Average customer rating:
|
Walks and Rambles on the Delmarva Peninsula: A Guide for Hikers and Naturalists (Walks & Rambles Guides)
Jay Abercrombie
Manufacturer: Countryman Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Walking
| Hiking & Camping
| Outdoors & Nature
| Subjects
| Books
Reference
| Outdoors & Nature
| Subjects
| Books
Guidebooks
| Reference & Tips
| Travel
| Subjects
| Books
Reference
| Reference & Tips
| Travel
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Regions
| United States
| Travel
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Maryland
| States
| United States
| Travel
| Subjects
| Books
North America
| Travel
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Reference
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Sports
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0942440277 |
Average customer rating:
- Wonderful! Perfect mix of Count of Monte Cristo/Mulan/Pride and Prejudice
- Mostly Empowering
- Magnificent
- 11 YEAR OLD BOY
- Exciting!
|
Seven Daughters and Seven Sons
Barbara Cohen , and
Bahija Lovejoy
Manufacturer: HarperTeen
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| Fairy Tales, Folk Tales & Myths
| Literature
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Literature
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
Folklore & Mythology
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Children's Books
| Mythology
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Literature & Fiction
| Teens
| Subjects
| Books
Look Inside Fiction Books
| Trip
| Specialty Stores
| Books
Look Inside Nonfiction Books
| Trip
| Specialty Stores
| Books
Look Inside Teen Books
| Trip
| Specialty Stores
| Books
General
| Fairy Tales, Folk Tales & Myths
| Literature
| Children's Books
| 4-for-3 Books Store
| Stores
| Books
General
| Literature
| Children's Books
| 4-for-3 Books Store
| Stores
| Books
General
| Children's Books
| Mythology
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| 4-for-3 Books Store
| Stores
| Books
Folklore & Mythology
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
| 4-for-3 Books Store
| Stores
| Books
General
| Literature & Fiction
| Teens
| 4-for-3 Books Store
| Stores
| Books
All 4-for-3 Deals
| 4-for-3 Books Store
| Stores
| Books
Similar Items:
-
Shadow Spinner (Jean Karl Books)
-
The Midwife's Apprentice (rpkg) (Trophy Newbery)
-
The Boy of the Painted Cave
-
Li Lun, Lad of Courage (The Newbery Honor Roll)
-
Daughter of the Mountains (Newbery Library, Puffin)
ASIN: 0688135633
Release Date: 1994-10-19 |
Book Description
In an ancient Arab nation, one woman dares to be different.Buran cannot -- Buran will not-sit quietly at home and wait to be married to the man her father chooses. Determined to use her skills and earn a fortune, she instead disguises herself as a boy and travels by camel caravan to a distant city. There, she maintains her masculine disguise and establishes a successful business. The city's crown prince comes often to her shop, and soon Buran finds herself falling in love. But if she reveals to Mahmud that she is a woman, she will lose everything she has worked for.
Customer Reviews:
Wonderful! Perfect mix of Count of Monte Cristo/Mulan/Pride and Prejudice.......2007-05-08
This book (based on an ancient tale) is amazing. While it is on a reading level for younger children, as a 21 year old I feel that a lot of the themes are better understood by those who are a little older. Still, unlike others who have posted before me I don't believe that anything in the books is inappropriate for younger readers. You've got to accept the material in context. This book was wonderful because it has a wonderful revenge plot, a love story, and overall theme of female empowerment. It also gives a look into a completely different culture. If you enjoy The Count of Monte Cristo (this book shows someone getting even in much fewer than 1400 pages), Pride and Prejudice, or the legend of Mulan I PROMISE you will enjoy this book. I picked it up in new condition at a thrift store and couldn't put it down once I started reading. :) I was so glad to discover it, as I'm in a reading slump because I'm caught up with all my favorite authors and definitely searching for something new!
Mostly Empowering.......2007-02-20
Buran is the fourth of seven daughters, living with her parents in Baghdad. She has no brothers, which is unfortunate for her parents. In the days of this story and in the place she lives, girls are not permitted to work for a living and only end up costing their parents more money, as they need to be fed and housed and clothed. Girls also need wedding dowries if they are to be married to the right sorts of men. Buran has always been her father's favorite and although she is a girl, he taught her to read and write and to play chess, and he talks to her seriously about his business affairs.
