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Into the Twilight, Endlessly Grousing
Outdoor Life magazine columnist Patrick McManus has been compared to Mark Twain. Into the Twilight, Endlessly Grousing demonstrates that he isn't, but McManus will suffice until the next Twain comes along. In this book, the outdoorsman extraordinaire is doing what he does best--telling fish stories, getting into scrapes with buddies, occasionally waxing philosophical, but grousing just as often. Sometimes he even ventures out of the wilderness and into mainstream humor. McManus is easily the equal of Dave Barry or any other contemporary humorist, for that matter: When I think of all the times a Stupidity Alarm could have saved me from committing a Stupidity ... Here's one instance that comes to mind. My children: "Daddy, please buy us a horse! Please, please, please, please!" Me: "Well, kids, I guess a horse wouldn't be all that much trouble." Stupidity Alarm: WHOOOOP! WHOOOOP! WHOOOOP! The cowboy who sold me the horse said it loved children. That was true. But as I belatedly discovered, it hated adults. He covers well-worn territory, sure. But McManus is a pro who tells stories well, so Into the Twilight, Endlessly Grousing is always diverting. And when he tells stories about his boyhood, a note of wistfulness and pathos creeps in that is definitely agreeable. This volume is a fine effort by an experienced woodsman/wordsman..
Price: $3.82
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Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking: Motherhood in Sylvia Plath's Work (Costerus NS 152)
Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking delves deeply into the notion of motherhood in Sylvia Plath's work in order to redeem Plath from the one-dimensional role assigned to her of the suicidal, father-obsessed poet. Written from the theoretical perspective of Julia Kristeva's theory of subject formation, the book focuses on Plath's baby poems in which mother figures are seen as subjects-in-process oscillating between authentication and non-authentication in motherhood. Furthermore, since the mother is always a daughter, part of the discussion centers on Plath's daughterhood poetry in which daughter figures are engaged in an endless struggle to release themselves from a suffocating maternal hold and achieve their own linguistic individuation. Finally Plath's works for children, The Bed Book, The-It-Doesn't-Matter Suit, "Mrs. Cherry's Kitchen", as well as her fairy tale poems, largely ignored until now, are read as manifestations of the self's regressive journey to "once below a time" to grasp an elusive pre-symbolic organization and take signification back to infancy. The book makes extensive use of Plath's drafts, mainly of the Ariel poems, her recycled materials, annotated books from her personal library, published and unpublished material from The Lilly Library Archive, The Mortimer Rare Book Room, and The Ted Hughes Archive in Emory..
Price: $83.49
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East meets north: Alvar Aalto's endlessly inventive career is seen through the eyes of Japanese architect Shigeru Ban in a major new exhibition at London's ... An article from: The Architectural Review
This digital document is an article from The Architectural Review, published by Thomson Gale on April 1, 2007. The length of the article is 1049 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser. Citation DetailsTitle: East meets north: Alvar Aalto's endlessly inventive career is seen through the eyes of Japanese architect Shigeru Ban in a major new exhibition at London's Barbican. Author: Peter Davey Publication:The Architectural Review (Magazine/Journal) Date: April 1, 2007 Publisher: Thomson Gale Volume: 221 Issue: 1322 Page: 96(2) Distributed by Thomson Gale.
Price: $9.95
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