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  • Ainslie Park Secondary School in Edinburgh - The cast of school's nativity play in December 1978. 27th December 1959<br />
<br />
Photograph by TSPL/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    ainsliepark008_19781227_tspl.JPG
  • Ainslie Park Secondary School in Edinburgh - Pupils take a dance lesson in the main hall. 31st January 1960<br />
<br />
Photograph by TSPL/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    ainsliepark007_19600131_tspl.JPG
  • Ainslie Park Secondary School in Edinburgh - Pupils prepare pottery exhibits for display in the Edinburgh Civic Exhibition at Waverley Market. 16th October 1959<br />
<br />
Photograph by TSPL/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    ainsliepark006_19591016_tspl.JPG
  • Ainslie Park Secondary School in Edinburgh - Sports Day<br />
4th June 1959<br />
<br />
Photograph by TSPL/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    ainsliepark005_19590604_tspl.JPG
  • Ainslie Park School FP Light Opera Company present The Pirates of Penzance for the patients of Bangour Hospital<br />
2nd May 1959<br />
<br />
Photograph by TSPL/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    ainsliepark004_19590502_tspl.JPG
  • Ainslie Park Secondary School in Edinburgh<br />
30th October 1949<br />
<br />
Photograph by TSPL/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    ainsliepark003_19491030_tspl.JPG
  • Ainslie Park Secondary School in Edinburgh<br />
1st April 1998<br />
<br />
Photograph by TSPL/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    ainsliepark002_19980401_tspl.JPG
  • Ainslie Park Secondary School in Edinburgh<br />
6th March 1997<br />
<br />
Photograph by Hamish Campbell/TSPL/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    ainsliepark001_19970306_tspl.JPG
  • Elizabeth Burton-Phillips has written a book about her two son's addiction to heroin, which killed one of them, Nicholas Mills.  Collect shows:  School photo 1991 l-r: Simon Mills and Nick Mills<br />
Copyright  Graham Jepson/Writer Pictures<br />
contact +44(0)20 8241 0039<br />
info@writerpictures.comElizabeth Burton-Phillips has written a book about her two son's addiction to heroin, which killed one of them, Nicholas Mills.  Collect shows:  l-r: brothers Simon and Nicholas Mills in August 2003 at a time when they were both hooked on heroin.<br />
<br />
Copyright  Graham Jepson/Writer Pictures<br />
contact +44 (0)20 822 41564<br />
info@writerpictures.com <br />
www.writerpictures.com
    9165122.jpg
  • Royal Mail Scottish Childrens Book Awards, Edinburgh, 24/11/09:<br />
<br />
Young book fans (from left) Jane Obro (correct, from Pitteuchar East primary school, Glenrothes, Fife), Ruaridh Holmes MacLeod (from Torridon primary school, Ross-shire) and Anya McRae (from Buckie high school) with Royal Mail award winning childrens authors Keith Gray (left), Lari Don (centre) and John Fardell were named as the 2009 winners of the Royal Mail Award for Scottish Children’s Books. John Fardell won the Early Years category for his picture book Manfred the Baddie, Lari Don won the Young Readers category with her first novel First Aid for Fairies and other Fabled Beasts and Keith Gray won the Older Readers category for his best-selling novel Ostrich Boys. The Royal Mail Awards are managed by Scottish Book Trust and voted for by Scottish Children themselves. This year a record 30,000 children got involved and over 15,000 votes were cast from all over Scotland. The winners were announced on Tuesday 24 November during a special ceremony at the Queen’s Hall, Edinburgh which was attended by over 700 children and Adam Ingram, Scotland’s Minister for Children and Early Years.<br />
Picture from:  Colin Hattersley/Writer Pictures<br />
contact +44 (0)20 8224 1564<br />
sales@writerpictures.com <br />
www.writerpictures.com
    Royal Mail Awards 03.jpg
  • Royal Mail Scottish Childrens Book Awards, Edinburgh, 24/11/09:<br />
<br />
<br />
Book fans (from left) Ruaridh Holmes MacLeod (from Torridon primary school, Ross-shire), Jane Obro (correct, from Pitteuchar East primary school, Glenrothes, Fife) and Anya McRae (from Buckie high school) with Royal Mail award winning books at the awards ceremony.<br />
Children’s authors Lari Don, John Fardell and Keith Gray were named as the 2009 winners of the Royal Mail Award for Scottish Children’s Books. John Fardell won the Early Years category for his picture book Manfred the Baddie, Lari Don won the Young Readers category with her first novel First Aid for Fairies and other Fabled Beasts and Keith Gray won the Older Readers category for his best-selling novel Ostrich Boys. The Royal Mail Awards are managed by Scottish Book Trust and voted for by Scottish Children themselves. This year a record 30,000 children got involved and over 15,000 votes were cast from all over Scotland. The winners were announced on Tuesday 24 November during a special ceremony at the Queen’s Hall, Edinburgh which was attended by over 700 children and Adam Ingram, Scotland’s Minister for Children and Early Years.<br />
