![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() an impressive first novel."- Booklist, starred review "A charming romantic comedy!"- SLJ "Witty exchanges, comic errors and miscommunications that could be taken right out of a Jane Austen novel. ![]() delightfully wholesome." - Newsday *"Wry engaging. delightfully wholesome." - Newsday, "When someone asks for a reading suggestion, Enthusiasm is the first word off my tongue." - Stephenie Meyer, author of the Twilight Saga " Enthusiasm, like Pride and Prejudice, bubbles over with romantic misunderstandings and comic confusion." - New York Times Book Review, an Editors' Choice book " Enthusiasm has the makings of an instant classic!" - Time magazine "A fanciful romance. (Stephanie Meyer, author of Twilight), "When someone asks for a reading suggestion, Enthusiasm is the first word off my tongue." -Stephanie Meyer, author of Twilight " Enthusiasm, like Pride and Prejudice, bubbles over with romantic misunderstandings and comic confusion." - New York Times Book Review, an Editors' Choice book " Enthusiasm has the makings of an instant classic!" - Time magazine "A fanciful romance. When someone asks for a reading suggestion, Enthusiasm is the first word off my tongue. ![]()
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![]() ![]() Sunset Boulevard continues, moreover, in a manner that alternates between film noir and the macabre and absurdist worksof Tod Browning two decades earlier. (Dead on Arrival), in which a poisoned Edmond O’Brien (as Frank Bigelow) must convince the police of his murder before he actually dies, cannot compare with Wilder’s talking corpse. ![]() Few films have attempted such audacious narrative stances-even Raymond Maté’s movie of the same year, D.O.A. There is perhaps no better example of a voice speaking from the dead than the man lying face down in the pool at the beginning of Billy Wilder’s film Sunset Boulevard (1950), a voice which, despite the murder of the body it inhabits, proceeds to “narrate” the rest of the movie. ![]() THE VOICE FROM THE BODY LYING FACE DOWN IN THE POOLĬharles Brackett, Billy Wilder, and D. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() At present I am a sojourner in civilized life again. When I wrote the following pages, or rather the bulk of them, I lived alone, in the woods, a mile from any neighbor, in a house which I had built myself, on the shore of Walden Pond, in Concord, Massachusetts, and earned my living by the labor of my hands only. With a new foreword by survivalist Matt Graham, venture into the woods with Thoreau and explore the complexities of life and truth in this classic piece of American literature. In addition to Walden, this edition also includes Thoreau’s essay on Civil Disobedience, which discusses his views on the nature of government and its negative effects on society. Thoreau divides his deliberations and meditations into a variety of sections which include his views on economy and the natural world, the importance of reading and literature, the values of both solitude and companionship, and other personal reflections. From the musings of academics such as Thomas Paine in Common Sense to the striking personal narrative of Harriet Jacobs in Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, this new series is a comprehensive collection of our intellectual history through the words of the exceptional few.įirst published in 1854, Walden was written by the renowned transcendentalist Henry David Thoreau about his experience living off the land at Walden Pond for more than two years. ![]() Packaged in handsome, affordable trade editions, Clydesdale Classics is a new series of essential works. ![]() ![]() ![]() The story of cancer is a story of human ingenuity, resilience, and perseverance, but also of hubris, paternalism, and misperception. The result is an astonishingly lucid and eloquent chronicle of a disease humans have lived with-and perished from-for more than five thousand years. Physician, researcher, and award-winning science writer, Siddhartha Mukherjee examines cancer with a cellular biologist’s precision, a historian’s perspective, and a biographer’s passion. ![]() Winner of the Pulitzer Prize, and now a documentary from Ken Burns on PBS, The Emperor of All Maladies by Siddhartha Mukherjee is a magnificent, profoundly humane “biography” of cancer-from its first documented appearances thousands of years ago through the epic battles in the twentieth century to cure, control, and conquer it to a radical new understanding of its essence. ![]() ![]() ![]() “Is anyone on this train who they say they are?”īriers doesn’t know whether to kiss Miles or punch him but is delighted to accompany him and his mother on their journey. Since their pursuers are looking for a man and a woman, might two women slip past them unnoticed? ![]() Miles’s aristocratic mother has information of importance to the British Government and he must escort her home from Bucharest immediately, but their plans go violently awry and Miles and Lady Siward find themselves on a train to Belgrade – where Miles’s lover is posted. Here’s a bit more about it, and the review I’ll be posting up on Amazon and Goodreads in the next day or two.