Buran's uncle is a very rich man, who has seven sons. He enjoys bragging about them to his poor brother, and describes how they will go abroad to different cities, where they will become businessmen who will bring great weath and honor to him. Buran is upset because her father is upset, but she seems to have few options to help him. When her father is suddenly struck ill, though, Buran chooses a desperate solution. She convinces her parents to allow her to disguise herself as a man and go to a distant city to set up a business.
Soon Buran's business is thriving and she is very wealthy, sending home money to her family. She has even become friends with the prince of the city in which she works, and in the evenings she often walks and talks with him, covering much distance and all possible subjects of conversation. But the prince grows suspicious and then discovers her secret. She must leave the city and go home where she will be safe. She can't stop dreaming of her prince, though.
I liked that this story was about a girl who refuses to let anyone tell her she can't achieve what she wants. I liked her relationship with her father, and I especially liked the way she was able to take revenge on her cousins and her uncle. Although this story was very empowering in one way, though, it still ended with the ultimate goal being winning over the prince.
Magnificent.......2007-02-05
One of the most richly romantic and rewarding books I've ever read, this spell-binding and intensely fascinating book blew me away and stayed in my memory long after reading it. Although technically a children's book, it's good enough and well-written enough to be enjoyed just as much by adults. Buran, one of seven daughters in a world in which sons are everything and women are expected to remain veiled behind doors for all their lives, finds herself rebelling against the limitations of her world, and one day sets out disguised as a man to find fame and fortune in the large world and to save her family from destitution. Told in Buran's clear and remarkably unselfpitying voice, this lovely book tells the tale of a strong, fiery woman who finds much more than she expected on her quest-who finds her heart slowly opening.A must for any lover of romance or historical fiction. Strong, well-written plot, richly detailed background, vivid and developed characters, and most of all Buran's own depth and passion make this a book to remember. One of the rare books in my life I put down with a deep sense of satisfaction.
11 YEAR OLD BOY.......2006-09-08
This book was about a young girl who's family was very poor. The family had 7 daughters who couldn't work to bring in money. At that time, boys could work and not girls. Buran, the 4th daughter, dresses up as a boy and goes to a new city to work. She meets a prince and falls in love. He does not know she is a girl. If you don't read the story then you can't find out what happens. This book is great at first but gets a little long in the middle. The ending is extremely romantic. It makes the book okay!
Exciting!.......2006-07-12
My mother had me choose a book to read of school , and of the books we had this sounded like the best. I was a little skeptical at first, but as soon as I started reading, I couldn't put it down! Every time something new happened, I would stop and announce to Mom why this part of the book was exciting, and I just couldn't thank her enough! One night I read from 10:30 to midnight. I just couln't get enough of Buran and her prince, Mahmud. If I had a favorite book before, it was nothing compared to Seven Daughters and Seven Sons. Thank you, Barbara Cohen and Bahija Lovejoy!
Book Description
Biology: AS and A Level meets the requirements of the Cambridge International Examinations (CIE) syllabus in Biology AS and A Level. In one volume, this full colour textbook covers both the AS Level syllabus and the core A Level syllabus. The A Level Optional Modules are covered in the Cambridge Advanced Science books: Mammalian Physiology and Behaviour, Microbiology and Biotechnology, Growth, Development and Reproduction and Application of Genetics. Each chapter starts with a list of learning objectives. Questions throughout the text help reinforce students’ understanding and the past examination questions aid revision. The accessible language ensures that the material is suitable for all students, including those for whom English is not their first language. The book has been written by experienced teachers and lecturers, with senior examining roles.
Average customer rating:
|
Novel Materials in Heterogeneous Catalysis (Acs Symposium Series)
Manufacturer: An American Chemical Society Publication
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Inorganic
| Chemistry
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
Industrial & Technical
| Chemistry
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Physical & Theoretical
| Chemistry
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
Catalysis
| Chemistry
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General & Reference
| Chemistry
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
Inorganic
| Chemistry
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
Physical & Theoretical
| Chemistry
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0841218633 |
Book Description
This new volume highlights the use and availability of new materials in catalysis. It replaces the stereotyped approach to catalysis with one that exploits the opportunity afforded from producing metal particles by novel routes or by supporting them in unusual locations on a carrier material. Among the highlighted topics are zeolite materials, layered structures, clusters, ceramic membranes, metal oxide catalysis, and catalysts used in fuel production.