Picture from:  Colin Hattersley/Writer Pictures<br />
contact +44 (0)20 8224 1564<br />
sales@writerpictures.com <br />
www.writerpictures.com
    Royal Mail Awards 01.jpg
  • FREE PICTURE FOR PRESS PUBLICITY USE IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE AWARDS<br />
Royal Mail Scottish Childrens Book Awards Photocall, Edinburgh, 09/09/2010:<br />
Young book fans Ryan Mackenzie and Amy McMullan (both pictured with parent's permission) after a ceremony announcing the shortlist for the 2010 Royal Mail Award for Scottish Children’s Books at Edinburgh's Scottish Book Trust.  <br />
The Royal Mail Awards are managed by the Scottish Book Trust and voted for by Scottish Children themselves. The winners will be announced in February 2011 at Glasgow's Tramway Theatre.<br />
Ryan Mackenzie is 15 years old and from Buckie High School, and Amy McMullan is 11 and from Holy Rood High School, Glasgow. <br />
Picture from:  Colin Hattersley/Writer Pictures<br />
contact +44 (0)20 8224 1564<br />
sales@writerpictures.com <br />
www.writerpictures.com
    RoyalMailBookAwards_05_cha_090910.JPG
  • FREE PICTURE FOR PRESS PUBLICITY USE IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE AWARDS<br />
Royal Mail Scottish Childrens Book Awards Photocall, Edinburgh, 09/09/2010:<br />
Young book fans Ryan Mackenzie and Amy McMullan (both pictured with parent's permission) after a ceremony announcing the shortlist for the 2010 Royal Mail Award for Scottish Children’s Books at Edinburgh's Scottish Book Trust.  <br />
The Royal Mail Awards are managed by the Scottish Book Trust and voted for by Scottish Children themselves. The winners will be announced in February 2011 at Glasgow's Tramway Theatre.<br />
Ryan Mackenzie is 15 years old and from Buckie High School, and Amy McMullan is 11 and from Holy Rood High School, Glasgow. <br />
Picture from:  Colin Hattersley/Writer Pictures<br />
contact +44 (0)20 8224 1564<br />
sales@writerpictures.com <br />
www.writerpictures.com
    RoyalMailBookAwards_06_cha_090910.JPG
  • FREE PICTURE FOR PRESS PUBLICITY USE IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE AWARDS<br />
Royal Mail Scottish Childrens Book Awards Photocall, Edinburgh, 09/09/2010:<br />
Young book fans Ryan Mackenzie and Amy McMullan (both pictured with parent's permission) after a ceremony announcing the shortlist for the 2010 Royal Mail Award for Scottish Children’s Books at Edinburgh's Scottish Book Trust.  <br />
The Royal Mail Awards are managed by the Scottish Book Trust and voted for by Scottish Children themselves. The winners will be announced in February 2011 at Glasgow's Tramway Theatre.<br />
Ryan Mackenzie is 15 years old and from Buckie High School, and Amy McMullan is 11 and from Holy Rood High School, Glasgow. <br />
Picture from:  Colin Hattersley/Writer Pictures<br />
contact +44 (0)20 8224 1564<br />
sales@writerpictures.com <br />
www.writerpictures.com
    RoyalMailBookAwards_04_cha_090910.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei019_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei017_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei003_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei020_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei018_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei016_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei015_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei014_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei013_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei012_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei011_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei010_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei009_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei008_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei007_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei006_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei005_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei004_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei002_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Abdul Jabbar Kakaei, Iranian poet. Born 1963 in Eylam, Iran. Kakaei spent his childhood and school years in Eylam then got his High school diploma in 1980. He moved to Tehran in 1982 and continued his studies in Persian language and literature. Kakaei is most interested in Persian poetry styles of Ghazal and Masnavi. Besides teaching Persian literature in different levels from high school to university he works at the Ministry of Education.<br />
<br />
Copyright Babak Sedighi/Writer Pictures       <br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Kakaei001_20150910_bsi.JPG
  • Royal Mail Scottish Childrens Book Awards, Edinburgh, 24/11/09:<br />
<br />
<br />
