Jane Willis (Partner) - Part of the MIT Blackjack Team later fictionalized in Bringing Down the House.
Among the few Americans who did not spurn him at this time was Margaret Brown, later fictionalized as "The Unsinkable Molly Brown".
In a terrorist plot of 1894, later fictionalized by Joseph Conrad, Greenwich itself was bombed.
Other writers who later fictionalized this theory include Edgar Rice Burroughs and L. Frank Baum.
Susan Glaspell, who covered the case for the Des Moines Daily News, later fictionalized it in her 1916 one-act play Trifles and a 1917 short story, "A Jury of Her Peers".
Manfred later fictionalized his stay in the book Boy Almighty, published under his given name of Feike Feikema.
Kingsley later fictionalized this meeting as that of Argemone with Lancelot Smith in his first novel Yeast (1848).
That establishment was based on the historical T&M Studio (later fictionalized in L.A. Confidential as the "Fleur de Lis Club").
He later fictionalized this marriage in his novel Blind Date, speaking of Weir under pseudonym Mary-Jane Kirkland.
He later fictionalized his experience in his novel The Blithedale Romance (1852).