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・ William Horner Fletcher
・ William Horrocks
・ William Horrocks (cricketer)
・ William Horsemonden-Turner
・ William Horsley
・ William Horsley (cricketer)
・ William Horsley Orrick
・ William Horsley Orrick, Jr.
・ William Horton
・ William Horton (cricketer)
・ William Horvath
・ William Horwitz
・ William Horwood
・ William Horwood (Chief Justice)
・ William Horwood (composer)
William Horwood (novelist)
・ William Horwood (police commissioner)
・ William Horwood Stuart
・ William Hosking
・ William Hoskins
・ William Hossak
・ William Hoste
・ William Hoste Webb
・ William Hoster House
・ William Hotchkiss III
・ William Hotham
・ William Hotham (Royal Navy officer, born 1772)
・ William Hotham, 1st Baron Hotham
・ William Houck
・ William Hough


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William Horwood (novelist) : ウィキペディア英語版
William Horwood (novelist)

William Horwood (born 12 May 1944 in Oxford) is an English novelist. He grew up on the East Kent coast, primarily in Deal, within a model modern family—fractious with "parental separation, secret illegitimacy, alcoholism and genteel poverty".
Between the ages of six and ten, he was raised in foster care, attended school in Germany for a year, then went on to Grammar School at age eleven. In his eighteenth year, he attended Bristol University to study geography, after which he had any number of jobs—fundraising and teaching, among others, as well as editing for the London Daily Mail.
In 1978, at age 34, he retired from the newspaper in order to pursue novel-writing as his primary career, inspired by some long-ago reading of Frances Hodgson Burnett's ''The Secret Garden''.
His first novel, ''Duncton Wood'', an allegorical tale about a community of moles, was published in 1980. It was followed by two sequels, forming ''The Duncton Chronicles'', and also a second trilogy, ''The Book of Silence''. William Horwood has also written two stand-alone novels intertwining the lives of humans and of eagles (''The Stonor Eagles'' and ''Callanish''), and ''The Wolves of Time'' duology. ''Skallagrigg,'' his 1987 novel about disability, love, and trust, was made into a BBC film in 1994. In addition, he has written a number of sequels to ''The Wind in the Willows'' by Kenneth Grahame.
''Boy with No Shoes,'' published in August 2004, is a fictionalised memoir that explores challenging themes of childhood in Kent.
In 2007, he collaborated with historian Helen Rappaport to produce ''Dark Hearts of Chicago'', a historical mystery and thriller set in nineteenth-century Chicago. It was republished in 2008 as ''City of Dark Hearts'' with some significant revisions and cuts under the pen name James Conan.
After almost fifteen years, Horwood returned to his hallmark genre of fantasy, publishing the first novel in his ''Hyddenworld'' quartet in 2010. Each novel is named after a season—the first is ''Hyddenworld: Spring'', the next meant to be published is ''Hyddenworld: Summer'' and so on—and deals with the adventures of a cast of humans and 'hydden' ('little folk,' with some distinct fae overtones) on a quest to find gems holding the powers of the season for which each is named. "If they can be brought together they may combine to re-kindle the fires of a dying universe."
== Bibliography ==


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