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Works by or about Charles E. Carryl at the Internet Archive; Works by Charles E. Carryl at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks) Davy and the Goblin at Children's Books Online; Robinson Crusoe's Story (audio reading) Ted Talk with Natalie Merchant singing "The Sleepy Giant" Charles E. Carryl at Library of Congress, with 15 library catalog records
Aaron Burr, the Third U.S. Vice President, 1801–05 (John Vanderlyn, 1802) Burr portrays the eponymous anti-hero as a fascinating and honorable gentleman, and portrays his contemporary opponents as mortal men; thus, George Washington is an incompetent military officer, a general who lost most of his battles; Thomas Jefferson is a fey, especially dark and pedantic hypocrite who schemed and ...
Charles Burr may refer to: Charles Chauncey Burr (1817–1883), American journalist, author, and publisher Charles E. Burr (1934–2008), American Champion Thoroughbred horse racing jockey
The Wake County school board will decide whether a book is too “demonic” to remain in an elementary school library or is just a piece of satire that’s acceptable for students to read.
Wake has not interpreted the new state law’s wording about supplementary material as applying to school library books. Third graders search for books during the WAKE Up and Read event in Garner ...
Among these are the great books project including the book series Great Books of the Western World, now containing 60 volumes. In 1998 Modern Library, an American publishing company, polled its editorial board to find the best 100 novels of the 20th century: Modern Library 100 Best Novels. These attempts have been criticized for their ...
The Sense of an Ending: Studies in the Theory of Fiction is the most famous work of the literary scholar Frank Kermode. It was first published in 1967 by Oxford University Press . The book originated in the Mary Flexner Lectures, given at Bryn Mawr College in 1965 under the title 'The Long Perspectives'.
The book did not succeed, however, and Keats quarrelled with him, publishing his subsequent books with Taylor & Hessey. [1] Shelley was more constant, although he objected to Ollier's insistence on the alterations which converted Laon and Cythna into The Revolt of Islam. All the subsequent works of Shelley published in his lifetime, except ...