Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Brick: A Literary Journal: Poetry [136] "TV Men: Akhmatova (Treatment for a Script)" Colorado Review: Poetry [137] "Father's Old Blue Cardigan" The New Yorker: Poetry [138] "New Rule" The New Yorker: Poetry [139] "Handbook for William (Liber Manualis) by Dhuoda, translated by Carol Neel" 1998 Brick: A Literary Journal: Review [140] "Strange ...
Joanna Clapps Herman is an Italian American writer, editor and poet. She is the author of three books of prose, editor of two anthologies, and her essays and writing have been published in many anthologies and literary journals, including Creative Nonfiction, [1] Inkwell [2] and The Massachusetts Review.
William Howard Gass (July 30, 1924 – December 6, 2017) [1] was an American novelist, short story writer, essayist, critic, and philosophy professor. He wrote three novels, three collections of short stories, a collection of novellas, and seven volumes of essays, three of which won National Book Critics Circle Award prizes and one of which, A Temple of Texts (2006), won the Truman Capote ...
Claude J. Summers (born 1944) is an American literary scholar, and the William E. Stirton Professor Emeritus in the Humanities and Professor Emeritus of English at the University of Michigan-Dearborn. A native of Galvez, Louisiana, he was the third child of Burg Martin Summers and Theo Coy Causey.
The altar is decorated with a heart at its centre, with on either side the tears that the poet affirms have bound it together again ("cemented") after it was broken. Built into this idea is an allusion to Psalm 51:17: "The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit; a broken and a contrite heart", in acknowledgement of the personal sin for which ...
A piece of flesh, translated by Dr. Fereshteh Vaziri Nasab, Dangerous Women Project, Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, the University of Edinburgh, April 2016. It’s only the heart of Tehran , translated by Dr. Fereshteh Vaziri Nasab, video of the poetry recitation, the International Day of the Imprisoned Writer, the Scottish ...
Hugh Brennan Scott Symons (July 13, 1933 – February 23, 2009), known professionally as Scott Symons, was a Canadian writer. [1] He was most noted for his novels Place d'Armes and Civic Square, among the first works of LGBT literature ever published in Canada, [2] as well as a personal life that was often plagued by scandal and interpersonal conflict.
Jennifer Lynn Armentrout was born in West Virginia. [9] She was inspired to become a writer after reading the works of L.J. Smith, including The Vampire Diaries, The Secret Circle Series, The Forbidden Games Series, and myriad others. [1]