Ebook {Epub PDF} Norma Jean the Termite Queen by Sheila Ballantyne
Norma Jean, the termite queen. by. Ballantyne, Sheila. Publication date. Topics. Married people. Publisher. Garden City, N.Y.: bltadwin.ru Interaction Count: Died. . edit data. Pen name of Sheila Caroline Weibert, author of two novels and a short story collection. Her second novel, Imaginary Crimes was made into a film in She received an O'Henry prize for the short story "Perpetual Care", Pen name of Sheila Caroline Weibert, author of two novels and a short story collection. Her /5. This copy of Norma Jean the Termite Queen by Sheila includes a personal note to someone named "Rog" as to his/her purchasing all her books. This is the first of two books written by Ms Ballantyne and it was published in There was a re-publishing in paperback in , perhaps after her second, and better known book was bltadwin.ru: Sheila Ballantyne.
Byline: By Shelia Ballantyne; Sheila Ballantyne is the author of the novels ''Norma Jean the Termite Queen'' and ''Imaginary Crimes.'' Lead: REASONS TO LIVE By Amy Hempel. pp. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. $ MINIMALISM has its uses, and can achieve surprisingly varied effects: it can allude and expand, as well as leave out and compress. (euphemistic, slang, usually derogatory) Motherfucker. , Sheila Ballantyne, Norma Jean, the Termite Queen, Doubleday Company (), →ISBN, page "Fuck off. Sheila Ballantyne's first novel, Norma Jean the Termite Queen (), deals with liberation from the confining roles of wife and mother. Her second novel, Imaginary Crimes, deals with liberation.
Ballantyne’s published works include Norma Jean the Termite Queen (), Imaginary Crimes (), and Life on Earth, a collection of short stories. Imaginary Crimes was made into a feature film in , and “Perpetual Care,” a story from her anthology Life on Earth, won an O. Henry Award. Author: BALLANTYNE, Sheila. pages. Ballantyne's first book. Uncommon signed. We specialize in Used and Rare Photography Monographs and Modern First Editions. Ms. Ballantyne’s first novel, “Norma Jean, the Termite Queen” (Doubleday, ), concerns the suburban miseries and dark existential longings of its doomed heroine, a California wife and mother.