Page-turner, a person who turns pages of sheet music for a musician during a performance
Tina Turner | J. M. W. Turner | Ted Turner | Jimmy Page | Turner | Kathleen Turner | Turner Prize | Patti Page | Bettie Page | Lana Turner | The Front Page | Turner Broadcasting System | Page | Handley Page Halifax | John Turner | Ike Turner | Ellen Page | Joe Lynn Turner | Mark Turner | Larry Page | Handley Page | Page McConnell | Nik Turner | Nat Turner | Graham Turner | Chris Turner | Big Joe Turner | web page | Robert Turner | Page County, Virginia |
Two of Leavitt's novels have been filmed: The Lost Language of Cranes was directed by Nigel Finch and The Page Turner (released under the title Food of Love) was directed by Ventura Pons.
The Guardian described it as "a supremely satisfying read which really deserves to be called a page-turner...Hill's original and quirky approach could yet make him the proper heir to Joan Aikens crown." The Times also gave it a good review saying, " It will have readers shivering with delight...From the moment that its 13-year-old heroine, Princess Thirrin, punches a werewolf on the nose you know you're in for a rollicking good read."
Her newest book, Nothing Between Us: The Berkeley Years, a novel in prose poems set in Berkeley in the sixties (Del Sol Press, 2009), has been called “unforgettably moving” by Sandra M. Gilbert; “a captivating page-turner” by Alicia Ostriker; and an “exciting tribute to a decade of change” by Denise Duhamel.