[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"$f392xFGrisWefaniPnMXPPzKgLvmTJl6lJRfO04owN5o":3},{"authors":4,"pagination":194},[5,13,19,27,33,39,45,51,57,63,69,75,83,91,97,103,111,117,123,129,135,141,147,153,159,165,171,176,182,188],{"id":6,"author_name":7,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":9,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":11,"image_url":10,"_count":12},201946,"E-40","E",102,null,"e-40",{"quote":9},{"id":14,"author_name":15,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":16,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":17,"image_url":10,"_count":18},39811,"E. B. White",1140,"e-b-white-2",{"quote":16},{"id":20,"author_name":21,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":22,"bio":23,"short_bio":24,"slug":25,"image_url":10,"_count":26},1390,"E. E. Cummings",282,"E. E. Cummings was born on October 14, 1894, in Cambridge, where he attended Cambridge Rindge and Latin School before going on to study at Harvard University. An American citizen, he grew up in a city he would eventually leave behind as the pressures of the wider world drew him elsewhere.\n\nDuring World War I, Cummings worked as an ambulance driver, an experience followed by his imprisonment in an internment camp. Back in the United States, he pursued an unusually wide range of creative work, functioning at once as a poet, novelist, playwright, and painter. His writing in English spanned multiple forms and formats: Tulips and Chimneys and is 5 appeared among his poetry collections, while No Thanks added further verse to his output. The Enormous Room stands as a notable prose work, and EIMI extended his writing into yet another register. CIOPW reflected his practice as a visual artist, and Santa Claus: A Morality showed his hand as a playwright. Fairy Tales, a further work, was published posthumously. In recognition of his career, Cummings received both a Guggenheim Fellowship and the Bollingen Prize.\n\nCummings died on September 3, 1962, at Joy Farm. Fairy Tales, published after his death, gave his body of work a concrete presence beyond his passing.","E. E. Cummings was born on October 14, 1894, in Cambridge, where he attended Cambridge Rindge and Latin School before going on to study at Harvard University. An American citizen, he grew up in a city he would eventually leave behind as the pressures of the wider world drew him elsewhere.","e-e-cummings",{"quote":22},{"id":28,"author_name":29,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":30,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":31,"image_url":10,"_count":32},144793,"E. F. L. Wood, 1st Earl of Halifax",30,"e-f-l-wood-1st-earl-of-halifax",{"quote":30},{"id":34,"author_name":35,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":36,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":37,"image_url":10,"_count":38},182579,"E. F. Schumacher",96,"e-f-schumacher-2",{"quote":36},{"id":40,"author_name":41,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":42,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":43,"image_url":10,"_count":44},144803,"E. Helm",134,"e-helm",{"quote":42},{"id":46,"author_name":47,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":48,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":49,"image_url":10,"_count":50},144801,"E. Hicks",549,"e-hicks",{"quote":48},{"id":52,"author_name":53,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":54,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":55,"image_url":10,"_count":56},144805,"E. Hurley",170,"e-hurley",{"quote":54},{"id":58,"author_name":59,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":60,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":61,"image_url":10,"_count":62},15177,"E. Joseph Cossman",28,"e-joseph-cossman",{"quote":60},{"id":64,"author_name":65,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":66,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":67,"image_url":10,"_count":68},737,"E. L. Doctorow",162,"e-l-doctorow",{"quote":66},{"id":70,"author_name":71,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":72,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":73,"image_url":10,"_count":74},43186,"E. L. James",47,"e-l-james-2",{"quote":72},{"id":76,"author_name":77,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":78,"bio":79,"short_bio":80,"slug":81,"image_url":10,"_count":82},13117,"E. L. Konigsburg",66,"E. L. Konigsburg was born on February 10, 1930, in Manhattan, New York City. A citizen of the United States, she wrote in English and worked throughout her career as a novelist and children's writer.\n\nKonigsburg was educated at Carnegie Mellon University before establishing herself as a writer of fiction for younger readers. Among her notable works are From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler and The View from Saturday, both of which became recognized titles within her body of work. These novels demonstrated her sustained engagement with children's literature across different periods of her writing life.\n\nKonigsburg received several awards in recognition of her work. She was awarded the Newbery Medal, one of the prominent honors in American children's literature. She also received the Regina Medal and was inducted into the Florida Artists Hall of Fame, recognitions that came at various points in her career as a novelist and children's writer.\n\nKonigsburg died on April 19, 2013, in Falls Church. Her career as a novelist and children's writer, conducted in English and rooted in the United States, was marked by the receipt of the Newbery Medal, the Regina Medal, and the Florida Artists Hall of Fame award.","E. L. Konigsburg was born on February 10, 1930, in Manhattan, New York City. A citizen of the United States, she wrote in English and worked throughout her career as a novelist and children's writer.","e-l-konigsburg-2",{"quote":78},{"id":84,"author_name":85,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":86,"bio":87,"short_bio":88,"slug":89,"image_url":10,"_count":90},914,"E. Lockhart",292,"The facts provided do not include a single named work by E. Lockhart, which the structural recipe requires as an opening. Without a titled work in the FACTS list, and given the Evidence Lock rule, a compliant biography can only draw on what is confirmed: her birth, origin, citizenship, education, and occupation.