Volks Reisner by Makoto Kojima
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Volks Reisner by Makoto Kojima

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If only I have a body for you!
Charlie Chaplin and the little actor Dinky Dean Reisner playing around. He acted in the movie The Pilgrim as a little boy in 1923. His father was a writer named Charles Reisner who was a friend of actors such as Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton. He acted in other films but was known for being an excellent movie writer as his father. This photo was taken probably in 1922-23.
Reisner - Volks By Kyohei Niimura / Puppet Tales We accept commissions by facebook. Please don’t remove source.
favorite tropes ♡ villainous crush
This trope applies whenever a villainous character has romantic and/or sexual feelings for a heroic one.

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Our Sowell Family Collection in Literature, Community, and the Natural World contains the personal papers of some of the most prominent writers on the natural world. This April 20th through 22nd, we're hosting the annual Sowell Collection Conference, featuring scholarly papers and panels on many of the Sowell writers, such as Marc Reisner.
Marc Reisner was an environmental writer and advocate. He is best known for Cadillac Desert: The American West and Its Disappearing Water (1986), a National Book Critic’s Circle Award finalist. It describes the role of water rights and water use in the history and development of the Western United States. Reisner has partnered with The Nature Conservancy and served as a staff writer and communications director for the Natural Resources Defense Council. He continued his activism and writing until his death in California in July 2000. His final book, A Dangerous Place (2004), was published posthumously.
Read a little more on other Sowell natural history authors over here.
get to know me: [3/5] favorite movies ⇢ red eye (2005)
Pretty clever thinking, given the circumstances. Let me guess, stress management courses? Well, they’re really paying off! When we get outta this, I may have to steal you.
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