Book fans (from left) Ruaridh Holmes MacLeod (from Torridon primary school, Ross-shire), Jane Obro (correct, from Pitteuchar East primary school, Glenrothes, Fife) and Anya McRae (from Buckie high school) with Royal Mail award winning books at the awards ceremony.<br />
Children’s authors Lari Don, John Fardell and Keith Gray were named as the 2009 winners of the Royal Mail Award for Scottish Children’s Books. John Fardell won the Early Years category for his picture book Manfred the Baddie, Lari Don won the Young Readers category with her first novel First Aid for Fairies and other Fabled Beasts and Keith Gray won the Older Readers category for his best-selling novel Ostrich Boys. The Royal Mail Awards are managed by Scottish Book Trust and voted for by Scottish Children themselves. This year a record 30,000 children got involved and over 15,000 votes were cast from all over Scotland. The winners were announced on Tuesday 24 November during a special ceremony at the Queen’s Hall, Edinburgh which was attended by over 700 children and Adam Ingram, Scotland’s Minister for Children and Early Years.<br />
Picture from:  Colin Hattersley/Writer Pictures<br />
contact +44 (0)20 8224 1564<br />
sales@writerpictures.com <br />
www.writerpictures.com
    Royal Mail Awards 04.jpg
  • FREE PICTURE FOR PRESS PUBLICITY USE IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE AWARDS<br />
Royal Mail Scottish Childrens Book Awards Photocall, Edinburgh, 09/09/2010:<br />
Children’s authors Cathy MacPhail and John Fardell get to know young book fans Ryan Mackenzie and Amy McMullan (both pictured with parent's permission) after a ceremony announcing the shortlist for the 2010 Royal Mail Award for Scottish Children’s Books at Edinburgh's Scottish Book Trust.  <br />
 Cathy's book "Grass" was nominated by team judge Ryan in the 12-16 years "Older Readers" category and John's book "The Secret of the Black Moon Moth" was nominated by team judge Amy in the 8-11 years "Younger Readers" category .<br />
 The Royal Mail Awards are managed by the Scottish Book Trust and voted for by Scottish Children themselves. The winners will be announced in February 2011 at Glasgow's Tramway Theatre. <br />
 Ryan Mackenzie is 15 years old and from Buckie High School, and Amy McMullan is 11 and from Holy Rood High School, Glasgow.<br />
Picture from:  Colin Hattersley / Writer Pictures<br />
contact +44 (0)20 8224 1564<br />
sales@writerpictures.com <br />
www.writerpictures.com
    RoyalMailBookAwards_02_cha_090910.JPG
  • FREE PICTURE FOR PRESS PUBLICITY USE IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE AWARDS<br />
Royal Mail Scottish Childrens Book Awards Photocall, Edinburgh, 09/09/2010:<br />
Children’s authors Cathy MacPhail and John Fardell get to know young book fans Ryan Mackenzie and Amy McMullan (both pictured with parent's permission) after a ceremony announcing the shortlist for the 2010 Royal Mail Award for Scottish Children’s Books at Edinburgh's Scottish Book Trust.  <br />
 Cathy's book "Grass" was nominated by team judge Ryan in the 12-16 years "Older Readers" category and John's book "The Secret of the Black Moon Moth" was nominated by team judge Amy in the 8-11 years "Younger Readers" category .<br />
 The Royal Mail Awards are managed by the Scottish Book Trust and voted for by Scottish Children themselves. The winners will be announced in February 2011 at Glasgow's Tramway Theatre. <br />
 Ryan Mackenzie is 15 years old and from Buckie High School, and Amy McMullan is 11 and from Holy Rood High School, Glasgow.<br />
Picture from:  Colin Hattersley / Writer Pictures<br />
contact +44 (0)20 8224 1564<br />
sales@writerpictures.com <br />
www.writerpictures.com
    RoyalMailBookAwards_03_cha_090910.JPG
  • Author  pictured at Grangemouth High School where he went through a question and answer session with pupils from Grangemouth High and other local schools.<br />
 <br />
copyright Ian MacNicol/TSPL/Writer Pictures<br />
contact +44 (0)20 822 41564<br />
info@writerpictures.com <br />
www.writerpictures.com
    Horowitz04_tspl_310305.JPG
  • Author  pictured at Grangemouth High School where he went through a question and answer session with pupils from Grangemouth High and other local schools.<br />
 <br />
copyright Ian MacNicol/TSPL/Writer Pictures<br />
contact +44 (0)20 822 41564<br />
info@writerpictures.com <br />
www.writerpictures.com
    Horowitz03_tspl_310305.JPG
  • Author  pictured at Grangemouth High School where he went through a question and answer session with pupils from Grangemouth High and other local schools.<br />
 <br />
copyright Ian MacNicol/TSPL/Writer Pictures<br />
contact +44 (0)20 822 41564<br />
info@writerpictures.com <br />
www.writerpictures.com
    Horowitz08_tspl_310305.JPG
  • Author  pictured at Grangemouth High School where he went through a question and answer session with pupils from Grangemouth High and other local schools.<br />
 <br />
copyright Ian MacNicol/TSPL/Writer Pictures<br />
contact +44 (0)20 822 41564<br />
