Tartarus publishes classic supernatural fiction by Arthur Machen, M. P. Shiel, Hugh Walpole, Gustav Meyrink, Oliver Onions, and more modern authors such as Sarban, Robert Aickman and David Lindsay, alongside contemporary writers including Quentin S. Crisp, Mark Valentine, Angela Slatter and Rhys Hughes.
Quentin Tarantino | Quentin Blake | Quentin Crisp | San Quentin State Prison | Saint-Quentin, Aisne | Quentin Bryce | San Quentin | Saint-Quentin | Caroline Quentin | Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines | Quentin Skinner | Quentin S. Crisp | Quentin Durward | Quentin Bell | Dorothy Crisp | Thomas Crisp | San Quentin, California | Saint-Quentin-au-Bosc | Quentin Willson | Quentin Richardson | Quentin Reynolds | Quentin Matsys | Quentin L. Kopp | Quentin Lee | Quentin Anderson | Battle of St. Quentin Canal | Battle of St. Quentin | Battle of Mont Saint-Quentin | Tobias Crisp | The Adventures of Quentin Durward |
Charles R. Crisp (1870–1937), US Representative from Georgia, son of Charles Frederick Crisp
Crisp was elected to the Sixty-third and to the nine succeeding Congresses and served from March 4, 1913, until October 7, 1932, when he resigned to become a member of the United States Tariff Commission, in which capacity he served until December 30, 1932.
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Crisp was elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-fourth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of his father, Charles F. Crisp, and served from December 19, 1896, to March 3, 1897.
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-- A grammar fix may be needed here. -->Again parliamentarian of the House of Representatives in the Sixty-second Congress.
Humans have an evolved propensity to think categorically about social groups, manifested in cognitive processes with broad implications for public and political endorsement of multicultural policy, according to psychologists Richard J. Crisp and Rose Meleady.