Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Eve Bjørgum Bunting (née Bolton, December 19, 1928 – October 1, 2023), better known as Eve Bunting, was a Northern Irish-born American writer of more than 250 books. Her work covered a broad array of subjects and included fiction and non-fiction books.
The series includes the first book illustrated by Andrew Wyeth, The Brandywine; Marjory Stoneman Douglas' The Everglades: River of Grass which successfully focused public attention on the plight of the Everglades; Paul Horgan's Great River: The Rio Grande in America History, considered the definitive study of the early Southwest; and poet Edgar ...
The Westminster Review also took issue with its style, though in all felt that "the book is an agreeable book." Thoreau had sent a copy to James Anthony Froude, who wrote back, "In your book . . . I see hope for the coming world." [6] An 1853 short story by Herman Melville, "Cock-A-Doodle-Doo!", is interpreted as a satire of Thoreau's book. [7] [8]
Doomsday Book: Connie Willis: A history student is inadvertently sent to 1348 England, at the beginning of the Black Death pandemic. 1995 The Hundred-Light-Year-Diary: Greg Egan: After the invention of a method for sending messages back in time, the history of the future becomes common knowledge, and every person knows their own fate. 1995 From ...
In Sandtown, a Midwestern town, six local boys talk about the stars and the river and places they'd like to go to. Tip mentions Enchanted Bluff, a rock surrounded by a plain in New Mexico, where Native Americans used to live before the Spaniards came along. Once, the men were down the rock hunting and an army party killed them.
The River essay by Dr. Robert J. Snyder at National Film Registry; The River at IMDb; The short film The River (part 1) is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive. (missing part 3) Pare Lorentz; The River; The River review 's channel on YouTube posted by the FDR Presidential Library and Pare Lorentz center
The events of Black Hawk take place immediately after those in The Jararaca, and the character of "Thomas Gordon Mack", an American explorer, is a major character in both stories. Some of the Pedro and Laurenco stories feature minor science fiction elements, such as lost civilizations and ape-human hybrids.
The book received mostly positive reviews from critics. [3] In a positive review, writing for The New York Times, writer Tayari Jones stated that the book was an "insightful, ambitious and moving project" that combined many forms of literary technique including history, literary criticism, journalism, and memoir. Jones concluded that the book ...