Average customer rating:
|
Iterative Methods for Simultaneous Inclusion of Polynomial Zeros
M. Petkovic
Manufacturer: Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. K
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Linear
| Algebra
| Pure Mathematics
| Mathematics
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
Mathematical Analysis
| Mathematics
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 3540514856 |
Average customer rating:
|
Iterative Methods for Simultaneous Inclusion of Polynomial Zeros (Lecture Notes in Mathematics)
Miodrag Petkovic
Manufacturer: Springer
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Applied
| Mathematics
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Mathematics
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
Number Systems
| Mathematics
| Science
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Applied
| Mathematics
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
Number Systems
| Mathematics
| Professional Science
| Professional & Technical
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0387514856 |
Customer Reviews:
Ian Myles Slater on: Editing the Master.......2004-12-29
This volume is well designed to convey a huge amount of information in as painless a form as possible. It is a meticulous edition, with commentary, of two manuscripts by J.R.R. Tolkien, representing stages of his thought in the years before his British Academy lecture, "Beowulf: The Monsters and the Critics" (1936; published 1937). That short work has been described as being, although not the beginning of "Beowulf" criticism, the beginning of all *modern* "Beowulf" criticism. It was a revised and condensed version of a longer work, which had already gone through two drafts, presented here as edited by Michael Drout, as the "A" and "B" Texts (designations apparently beloved by medievalists).
The 1936 lecture is the title piece in the 1984 collection of some of Tolkien's essays, with which this book should NOT be confused, and is found in several anthologies of "Beowulf" criticism. It is beautifully expressed, and vigorously argued, but, with its compressed references to old disputes, at times a little hard to follow in detail. I found that careful readings of R.W. Chambers' magisterial "Beowulf: An Introduction to the Study of the Poem" (1921; third edition, 1953) and use of Fr. Klaeber's great edition (1922, 1928, 1936), both referred to by Tolkien, were very helpful, and worth the time (if not essential!) for any student of the poem anyway. But the critical (or uncritical) consensus Tolkien was attacking long ago faded from the scholarly mind. (It persists in third-hand opinions, often repeated by people who should know better.)
This presentation of the work-in-progress which produced "The Monsters and Critics" unfolds the reasoning process and critical disputes behind its crisp rhetoric, and reveals beyond any doubt that Tolkien's disclaimer of detailed knowledge of the secondary literature was the typical medieval-style "modesty trope" some of us suspected anyway. (More than suspected, really, since the 1983 publication of other Tolkien material on "Beowulf," edited by Alan Bliss as "Finn and Hengest.")
Among other issues, the resemblance of Tolkien's reading strategies for "Beowulf" to the then-emerging "New Criticism" is explored, and shown to be coincidental -- beyond sharing in the "spirit of the age," if one cares to take that approach. (I have actually seen a "history of criticism" which dismissed "Monsters and the Critics" as merely applying New Criticism to medieval literature, and offering nothing original -- which suggested, just as a matter of chronology, a lack of qualifications to write such a history.)
There is information, too, on the probable dates and present conditions of the manuscripts, on the emendations and original readings in the sometimes difficult-to-read handwritten pages, and similar matters. And this is tucked away where those who need the information can find it, and those who aren't interested can ignore it. (It might even serve as a student's introduction to physical descriptions of manuscripts, given that Tolkien's text is, mainly, in modern English, and the issues more immediately clear, than in, say, the case of the "Beowulf" manuscript itself, or of the two texts of Malory -- or the A, B, and C versions of "Piers Plowman.")
Annotations on the two versions supply identifications, translate quotations in a large number of languages, and generally clarify Tolkien's statements for non-professionals on the one hand, and for scholars seventy or eighty years removed from the intended readership on the other.
There are interesting sidelights. Some appear as Drout traces the origin of Tolkien's metaphors and allegories in the published lecture. The published version has a now-famous image of the poem as a Tower, made of more ancient stones which have attracted attention away from the view of the Sea at the top. The resemblance to passages in "Lord of the Rings" seemed to suggest he was borrowing an evocative image from his own developing mythology. Michael Drout shows that the passage started as a fable about a rock garden, and provides references to show that it was then the latest fashion in England. Who would have guessed it? Tolkien as landscape gardener, not Tolkien as secondary world-creator! And this doesn't stand alone, although it is the easiest example to describe.
