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    • American writer, reporter, and columnist

      • Marjorie Williams (January 13, 1958 – January 16, 2005) was an American writer, reporter, and columnist for Vanity Fair and The Washington Post, writing about American society and profiling the American "political elite."
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marjorie_Williams
  1. The Woman at the Washington Zoo (published posthumously) Spouse. Timothy Noah. . (m. 1990) . Children. 2. Marjorie Williams (January 13, 1958 – January 16, 2005) was an American writer, reporter, and columnist for Vanity Fair and The Washington Post, writing about American society and profiling the American "political elite." [1][2]

  2. Sep 14, 2016 · Marjorie Williams, columnist for the Washington Post, writer for Vanity Fair, contributor to Slate, was the country’s most acute and original chronicler of how power worked in Washington, D.C.,...

  3. Oct 7, 2008 · Marjorie Williams was a Vanity Fair contributing editor and a writer for The Washington Post. She died of cancer in January 2006 at the age of 47.

  4. For a 43-year-old woman with two young children and a full life, that prognosis was devastating, but also, in unexpected ways, liberating. And so began more than three years of horror, hope, and...

  5. Nov 9, 2005 · But this is what Marjorie Williams, a Washington Post columnist who died last January at 47, describes in her extraordinary essay about being diagnosed with advanced liver cancer, “Hit by ...

  6. Nov 8, 2005 · Marjorie Williams, a writer for The Washington Post and Vanity Fair and one of the most penetrating and original journalists of her generation, lived and worked in this room. And last January,...

  7. Nov 23, 2005 · Marjorie Williams knew Washington from top to bottom. Beloved for her sharp analysis, elegant prose and exceptional ability to intuit character, Williams wrote political profiles for the...