Top 10 similar words or synonyms for burnard

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Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for burnard

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Bonnie Burnard Born Bonita Amelia Huctwith on January 15, 1945, in Petrolia, Ontario, she grew up with her four brothers in Forest, Ontario. She was the youngest in her family. Her mother's family bred Clydesdale horses which they showcased at the annual Royal Agricultural Winter Fair in Toronto. Her father, Charles, was raised by his relatives after his parents died when he was a child. The couple sold eggs at the Toronto market and later shipped tens of thousands of cases from Ottawa to England. After World war II, the couple continued to sell eggs to Toronto and Montreal. In 1967, Burnard completed her Bachelor of Arts degree in English from the University of Western Ontario.
Bonnie Burnard Her short stories were included in many anthologies, among these: "Best Canadian Stories" (1984, 1989, 1992), "Saskatchewan Gold" (1982), "Double Bond" (1984), "More Saskatchewan Gold" (1984), "Sky High" (1988), "Last Map" (1989), "Soho Square 111: Bloomsbury" (1990), "Canadian Short Stories" (1991), "Worlds Unrealized" (1991), "Beyond Borders" (1992), "Kitchen Talk" (1992), "Lodestone" (1993), "The Second Gates of Paradise: Anthology of Erotic Short Fiction" (1994), "Writing from Canada" (1994), "Spin on 2" (1995), "The Oxford Book of Canadian Short Stories" (1995), "Arnold Anthology of Post-Colonial Literature" (1996), "Desde El Invierno" (1996), "The Best of NeWest" (1996), "Mothers and Daughters" (1997), "Penguin Anthology of Stories by Canadian Women" (1997), "Sunrise to Sunset" (1997), "Desire" (1999) "Oxford Stories by Canadian Women" (1999), "Turn of the Story" (1999) "Dropped Threads" (2001), "Donde Es Aqui?" (2002), "Notes from Home" (2002), and "Short Fiction" by Oxford University (2003).
Bonnie Burnard Burnard's first novel "A Good House" was published in 1999. The novel received wide acclaim and was an international success. It was a #1 bestseller in Canada. Four editions of the novel were published in Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, and in twelve other countries from 1999 to 2002. Her second novel "Suddenly" was published after ten years in 2009.
Bonnie Burnard Bonnie Burnard (January 15, 1945 – March 4, 2017) was a Canadian short story writer and novelist, best known for her 1999 novel, "A Good House", which won the Scotiabank Giller Prize.
Bonnie Burnard Born in Petrolia, Ontario, she grew up in Forest, Ontario, and moved to Regina, Saskatchewan, in the late 1970s. In the early 1990s she returned to Southwestern Ontario, and was a resident of London, Ontario, where she died on March 4, 2017.