Drout's editing, in my opinion, manages to meet the needs and expectations of two sets of readers -- scholars and students, and curious Tolkien fans -- quite well. A second reading has left me as convinced as the first time through. And I feel qualified to say this, although I am not the ideal reviewer for this book.
That ideal reviewer would be a professional scholar of Old English (Anglo-Saxon) language and literature, who is also fully at home in the history of "Beowulf" criticism, and at the same time a well-informed fan of J.R.R. Tolkien. In other words, someone very much like the actual editor. There are such people; I am hoping to hear from some of them in the academic journals, whether Medievalist, Germanist, or Tolkienian (!).
I am at best a rough approximation of this ideal reviewer. I had courses in Old English, including a "Beowulf" seminar, during which I translated a lot of the major poems (and have the notebooks to prove it), and read through much of the major (and some minor) English-language Beowulf studies through the 1970s. As a Tolkien fan, active mainly in the 1970s, I can point to a set of listings in the 1981 Revised Edition of Richard West's "Tolkien Criticism: An Annotated Checklist." In a fanzine I then edited, I sometimes managed to wear both hats simultaneously, as with a review of "Beowulf: A Dual-Language Edition," by Howell D. Chickering, Jr. Although I haven't kept really current, I have worked my way through Michael Alexander's text edition, with facing-page glosses, for Penguin Classics (1995), and the bi-lingual version (2000) of Seamus Heaney's celebrated translation.
So, for me, getting to see Tolkien's thoughts on the poem in the process of formation was very exciting. And learning precisely which critic or critics he was responding to, was a well-guided tour through unexpected corners of old familiar places. The editor's observations on how Tolkien's thoughts on the work of the Beowulf-poet sometimes reflect his own experiences writing stories and poems that would not appear before the public for years appealed to the fan side. At least the sort of fan who enjoyed the successive volumes of "The History of Middle Earth," even while despairing of mastering the mass of new material.
An incisive analysis of the nature of the poem Beowulf.......2004-01-09
JRR Tolkien's 1936 "Beowulf: The Monsters and the Critics" is generally accorded to be a seminal study of the great Old English poem "Beowulf", focusing attention upon the work itself as a consciously crafted piece of literary creation rather than as merely something of historical or quaint antiquitarian interest. "Beowulf and the Critics" presents two extended lectures from the mid-1930's that were successive steps towards Tolkien's final essay. The greater length of these lectures, perhaps especially "Version B", may provide an easier path to appreciating Tolkien's views of the poems than the more dense "The Monsters and the Critics". Editor Michael Drout provides voluminous explanatory notes about every possibly obscure reference in Tolkien's lectures. In addition, lengthy textual notes are provided so that the interested scholar may trace the process of revision used by Tolkien in writing his lectures.
In his preface Drout mentions the likelihood that there are two natual audiences for this book: Those who read it because the name "Tolkien" is on the cover; and those who read it because "Beowulf" on the cover. (And Drout writes that "the most valued audience of all [is] those who read the book because it says both 'Tolkien' and 'Beowulf' on the cover" -- I'm pleased to count myself in that group.) To be candid, those Tolkien enthusiasts who pick up the volume expecting to find discussions of elves and hobbits will be disappointed. There are few direct references to Tolkien's better-know fictional works (although there is an interesting extended footnote discussing the relationship of Shakespeare's "King Lear" to certain aspects of "The Lord of the Rings.") However, if they press on to fathom Tolkien's concept of what Beowulf's poet was truly saying, then they will be rewarded, I believe, with a deepening of their own appreciation of the world later created by Tolkien. And, of course, they may come to appreciate "Beowulf" in itself.
Students of "Beowulf" will undoubtedly be more directly rewarded by this book that presents insights into the poem (and earlier criticism of that work) not so accessibly set forth in the later, more famous essay. If nothing else, this work presents an opportunity to once again consider the artistic intent of the Beowulf poet, speaking to us over a gulf of over a thousand years, yet illuminating a tradition of thought and conduct that still influences our modern world.
A New Look at Tolkien's Thought.......2003-01-22
This book is a much longer, easier to read version of Tolkien's famous 1936
lecture of Beowulf, called "The Monsters and the Critics." I've read
"Monsters and the Critics," and liked it, but Beowulf and the Critics is
much better, not only because it is easier to follow, but because Tolkien
puts in a lot more interesting material, including two very good poems
about dragons. According to the editor, Tolkien started writing this book
for his students at Oxford, and it shows.