īook Two of The Carstairs Affairs: Miles Siward and Briers Allerdale return for another thrilling Jazz Age adventure. I love Miles Siward and Briers Allerdale, and their rollicking 1930s adventure on a train crossing Europe will blow your socks off, it’s so good. Seriously, it’s the best thing I’ve read in about a year. SUCH a treat! Midnight Flit, Elin Gregory’s latest book in The Carstairs Affairs series, was published a few days ago. ![]() ![]() ![]() Why do you think the author chose to include a number of Iranian tales throughout the novel? What did these stories add to.Know the narrator's name? What effect did the ano nymity have on you as a reader? Does it matter whether or not The author decided to leave the narrator anonymous, as is the.Period in history, as opposed to a nonfiction historical account? Today? What do you think you gain from reading a novel about a How much did you know about Iranian history and culture before reading this book? Did anything in the story strike you asĬompletely unlike or surprisingly reminiscent of our lives.Striking or unusual about the way the story unfolds? Did it remind you of anything you have read before? You think this style brings to the novel? Did you find anything Terms of both the narrator and the story itself? What is the significance of the novel's. ![]() ![]() ![]() He is an old fashioned liberal and decries the policies of the UK conservative government. Cyril is a doctor in Britain’s National Health Service, and is acutely conscious of the pressures that the care of old people puts on the service. The central plot is structured to facilitate the big issues. The stories explore how that plan might work out. Cyril proposes that they both kill themselves when Kay turns 80. When Kay’s father dies after a long illness, the couple discuss how they might avoid such a long undignified end that places a huge burden on family members doing the care work. The range of possibilities includes some science fiction scenarios. ![]() ![]() It explores different themes and ideas by replaying the last years of a married couple, Kay and Cyril, with different possible outcomes. It’s a philosophical work, and also manages to include the COVID-19 pandemic. Shriver’s new novel deals with old age and death. ![]() ![]() ![]() The book starts in Istanbul, Turkey, where Peri is with her daughter when she is robbed and is subject to an attempted rape. As her night unfolds, bringing with it a series of terrorist attacks, she finds herself lost in memories of the friends she made while studying at Oxford University, and the scandal that tore them apart." Plot Istanbul (1980s–2016) In short, "Set in modern-day Istanbul, this riveting book follows Peri - married, wealthy, and on her way to a party. The book also provides a look into Peri’s teenage love life and its aftermath. For this reason, while studying at Oxford University, she attends a lecture on God given by a professor of the campus, Azur. Peri is confused when it comes to matters of religion. ![]() Her parents are very different as her father never cared much about religion and her mother is a devout Muslim. She has two brothers who are quite dissimilar to her. The book describes the present and past of Peri, who was born and raised in Turkey by her parents. The book was featured on several lists of "best books" in 2018. ![]() It focuses on her categorizing her identity. The book centres on a wealthy, middle-aged housewife, her childhood in Istanbul and her time as a student at Oxford University where she fell in love with a philosophy professor. ![]() In many places, the book was recalled and retitled Confused Quest. Three Daughters of Eve is a 2016 novel by Turkish writer Elif Safak. ![]() ![]() Kelly was abducted by her father for three years and this drama is another source of inspiration in Hopkins’ books. ![]() A third child, Kelly, was the result of her next tumultuous marriage which ended as a result of abuse. Cristal would much later go on to be the inspiration behind Hopkins’ bestselling series about the corruptive force of methamphetamines. Two children, Jason and Cristal, were born by 1976, but her marriage with their father ended shortly after. After going to college to pursue a degree in journalism, Hopkins dropped out to marry and start a family. Unfortunately, there were quite a few speedbumps along the way. With such an influential start, one might assume that Hopkins’ road to the bestseller list might have been an easy one. ![]() Hopkins published her first poem, a haiku, at the age of nine and would discover later in life that her biological mother Toni, was also a lifelong poet. Her mother taught her to value literature and to read often. Her father, a self-made millionaire who made his money in the steel industry, taught her the value of working hard and staying honest. She grew up in Palm Springs and went to private school through eighth grade. ![]() She was adopted by seventy-two-year-old Albert and forty-two-year old Valeria Wagner at birth. An Author Study and Writing Mini Lesson Author Biographyīest-selling, young adult novelist Ellen Hopkins was born in Long Beach, California in 1955. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() He sent Dutt a friend request on Facebook. At this point, her path and that of Rohith Vemula-a 26-year-old Dalit research scholar who stood up against vicious, casteist harassment at the University of Hyderabad-almost crossed. Seeking to learn more about the Dalit cause, Dutt reached out to activists on social media. When she did, her classmates’ response helped her see that she should not be ashamed and should, in fact, feel outraged. ![]() After listening to such discussions for nearly two months, Dutt came to the painful decision to start talking about her own experiences with caste. They did not challenge what was said, but instead showed sympathy for their classmates from minority communities, and even anger on their behalf. What impressed her even more was how the rest of the class reacted to these remarks. She was astounded because, while growing up, attending university and pursuing a career in India she had always had to assiduously hide her caste. There she had an epiphany.ĭutt witnessed her black, Hispanic and gay classmates openly sharing their stories of discrimination and abuse in class discussions. Yashica Dutt moved to New York in 2015 to study journalism at Columbia University. ![]() |