info@writerpictures.com <br />
www.writerpictures.com
    Horowitz07_tspl_310305.JPG
  • Author  pictured at Grangemouth High School where he went through a question and answer session with pupils from Grangemouth High and other local schools.<br />
 <br />
copyright Ian MacNicol/TSPL/Writer Pictures<br />
contact +44 (0)20 822 41564<br />
info@writerpictures.com <br />
www.writerpictures.com
    Horowitz06_tspl_310305.JPG
  • Author  pictured at Grangemouth High School where he went through a question and answer session with pupils from Grangemouth High and other local schools.<br />
 <br />
copyright Ian MacNicol/TSPL/Writer Pictures<br />
contact +44 (0)20 822 41564<br />
info@writerpictures.com <br />
www.writerpictures.com
    Horowitz05_tspl_310305.JPG
  • Author  pictured at Grangemouth High School where he went through a question and answer session with pupils from Grangemouth High and other local schools.<br />
 <br />
copyright Ian MacNicol/TSPL/Writer Pictures<br />
contact +44 (0)20 822 41564<br />
info@writerpictures.com <br />
www.writerpictures.com
    Horowitz02_tspl_310305.JPG
  • Author  pictured at Grangemouth High School where he went through a question and answer session with pupils from Grangemouth High and other local schools.<br />
 <br />
copyright Ian MacNicol/TSPL/Writer Pictures<br />
contact +44 (0)20 822 41564<br />
info@writerpictures.com <br />
www.writerpictures.com
    Horowitz01_tspl_310305.JPG
  • Raffaella Barker, author at her home in North Norfolk. Barker was born in London in 1964 and moved to Norfolk when she was three. Her father, the poet George Barker, had 15 children; she is the oldest of those by the novelist Elspeth Barker..She spent her childhood in Norfolk sulking and refusing to get dressed, going everywhere in her nightie. She recalls worrying about how to respond at school when asked how many brothers and sisters she had. She did not know the answer..After Norwich High School, Raffaella Barker moved to London and did life modelling and film-editing. She landed a job on Harpers & Queen magazine and later freelanced as its motoring columnist. For 10 years she wrote a column for Country Life about her week..Her debut novel Come and Tell Me Some Lies was published in 1994, followed by The Hook, Hens Dancing, Summertime, Green Grass, the children's book Phosphorescence and A Perfect Life..Divorced, she lives in Norfolk with her three children aged 17, 15 and eight.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Jason Bye/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
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  • Raffaella Barker, author at her home in North Norfolk. Barker was born in London in 1964 and moved to Norfolk when she was three. Her father, the poet George Barker, had 15 children; she is the oldest of those by the novelist Elspeth Barker..She spent her childhood in Norfolk sulking and refusing to get dressed, going everywhere in her nightie. She recalls worrying about how to respond at school when asked how many brothers and sisters she had. She did not know the answer..After Norwich High School, Raffaella Barker moved to London and did life modelling and film-editing. She landed a job on Harpers & Queen magazine and later freelanced as its motoring columnist. For 10 years she wrote a column for Country Life about her week..Her debut novel Come and Tell Me Some Lies was published in 1994, followed by The Hook, Hens Dancing, Summertime, Green Grass, the children's book Phosphorescence and A Perfect Life..Divorced, she lives in Norfolk with her three children aged 17, 15 and eight.<br />
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Photograph by Jason Bye/Writer Pictures<br />
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  • Raffaella Barker, author at her home in North Norfolk. Barker was born in London in 1964 and moved to Norfolk when she was three. Her father, the poet George Barker, had 15 children; she is the oldest of those by the novelist Elspeth Barker..She spent her childhood in Norfolk sulking and refusing to get dressed, going everywhere in her nightie. She recalls worrying about how to respond at school when asked how many brothers and sisters she had. She did not know the answer..After Norwich High School, Raffaella Barker moved to London and did life modelling and film-editing. She landed a job on Harpers & Queen magazine and later freelanced as its motoring columnist. For 10 years she wrote a column for Country Life about her week..Her debut novel Come and Tell Me Some Lies was published in 1994, followed by The Hook, Hens Dancing, Summertime, Green Grass, the children's book Phosphorescence and A Perfect Life..Divorced, she lives in Norfolk with her three children aged 17, 15 and eight.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Jason Bye/Writer Pictures<br />
