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・ Eva Moga
・ Eva Moll
・ Eva Monley
・ Eva Moore
・ Eva Moore (Doctors)
・ Eva Morris
・ Eva Hoffman
・ Eva Holubová
・ Eva Horáková
・ Eva Hrdinová
・ Eva Hren
・ Eva Hubená
・ Eva Hudečková
・ Eva Hughes
・ Eva Håkansson
Eva Ibbotson
・ Eva Illouz
・ Eva Ingeborg Scholz
・ Eva Ingolf
・ Eva Ionesco
・ Eva Irgl
・ Eva Isaksen
・ Eva Isanta
・ Eva J. Engel
・ Eva J. Pell
・ Eva Jablonka
・ Eva Janina Wieczorek
・ Eva Janko
・ Eva Jessye
・ Eva Jinek


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Eva Ibbotson : ウィキペディア英語版
Eva Ibbotson

Eva Maria Charlotte Michelle Ibbotson (née Wiesner; 21 January 1925 – 20 October 2010),〔 was an Austrian-born British novelist, known for her children's books. Some of her novels for adults have been successfully reissued for the young adult market in recent years.
For the historical novel ''Journey to the River Sea'' (Macmillan, 2001), she won the Smarties Prize in category 9–11 years, garnered unusual commendation as runner up for the Guardian Prize,〔 and made the Carnegie, Whitbread, and Blue Peter shortlists.
She was a finalist for the 2010 Guardian Prize at the time of her death.〔 Her last book, ''The Abominables'', was one of four finalists for the same award in 2012.〔〔
==Personal life==
Eva Wiesner was born in Vienna in 1925 to non-practising Jewish parents.〔 Her father, Bertold Paul Wiesner, was a physician who pioneered human infertility treatment. He became a controversial figure, as he is now believed to have used his own sperm to sire perhaps 600 of the children his clinic helped to be born.〔 Her mother, Anna Wilhelmine Gmeyner, was a successful novelist and playwright, who had worked with Bertolt Brecht and written film scripts for Georg Pabst.〔
Wiesner's parents separated in 1928. What followed for Eva was a "very cosmopolitan, sophisticated and quite interesting, but also very unhappy childhood, always on some train and wishing to have a home," as she later recalled.〔 Her father took up a university lectureship in Edinburgh, while her mother left Vienna for Paris in 1933 after her work was banned by Hitler, putting a sudden end to her successful writing career. In 1934, she settled in Belsize Park in Middlesex, and sent for her daughter. Other family members also escaped from Vienna and joined Anna and Maria in England, avoiding the worst of the Nazi regime, which had already affected the family. The experience of fleeing Vienna was a strong thread throughout Ibbotson's life and work.〔
Eva Wiesner attended Dartington Hall School, which she later fictionalised as Delderton Hall in her novel ''The Dragonfly Pool'' (2008). Originally, she intended to become a physiologist like her father, and earned an undergraduate degree from Bedford College, London, in 1945. During her postgraduate studies at Cambridge University, she met her future husband, Alan Ibbotson, an ecologist.〔

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