Tolkien argues that Beowulf is a great poem and that the monsters in it (a
troll named Grendel, Grendel's mother, and a dragon) are essential to the
poem's theme. I think he makes his case. He also provides a summary of
the study of Beowulf, from the discovery of the manuscript until he wrote
this book in the 1930's, which is actually much more interesting than it
sounds.
The editor has written a good, clear introduction that explains how all
this scholarly material relates to Tolkien's other work in Old English and
to his Middle-earth books. The notes are unbelievably extensive, and while
I didn't read straight through them all, the things I did look up were
explained very clearly.
While there aren't any Hobbits, dwarves or elves, I still strongly
recommend this book to anyone who really wants to know how Tolkien's mind
works.
Average customer rating:
- Exceptionally well crafted, but impossible to comprehend.
|
Beowulf: The monsters and the critics
J. R. R Tolkien
Manufacturer: Norwood Editions
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Unknown Binding
Old
| British
| World Literature
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
Epic
| Poetry
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0883056550 |
Customer Reviews:
Exceptionally well crafted, but impossible to comprehend........2007-09-18
I read this criticism directly after reading the poem "Beowulf" itself. Finding "Beowulf" an enjoyable story, I thought I might take delight in hearing what a world famous author thought of the text.
I thought wrong.
Very simply put, this selection is written intensely. It is an excellent piece of prose, but has several flaws. The first and perhaps most critical flaw is the fact that Tolkein constantly contradicts each point he just reiterated. Everything time he stands fit to make a decent objection in the way "Beowulf" has previously been treated, he goes back on it and defends the opposite point of view. This makes it very difficult to understand, and for a moment, the reader actually loses sight of his argument. It is very hard to keep track of what he is actually trying to convey, which causes the lecture to be uneffective.
This piece was written as a reaction to those analysts who merely credited "Beowulf" for its historical value and not at all for its literary content as a poem. Tolkein does manage to convey this point, but it takes a staggering 30 pages of dense prose in order to conceive the idea. His point does make sense, and he supports it with his own thoughts and opinions, but it seems to lack conclusive fact. He gets caught up in the moment, and begins to compose his true feelings on the matter, creating a whirlwind of extended criticism that is filled with personal emotion rather than conclusive fact. The only reason the reader is given for "Beowulf" to be considered a literary masterpiece is that previous critics have looked at it the wrong way. But shouldn't that be obvious? Does it really need 30 pages behind it in order to thorougly convince the reader of its truth?
Overall, I found this piece long, tedious, and boring. It was a good thing in its time, shining a new light on the story of "Beowulf" that is still cherished today. But it has outlived its time, and is really no longer relevant for today's culture. We now know "Beowulf" is of literary quality, and we needn't look back on that past in order to challenge our doubt.
Average customer rating:
- Painstaking difficult to get through, but conveys a good point.
- Meet the Real J.R.R.
|
Beowulf: The Monster and the Critics
J. R. R. Tolkien
Manufacturer: Longwood Pr Ltd
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| Literature & Fiction
| Subjects
| Books
| Classics
| Comic
| Contemporary
| Literary
ASIN: 0856720038 |
Customer Reviews:
Painstaking difficult to get through, but conveys a good point........2007-09-18
I read this criticism directly after reading the poem "Beowulf" itself. Finding "Beowulf" an enjoyable story, I thought I might take delight in hearing what a world famous author thought of the text.
I thought wrong.
Very simply put, this selection is written intensely. It is an excellent piece of prose, but has several flaws. The first and perhaps most critical flaw is the fact that Tolkein constantly contradicts each point he just reiterated. Everything time he stands fit to make a decent objection in the way "Beowulf" has previously been treated, he goes back on it and defends the opposite point of view. This makes it very difficult to understand, and for a moment, the reader actually loses sight of his argument. It is very hard to keep track of what he is actually trying to convey, which causes the lecture to be uneffective.
