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Virginia Pearson
built 277 days ago
Virginia Pearson (1886-1958) was a stage actress and silent film star who was born in Anchorage, Kentucky, USA. After completing school Virginia worked for a brief time as an assistant in the public library in Louisville, Kentucky.
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Virginia Pearson is an independent, self-reliant and organised accountant and her clients really appreciate this. She likes to get 'stuck in'. . . Sorting 'muddles and messes', ensuring that they don't come back!
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Virginia Pearson died of uremic poisoning in Hollywood, California on June 6, 1958. She was 72. The actress became ill just two weeks before her death. She refused to allow friends to summon a doctor. Funeral services were held at the Pierce Brothers Hollywood Chapel. She was buried in Valhalla Memorial Park.
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Virginia Pearson (later Sister Agnes), suspicious of Margaret McGuigan's (later Sister Catherine) role in all this, enters into a barely suppressed conflict with her through their religious training to their university course in 1962. The intrusion of Virginia Pearson's former fiancé - and senior university lecturer - into her life as Sister Agnes adds a further unexpected problem. During this time Aine, who has maintained contact with Sister Agnes, unwittingly plays a connecting role in the deepening conflict and the continuing mysteries that see Agnes and Aine each rushing towards a destructive crisis.
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Virginia Pearson, c. 1918 Deputy Ray Tatum's search for a missing child in the wilds of the Virginia Blue Ridge, T. R. Pearson revisits the seamier side of the South. Among the local citizens are Ray's hothead girlfriend, his ill-tempered mongrel, and, most significantly, Clayton, a ne'er-do-well who is notorious for his devotion to pornographic movies. But Clayton has suddenly undergone a personality change: he asks to be called "Titus" and seems able to predict the future-though in random and meaningless ways. As Ray unravels the mystery of Clayton's condition and thereby closes in on his quarry, the story moves to its surprising end, never losing the poignant magical realism that is a Pearson trademark.
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Pearson, master of digression, the periodic sentence, and the 50-cent word in an Appalachian setting, returns with the tale of a missing child and a backwoods seer nothing like Sharyn McCrumb's Nora Bonesteel (The Hangman's Beautiful Daughter). The seer is former porno movie maven Clayton, who is transformed in a grocery-store check-out line into a dispenser of cryptic, useless, but accurate prophecy and a sort of "channel" for a long-dead polar explorer, Titus Oates. The missing girl? Well, her father finds himself an odd suicide, her mother finds herself a right-wing radio/TV phenomenon, and Deputy Ray Tatum (see ... Pearson's Blue Ridge) finds the girl, years later. Oh yeah, lots more happens, too. Potentially interesting characters like Ray's black kung-fu girlfriend Kit Carson are two-dimensional, but Ray, Clayton, and "that Dunn woman" come alive.
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