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  • Raffaella Barker, author at her home in North Norfolk. Barker was born in London in 1964 and moved to Norfolk when she was three. Her father, the poet George Barker, had 15 children; she is the oldest of those by the novelist Elspeth Barker..She spent her childhood in Norfolk sulking and refusing to get dressed, going everywhere in her nightie. She recalls worrying about how to respond at school when asked how many brothers and sisters she had. She did not know the answer..After Norwich High School, Raffaella Barker moved to London and did life modelling and film-editing. She landed a job on Harpers & Queen magazine and later freelanced as its motoring columnist. For 10 years she wrote a column for Country Life about her week..Her debut novel Come and Tell Me Some Lies was published in 1994, followed by The Hook, Hens Dancing, Summertime, Green Grass, the children's book Phosphorescence and A Perfect Life..Divorced, she lives in Norfolk with her three children aged 17, 15 and eight.<br />
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Photograph by Jason Bye/Writer Pictures<br />
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
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Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
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WORLD RIGHTS
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
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  • Laura Lynne Jackson November 17, 2015 is a wife, a mother, a high school English teacher—and a psychic medium. Where most believe an impenetrable wall divides the world between the living and the dead, Jackson sees bright, brilliant cords of light that pass through a barrier as thin as a sheet of paper. Her gifts tested and verified by some of the most prominent scientific organizations studying paranormal phenomena, Jackson has dedicated her life to exploring our connection to the Other Side, conversing with departed loved ones, and helping people come to terms with loss. In The Light Between Us, she shares her remarkable journey and the lessons in love she’s learned along the way.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Dan Callister/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
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  • Raffaella Barker, author at her home in North Norfolk. Barker was born in London in 1964 and moved to Norfolk when she was three. Her father, the poet George Barker, had 15 children; she is the oldest of those by the novelist Elspeth Barker..She spent her childhood in Norfolk sulking and refusing to get dressed, going everywhere in her nightie. She recalls worrying about how to respond at school when asked how many brothers and sisters she had. She did not know the answer..After Norwich High School, Raffaella Barker moved to London and did life modelling and film-editing. She landed a job on Harpers & Queen magazine and later freelanced as its motoring columnist. For 10 years she wrote a column for Country Life about her week..Her debut novel Come and Tell Me Some Lies was published in 1994, followed by The Hook, Hens Dancing, Summertime, Green Grass, the children's book Phosphorescence and A Perfect Life..Divorced, she lives in Norfolk with her three children aged 17, 15 and eight.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Jason Bye/Writer Pictures<br />
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WORLD RIGHTS
    barker004_20070606_jby.JPG
  • Raffaella Barker, author at her home in North Norfolk. Barker was born in London in 1964 and moved to Norfolk when she was three. Her father, the poet George Barker, had 15 children; she is the oldest of those by the novelist Elspeth Barker..She spent her childhood in Norfolk sulking and refusing to get dressed, going everywhere in her nightie. She recalls worrying about how to respond at school when asked how many brothers and sisters she had. She did not know the answer..After Norwich High School, Raffaella Barker moved to London and did life modelling and film-editing. She landed a job on Harpers & Queen magazine and later freelanced as its motoring columnist. For 10 years she wrote a column for Country Life about her week..Her debut novel Come and Tell Me Some Lies was published in 1994, followed by The Hook, Hens Dancing, Summertime, Green Grass, the children's book Phosphorescence and A Perfect Life..Divorced, she lives in Norfolk with her three children aged 17, 15 and eight.<br />
<br />
Photograph by Jason Bye/Writer Pictures<br />
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    barker002_20070606_jby.JPG
  • Bernard MacLaverty, writer, author and teacher at St Augustine's High School in Edinburgh, January 1983. <br />
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  • Bernard MacLaverty, writer, author and teacher at St Augustine's High School in Edinburgh, May 1981. <br />
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  • Mikhail Bulgakov, as a high school boy, 1909.<br />
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