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Showing 1 - 20 of 91 items
By Dominick Dunne. 2009
Elderly gossip writer Augustus "Gus" Bailey is being sued for millions over a fake story about a politician's missing intern.…
Meanwhile, a billionaire widow is trying to stop the publication of Bailey's tell-all novel concerning the death of her husband. Strong language. 2009By Joseph Roth, Michael Hofmann. 2015
In 64 short essays written between 1919 and 1939, author and journalist Joseph Roth evokes life between the wars in…
his travels through hotels from Germany and Austria to Albania and the Soviet Union. UnratedBy Michael Hulse, W. G. Sebald, Winfried Georg Sebald. 1999
A walking tour of England's southeast coast frames a wide-ranging series of meditations on literature and stories from Britain's imperial…
past. A stay in a Norwich hospital prompts the protagonist to search for naturalist Thomas Browne's skull; a railroad bridge over the river Blyth recalls England's silk trade with China. 1998By Anton Chekhov, Larissa Volokhonsky, Richard Pevear, Anton Pavlovich Chekhov. 2004
Anton Chekhov, widely hailed as the supreme master of the short story, also wrote five works long enough to be…
called short novels, here brought together in one one volume for the first time, in a new translation by Richard Pevear and Larissa VolokhonskyBy Philip Ziegler, Philip Zeigler. 2005
Biography of British editor and publisher Rupert Hart-Davis (1907-1999). Relates his upper-class childhood, his initial attempt at a career in…
the theater, and his success in the world of manuscripts that led to a knighthood in 1967. 2004By Madeleine L'Engle. 1984
L'Engle describes her ninety-year-old mother's plunge into senility during her final summer at Crosswicks, the family home. As she recalls…
this fourth four-generation season, L'Engle reviews her parent's rich life and shows how she influenced the entire family. 1974By Washington Irving, Charles Neider. 1998
Sixty-one short stories by the prolific New Yorker Washington Irving (1783-1859), best known for "Rip Van Winkle" and "The Legend…
of Sleepy Hollow." The volume contains satires, ghost stories, and fables, many of them set in New York City and the Hudson Valley in the early days of Dutch settlement. Introduction by Charles Neider. 1975By Günter Grass, Gunter Grass, Michael Henry Heim. 1999
Günter Grass, the 1999 winner of the Nobel Prize for literature, chronicles his own and Germany's centennium through one hundred…
short stories, one for each year of the twentieth century. For 1989 Grass recalls a parent-teacher association's concern about a schoolteacher's "obsession with the past." 1999By Angela Carter. 1998
A substantial selection of Carter's journalism--articles, criticism, personal essays, and reviews--from the 1960s until her death in 1992. These cultural…
and social commentaries are grouped under broad categories: body languages, food fetishes, home and away, travelling, Japan, Amerika, screen and dream, stories and tellers, writers and readers. Some strong language. 1997By F. Scott Fitzgerald, Matthew J. Bruccoli, Judith S. Baughman. 1994
Collection of Fitzgerald's correspondence portraying his life and work. The chronological arrangement of letters reflects his literary development through the…
years, his friendships with Hemingway and other writers, and his tragic marriage and personal lifeBy Ralph Moody. 1993
In 1912, after the death of his father, the author and his family move from Colorado to Massachusetts. Not used…
to life in town, fourteen-year-old Ralph somehow finds himself catching trouble at every turn and is sent to live on his grandfather's farm in Maine. The old man is stubborn and crotchety, and Ralph cannot wait to leave. But his satisfaction in meeting the needs of the farm and his grandfather helps Ralph find a wonderful lifeBy Bob Simon. 1992
A CBS correspondent and his news team were taken prisoner by the Iraqis soon after the start of the Gulf…
War in 1991. Simon recounts the beatings, starvation, and lengthy interrogations that the four men endured. He also relates what was going on in his mind as he fought to retain his sanity, especially while he was in solitary confinement. And in an epilogue, he describes efforts others made to rescue the team. Some violence and strong languageBy Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, Antoine De Saint-Exupéry. 1986
Posthumously collected and chronologically arranged miscellaneous writings of the French author best known for The Little Prince. Saint-Exupery, a professional…
aviator when World War II was declared, describes how he wrestled with his moral objections to war and his sense of duty to his Nazi-occupied homeland. He decided to become a military pilot and ultimately disappeared on a missionBy Margaret Drabble. 1974
An English novelist draws on the letters and memories of Bennett's contemporaries to convey the writer's struggle with his craft…
and to recreate the personality of this shy, brilliant man who was afflicted by a severe stammer. Also talks of his last love and friendships with Shaw, Colette, and WellsBy Charles Bukowski. 2015
Collection of previously unpublished correspondence by the author of Pulp (DB 40326) and The Pleasures of the Damned (DB 66380),…
discussing the art of creation with publishers, editors, friends, and peers. Shares the joys and tribulations of not only writing, but writing for publication. 2015By Dylan Thomas. 2003
Presents Wright's complete autobiography for the first time, combining his childhood in the South (Black Boy) with his life as…
an adult in the North (American Hunger). Also contains his 1953 novel (The Outsider), a literary chronology, and extensive notes. Sequel to Richard Wright: Early Works (DB 41552, BR 10299). Violence, some strong language, and some descriptions of sexBy Reeve Lindbergh. 2001
This book is a moving and compassionate memoir of the final seventeen months of Reeve's mother's life. Reeve writes with…
great sensitivity of her mother's flight while also analyzing her own conficting feeling. Anyone who has had to care for an elderly parent disabled by Alzheimer's or stroke will understand the heartache and find comfort in the storyBy Elie Wiesel. 1999
Ce que j'affirme, c'est que ce témoignage qui vient après tant d'autres et qui décrit une abomination dont nous pourrions…
croire que plus rien ne nous demeure inconnu, est cependant différent, singulier, unique... L'enfant qui nous raconte ici son histoire était un élu de Dieu. Il ne vivait, depuis l'éveil de sa conscience, que pour Dieu, nourri du Talmud, ambitieux d'être initié à la Kabbale, voué à l'Eternel. Avions-nous jamais pensé à cette conséquence d'une horreur moins visible, moins frappante que d'autres abominations, - la pire de toutes, pourtant, pour nous qui possédons la foi : la mort de Dieu dans cette âme d'enfant qui découvre d'un seul coup le mal absolu ?By Ernest Hemingway. 1964