This piece was written as a reaction to those analysts who merely credited "Beowulf" for its historical value and not at all for its literary content as a poem. Tolkein does manage to convey this point, but it takes a staggering 30 pages of dense prose in order to conceive the idea. His point does make sense, and he supports it with his own thoughts and opinions, but it seems to lack conclusive fact. He gets caught up in the moment, and begins to compose his true feelings on the matter, creating a whirlwind of extended criticism that is filled with personal emotion rather than conclusive fact. The only reason the reader is given for "Beowulf" to be considered a literary masterpiece is that previous critics have looked at it the wrong way. But shouldn't that be obvious? Does it really need 30 pages behind it in order to thorougly convince the reader of its truth?
Overall, I found this piece long, tedious, and boring. It was a good thing in its time, shining a new light on the story of "Beowulf" that is still cherished today. But it has outlived its time, and is really no longer relevant for today's culture. We now know "Beowulf" is of literary quality, and we needn't look back on that past in order to challenge our doubt.
Meet the Real J.R.R........2002-03-29
With all due respect to Carpenter's biographies, Shippey's standard studies, Bliss's edition of Tolkien's notes on the Finnsburgh fragment and Tolkien's own journal articles from the `20s (e.g. "The Devil's Coach-Horses"), this is Tolkien as scholar at his best and most accessibly readable. All but one of these essays were presented as (variously commissioned) lectures over the span of some 35 years; and some of them had appeared in print before their selection for this volume.
The initially hilarious title piece (e.g., "the jabberwocks of antiquarian research burbling in the tulgy wood of conjecture") has been recognized in the `90s as having inaugurated modern Beowulf criticism. The one non-lecture included features 19 lines from Tolkien's unfinished translation of that sternest of works, which remain the only close modern-English analogue of its line-by-line quality. The Gawain lecture provides a vital link between Tolkien & Gordon's revival edition in the `20s and Tolkien's metrical translation posthumously published half a century later. The recondite linguistic technicality of "English and Welsh" is well worth the breathtaking overview of European literary history updated from his Beowulf lecture 20 years earlier. His Valedictory Address confirms in no uncertain terms Carpenter's portrayal of him as a "culture warrior" long before semiotics and deconstruction became buzzwords in literary academia.
Tolkien's legendarium is a repository of his critical framework on medieval literature. His having acceded to professional status precisely concurrent with the arriving maturity of modern comparative philology, Tolkien brought a literary sensibility to the minutiae of lexicography, which resulted in one correction after another of egregious errors committed by relatively underinformed and thus necessarily less imaginative predecessors in the field--including his own errors, as the decades continued. Every hobbit buff should know that Tolkien was a breakthrough scholar of medieval lit, who retaught the experts how to read; because he really wasn't making anything up-all of his fictional narrative materials were rigorously derived from his superencyclopedic knowledge of pre- and early Renaissance writings across the scope of European languages.
Which is as good as to say that the charm, the warmth and the magic are as fully present in his unjustly obscure nonfictions as they are in his justly renowned imaginary sagas. If only there could be an edition that would just collect everything-"Glossary of the Huddersfield District" and all. His largely illegible 1934 Chaucer lecture excluded from this volume is not only a landmark in textual criticism of the Canterbury Tales (keyphrase "dialect humor") but a crucial sidelight on his practice as a calligrapher as well.
Books:
- Bats: Biology, Behavior and Folklore
- Biological Consequences of Global Climate Change (The Global Change)
- Biorhythms: How to Live With Your Life Cycles
- Boardwalk Empire: The Birth, High Times, and Corruption of Atlantic City
- Butterflies: Ecology and Evolution Taking Flight
- Cheating Monkeys and Citizen Bees: The Nature of Cooperation in Animals and Humans
- Collaborative Planning for Wetlands and Wildlife: Issues And Examples
- Coming Through the Swamp: The Nature Writings of Gene Stratton Porter
- Costa Rica: Mapa-guia de la naturaleza
- Daniel Smiley of Mohonk: A Naturalist's Life
Books Index
Books Home
Recommended Books
- How Clean Is Your House
- History: Fiction or Science
- Marjorie Morningstar
- Lazarus Rising
- Landscape Painting Inside and Out: Capture the Vitality of Outdoor Painting in Your Studio With Oils
- Intermolecular and Surface Forces, Second Edition: With Applications to Colloidal and Biological Sys
- History: Fiction or Science
- Covers & Jackets!: What the Best Dressed Books & Magazines Are Wearing
- Favorite Garden Flowers Postcards: 24 Full-Color Cards
- The Natural History of WILD SHRUBS AND VINES Eastern and Central North America