A. M. Williamson and C. N. WilliamsonC. N. Williamson The Black & White magazine was started by British author and motorsport journalist Charles Norris Williamson (1859–1920). He is most well-known for his work on several books and travelogs alongside his wife, Alice Muriel Williamson. illiamson, who was raised at University College, London, and was born in Exeter, studied engineering there. Before becoming the founding editor of the Black and White in 1891, he worked as a writer for the Graphic for eight years. In 1881, he released a Life of Carlyle. Several of the Williamsons' novels and short tales went on to become movies. A.M. Williamson American-English novelist Alice Muriel Williamson (8 October 1858 – 24 September 1933), also known as the "C. N. and A. M. Williamson" and "Mrs. C. N. Williamson," wrote mostly under these aliases. Her father co-founded the Ohio State and Union Law Colleges, and she was born there in 1858. She took her maternal great grandfather's last name, "Livingston," as her own in 1890. Forget-Me-Not published her debut serial, "Confessions of a Stage-Struck Girl." Her sense of humor would eventually emerge as one of her most distinctive writing traits. Read More Read Less
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