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  1. Leonora Hornblow (née Salmon; later Schinasi; June 3, 1920 – November 5, 2005) was an American novelist, children's literature writer and socialite. She wrote two novels in the 1950s, wrote for Liberty magazine and Los Angeles Daily News , edited a collection of short stories with publisher Bennett Cerf , and collaborated with her ...

    • Leonora Salmon, June 3, 1920, New York City, US
    • 1950–1989
  2. The tobacco heiress and novelist Leonora Hornblow, who has died at 85, was addicted to New York. Two marriages - to an actor and a producer - took her from Manhattan to Hollywood, and it was...

  3. Leonora Hornblow, novelist and co-writer of a series of children’s books with her late husband, film producer Arthur Hornblow Jr., has died. She was 85. Hornblow died at her home in Fearrington...

  4. Leonora Hornblow, Michael K. Frith (Illustrator) 3.86 avg rating — 1,830 ratings. Is this you? Let us know. If not, help out and invite Leonora to Goodreads. Leonora Hornblow is the author of Cleopatra of Egypt (3.76 avg rating, 96 ratings, 6 reviews, published 1961), Animals Do The Strangest Things (3.94 avg ...

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  5. Author. Hornblow was the author of two successful novels for adults, as well as a series of nonfiction works for children that she wrote with husband and film producer Arthur Hornblow, Jr. The daughter of a tobacco magnate named Leon Schinasi, she grew up enjoying a life of privilege.

  6. Leonora Hornblow, Arthur Hornblow. Random House, 1990 - Juvenile Nonfiction - 62 pages. Revised to include the most up-to-date theories and discoveries--like the extra "helper" brain in the...

  7. Leonora Hornblow, W.T. Mars (Illustrator) 3.76. 96 ratings6 reviews. This book is an interpretation of the life of Cleopatra, as pieced together by the author from several sources, including, but not limited to: The Ides of March by Thornton Wilder; Julius Caesar, a play by William Shakespeare; Antony and Cleopatra, a play by William Shakespeare;