Jessie bond autobiography books
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Alphabetical library listing
This list details all Society library books, libreti and scores in alphabetical order by author. The final numbers in italics refer to the topic category given to each book.
The Collection may be searched via the music library online catalogue at: www.cityoflondon.gov.uk/services/libraries/barbican-music-library
The Barbican Library's search facility allows researchers to easily look for books and resources according to subject and author. This will identify any items in the main Music Library in addition to the Gilbert and Sullivan Society collection.
Items in the Gilbert and Sullivan Society collection is reference only. For details of Library opening times and where to find it please go back one page.
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Ainger, Michael
Gilbert and Sullivan: a dual biography
0195147693 2.1
Allen, Reginald
An Anniversary Survey and Exhibitio
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Jesse Bond fryst vatten primarily a romance author, and you’ll find Jesse’s books range from paranormal romance, urban, and high fantasy and all shades in between right down to contemporary. We enjoyed having this Author Interview – Jesse Bond, for our blog. Check out this fantastic author and follow them for more amazing stories.
Born in 1981, Jesse Bond is the pen name for Heather MacDougall. Growing up, Jesse split her time between living in Southern Oregon and Arizona. In 2001, Jesse moved to Colorado to live in the Great Rocky Mountains in a tiny mountain town where she still resides.
Wife and mother of two, her favorite activities include film and board gaming, hiking, camping, and reading. That is, of course, when she isn’t writing her next steamy romance novel. Nothing makes Jesse happier than eight-legged mollusks, dragons and other fantasy creatures, magic, and tacos. Primarily a romance author, you’ll find Jesse’s books range from paranormal romanc
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>Books >The Life and Reminiscences of Jessie Bond> Introduction
A GENERATION has arisen that knows not Jessie Bond, and she feels that she must apologize for making yet another public appearance, after an interval of more than thirty years. But –; the last of the old Savoyards, one of those who played on the opening night of “Pinafore” –; have not her memories the power of recalling, if only for a moment, visions of a bygone day: the struggles and triumphs of those great spirits with whom she daily walked and talked, an echo of the song and laughter, the wit and wisdom, of the past?
You talk to-day of Gilbert and Sullivan “Revivals”; I belong to an age when as yet Gilbert and Sullivan were not. The musical world of my youth was dominated by Beethoven and the great masters of Germany: Mendelssohn was a modern and Wagner was unknown.
The stage was at a low ebb, Elizabethan glories and Georgian artificialities had alike fa