Roger Angell

Roger Angell (born 19 September 1920) was a fiction editor of The New Yorker for over 40 years, and is best known for his articulate essays on baseball for that magazine. His mother Katharine Sergeant Angell and stepfather E. B. White were editors at The New Yorker from the 1920s through the 1970s. Angell, Roger

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
rhodes
rms laconia
retcon
rochester
radiocarbon year
rosl
risk management
rainer maria rilke
richard doyle
reparative therapy
ring homomorphism
reflux
real madrid
resurrection of jesus
rube foster
ring lardner
river clyde
reactor
reproductive issues
rational root theorem
round table (camelot)
rosetta stone
redshirt
receptor
resolution class submarine
rms titanic
rent (musical)
restaurant
rolf nevanlinna
role playing
red panda
roppongi
robert louis stevenson
recreational mathematics
resurrection
robert parr
riesz representation theorem
ripple
romano scarpa
rosa parks
ringworld (rpg)
reading
risus
rigel