\n\nE. Lockhart is an American writer working in English, with a focus on children's literature. Born in New York City in 1967, she is a citizen of the United States.\n\nLockhart pursued her education at Vassar College and later at Columbia University, two institutions that shaped her path toward a writing career.\n\nShe works as a children's writer, producing fiction in the English language.","The facts provided do not include a single named work by E. Lockhart, which the structural recipe requires as an opening. Without a titled work in the FACTS list, and given the Evidence Lock rule, a compliant biography can only draw on what is confirmed: her birth, origin, citizenship, education, and occupation.","e-lockhart",{"quote":86},{"id":92,"author_name":93,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":94,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":95,"image_url":10,"_count":96},6825,"E. M. Forster",690,"e-m-forster-2",{"quote":94},{"id":98,"author_name":99,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":100,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":101,"image_url":10,"_count":102},2455,"E. Nesbit",46,"e-nesbit",{"quote":100},{"id":104,"author_name":105,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":106,"bio":107,"short_bio":108,"slug":109,"image_url":10,"_count":110},42899,"E. O. Wilson",1070,"Edward O. Wilson was an American biologist, naturalist, ecologist, entomologist, sociobiologist, and myrmecologist — a scientist whose work extended across multiple disciplines within the life sciences.\n\nBorn in Birmingham on June 10, 1929, Wilson became a university teacher and science writer who worked in English throughout his career. He held a Guggenheim Fellowship and received the National Medal of Science, the Crafoord Prize in Biosciences, and the TED Prize, honors that recognized both his scientific contributions and his public engagement with ideas.\n\nAmong his notable books are *The Ants*, *Journey to the Ants*, and *Sociobiology: The New Synthesis*. He received the Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction, an acknowledgment of his achievement as a writer alongside his standing as a researcher. These works reflect his sustained engagement with entomology and sociobiology as fields of inquiry.\n\nWilson died in Burlington on December 26, 2021, at the age of ninety-two. The study of ants, pursued through myrmecology, runs as a consistent thread across the books he produced and the disciplines he occupied throughout his working life.","Edward O. Wilson was an American biologist, naturalist, ecologist, entomologist, sociobiologist, and myrmecologist — a scientist whose work extended across multiple disciplines within the life sciences.","e-o-wilson",{"quote":106},{"id":112,"author_name":113,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":114,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":115,"image_url":10,"_count":116},189757,"E. P. Thompson",271,"e-p-thompson",{"quote":114},{"id":118,"author_name":119,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":120,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":121,"image_url":10,"_count":122},13374,"E. Stanley Jones",138,"e-stanley-jones",{"quote":120},{"id":124,"author_name":125,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":126,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":127,"image_url":10,"_count":128},5782,"E. V. Lucas",32,"e-v-lucas",{"quote":126},{"id":130,"author_name":131,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":132,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":133,"image_url":10,"_count":134},144802,"E. W. Howe",186,"e-w-howe",{"quote":132},{"id":136,"author_name":137,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":138,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":139,"image_url":10,"_count":140},40,"E.A. Bucchianeri",231,"ea-bucchianeri",{"quote":138},{"id":142,"author_name":143,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":144,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":145,"image_url":10,"_count":146},679,"E.B. White",410,"eb-white",{"quote":144},{"id":148,"author_name":149,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":150,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":151,"image_url":10,"_count":152},1837,"E.E. Cummings",142,"ee-cummings",{"quote":150},{"id":154,"author_name":155,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":156,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":157,"image_url":10,"_count":158},46957,"E.F. Benson",34,"ef-benson",{"quote":156},{"id":160,"author_name":161,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":162,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":163,"image_url":10,"_count":164},6834,"E.F. Schumacher",83,"ef-schumacher",{"quote":162},{"id":166,"author_name":167,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":168,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":169,"image_url":10,"_count":170},12653,"E.H. Gombrich",27,"eh-gombrich",{"quote":168},{"id":172,"author_name":173,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":156,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":174,"image_url":10,"_count":175},7205,"E.L. Doctorow","el-doctorow",{"quote":156},{"id":177,"author_name":178,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":179,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":180,"image_url":10,"_count":181},817,"E.L. James",452,"el-james",{"quote":179},{"id":183,"author_name":184,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":185,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":186,"image_url":10,"_count":187},3113,"E.L. Konigsburg",95,"el-konigsburg",{"quote":185},{"id":189,"author_name":190,"author_name_first_letter":8,"article_count":191,"bio":10,"short_bio":10,"slug":192,"image_url":10,"_count":193},18814,"E.M. Bounds",104,"em-bounds",{"quote":191},{"currentPage":195,"totalPages":196,"totalItems":197,"itemsPerPage":30},1,36,1062]