Grete Sultan, titled'' Rebellische Pianistin. |
David Rorvik | In 2006, a sixth edition of his gender-selection book with Dr. Shettles was published, marking nearly 40 years of continuous print for that title. |
Kurt Vonnegut | In 2005, many of his essays were collected in a new bestselling book titled A Man Without a Country, which he insisted would be his last contribution to letters. |
Sir Banister Fletcher | Fletcher produced the sixteenth edition shortly before his death in 1953. |
Sara Coleridge | This, which reaches only to her ninth year, was completed by her daughter, and published in 1873, together with some of her letters, under the title Memoirs and Letters of Sara Coleridge. |
George M. Stratton | This was the theme of his last published book, Man-Creator or Destroyer, completed in 1952 when he was eighty-seven years old. |
Jacques Chirac | In Volume 2 of his memoirs published in June 2011, Chirac mocked his successor Nicolas Sarkozy as'' irritable, rash, impetuous, disloyal, ungrateful, and un-French''. |
Aaron Rakeffet-Rothkoff | Rabbi Rakeffet finished his 10 year effort of writing his personal scholarly memoir,'' From Washington Avenue to Washington Street'', in the summer of 2009. |
Constance Fenimore Woolson | Benedict then reprinted the second volume of the series, Constance Fenimore Woolson, in 1932 and added selected published and unpublished materials in `` Appendix A.'' In this reference section, the four volumes Benedict edited are referred to as : Benedict 1, Benedict 2, Benedict 3, Benedict 4 (1932). |
Zulfiqar Ali Bukhari | Bukhari's other books include Sarguzasht, an autobiography, Jo Kuchh Main Ne Kaha, a collection of his verses and Raag Darya, a book on music Z. A. Bukhari died in Karachi on July 12, 1975. |
Ligia Montoya | Evan Zodl's'' Tribute'' to Señorita Montoya at the 2012 OrigamiUSA meeting in New York included, besides folded models of her works, ten photographs of her and some text information, which reports that, suffering from depression, she took her own life, and that shortly afterward robbers of her residence destroyed the work she left there. |
Vladimir Vysotsky | In 1988 the Selected Works of... (edited by N. Krymova) compilation was published, preceded by I Will Surely Return... (Я, конечно, вернусь...) book of fellow actors' memoirs and Vysotsky's verses, some published for the first time. |
Malik Ram | In a profile on Malik Ram on April 17, 1972'' The Statesman'', a leading English language daily newspaper published in New Delhi, commented : Following in the footsteps of Syed Sulaiman Nadvi, who, in his time, had regularly published obituaries (tazkirahs) in the journal'' Maarif'', Malik Ram popularised obituary-writing and became an obituarist of renown through the obituaries he published in'' Tahreer'' under the heading Wafiyat. |
Giorgio Morandi | Don DeLillo's 9/11 novel'' Falling Man'' (2007) includes two Morandi still-life paintings on the wall of Nina's New York apartment. |
Anzia Yezierska | Although she was nearly blind, Yezierska continued writing and having stories, articles, and book reviews published until her death in California in 1970. |
Carol Bly | She continued to work until the very end of her life, completing a novel,'' Shelter Half,'' which was published posthumously in June, 2008 by Holy Cow ! |
Paul Simon (politician) | His final book, Our Culture of Pandering, was published in October 2003, two months before his death. |
Abraham Hayward | Two volumes of Hayward's Correspondence (edited by HE Carlisle) were published in 1886. |