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Scot D. Ryersson
Scot D. Ryersson began his training at the prestigious Chelsea School of Art and Design (London) before entering the field of motion picture advertising and promotion. He has designed multi-award-winning graphics for numerous major Hollywood and international films, including The Silence of the... show more

Scot D. Ryersson began his training at the prestigious Chelsea School of Art and Design (London) before entering the field of motion picture advertising and promotion. He has designed multi-award-winning graphics for numerous major Hollywood and international films, including The Silence of the Lambs (1991), Ghost (1990), and Witness (1985). Ryersson's work on the campaigns for Evil Under the Sun (1982) and Another Country (1984) each garnered him an Art Directors of London Award. His illustration work has appeared in many publications worldwide. Ryersson is also the author of numerous critiques and essays on film and literature. He has published exclusive interviews with author Anne Rice, actress Diana Rigg, and film director Tim Burton; an analysis of the supernatural fiction of Agatha Christie; and a cover-story on the life and work of German screen icon Brigitte Helm, star of Fritz Lang's Metropolis (1927). His poetry has appeared in the New Yorker. With Michael Orlando Yaccarino, Ryersson is coauthor of the internationally best-selling biography Infinite Variety: The Life and Legend of the Marchesa Casati and a play based upon it; the decadent fairy tale The Princess of Wax: Un Conte cruel; and most recently The Marchesa Casati: Portraits of a Muse.
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Community Reviews
Stumbling Over Chaos
Stumbling Over Chaos rated it 15 years ago
This so-so historical paranormal m/m romance about students at Yale in the early part of the 20th century just never really came together for me. Between the language (aping Jane Austen? or trying for a more literary feel?) and the WTF ending, I never warmed to the story.
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