Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. It also carries this picaresque novel along at a fast clip.”—New York Times Book Review. “Cocktail offers “a tour-de-force two-page history of (New York’s) Upper West Side’s gentrification- as seen through drinking habits…Even more impressive: Gould’s authoritative, back-room view of the saloon trade- the atmosphere, the ...

  2. Heywood Gould can write…He is in turn sharp, wacky, earthy and full of felicitous phrases…the plot of Glitterburn is hysterical…Mr. Gould will not bore anybody.”-New York Times Book Review. Gould…proves himself a vivid, often hilarious writer…hip and wildly funny without being cartoony.”-Kirkus

  3. Sir Christopher Wren is famous as the greatest of English architects. His most acclaimed work, the new Saint Paul’s Catherdrall, is one of the world’s most striking architectural monuments.

  4. Jun 21, 2021 · It's 1966, and young Heywood Gould, a Brooklyn boy with literary ambitions, has his dream job. He is a reporter at the ultra liberal (that's right liberal) New York Post, alongside young writers like Nora Ephron, Pete Hamill and Anthony Scaduto. New York is a newspaper town, six dailies trying to beat each other to the big story.

  5. Heywood Gould (born December 19, 1942) is an American screenwriter, journalist, novelist and film director. He wrote the screenplays for the films Rolling Thunder, The Boys from Brazil, Fort Apache, The Bronx, Streets of Gold, Cocktail, and wrote and directed the films One Good Cop, Trial by Jury, M

  6. Heywood Gould has written an exciting crime thriller that looks deeply into the various masks people wear and change to hide their peculiarities and what they consider a fault. … Readers will understand that even serial killers have families who are victims of their insanity too as Mr. Gould allows fans to see up close how the Serial killer’s Daughter survives the whisperers about her heritage.

  7. Born in the Bronx and raised in Brooklyn, Heywood Gould got his start as a reporter for the NY Post when it was still known as a "pinko rag." Later he financed years of rejection with the usual colorful jobs-cabdriver, mortician's assistant, industrial floor waxer, bartender and screenwriter.