Fiona McIntosh is an English-born Australian author of adult and children's books. She was born in Brighton, England and between the ages of three and eight, travelled a lot to Africa due to her father's work. At the age of nineteen, she travelled first to Paris and later to Australia, where she has lived ever since. In 2007, she released a crime novel, Bye Bye Baby, under the pen name of Lauren Crow; however, the pen name was dropped for the republished edition of Bye Bye Baby and for the sequel, Beautiful Death.
Fiona Neill is a British author and journalist. She has written five Sunday Times bestsellers including Her last novel,
The Betrayals which sold over 130,000 copies and was a Richard & Judy Book Club selection. She has worked
as a foreign correspondent in Central America, was assistant editor for Marie Claire and The Times
Magazine, and written for numerous publications including the Sunday Times and the Telegraph, as well as having
written a screenplay of her first novel for the British Film Institute.
Fiona Ruth Sampson, is a British poet and writer. She is published in thirty-seven languages and has received a
number of national and international awards for her writing. A former musician, Sampson has written on the links between music and poetry, and her work has been set to music by several composers. She has received several prizes for her literary biographies and poetry. Notably, Sampson received a MBE for services to literature in 2017.
Fiona Zedde is the pen name of Jamaican-born American fiction writer Fiona Lewis. Her 2005 novel, Bliss, was a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award for début Lesbian Fiction.
Firmin Abauzit was a French scholar who worked on physics, theology and philosophy, and served as librarian in Geneva during his final 40 years. Abauzit is also notable for proofreading or correcting the writings of Isaac Newton and other scholars.
The Fiske Guide to Colleges is an American media company that publishes, inter alia, descriptions, ratings, and analysis for more than 320 U.S. colleges and universities. It is the best-selling college guide in the United States, although it remains significantly less well-known than rankings such as the U.S. News & World Report Best Colleges rankings. It was begun in 1982 by Edward B. Fiske while he was the education editor of The New York Times, a position he held from 1974 to 1987.
Fit for Life is a diet and lifestyle book series stemming from the principles of orthopathy. It is promoted mainly by the American writers Harvey and Marilyn Diamond. The Fit for Life book series describes a fad diet which specifies eating only fruit in the morning, eating predominantly "live" and "high-water-content" food, and, if animal protein is eaten, avoiding combining it with complex carbohydrates.