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Fancies Versus Fads is a collection of 30 essays which had been published in the New Witness, the London Mercury, and The Illustrated London News, written by G. K. Chesterton. [2] Described in the author's words as "sketches," "notes," "visions," "idle journalistic jottings" or "frivolous essays," each chapter deals with a different fad.
In 2014, G. K. Chesterton Academy of Chicago, a Catholic high school, opened in Highland Park, Illinois. [ 118 ] A fictionalised G. K. Chesterton is the central character in the Young Chesterton Chronicles , a series of young adult adventure novels by John McNichol, [ 119 ] [ 120 ] and in the G K Chesterton Mystery series , a series of ...
English: Photograph of Hilaire Belloc, G. K. Chesterton and Captain Edward Grindlay. Grindlay deputising for Maurice Baring during the first sketches for Conversation Piece by Sir James Gunn (1893-1964), featuring Chesterton, Belloc and Baring.
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G.K. Chesterton, The Turkey and the Turk; arranged and pictured by Thomas Derrick. [Ditchling: St. Dominic's Press, 1930]. Ambrose Bierce, Battle Sketches. Oxford: printed at the Shakespeare Head Press ... for the First Edition Club, 1930. Ernest Rhys (ed.), Everyman; arranged and pictured by Thomas Derrick. Everyman's library 381.
Four Faultless Felons is a collection of stories by G. K. Chesterton, comprising four mystery novelettes connected by the theme of persons assumed to be criminals, who are paradoxically not so. Published in 1930 in London by Cassell and in New York by Dodd, Mead & Co. , it was the final collection of mystery stories that appeared during ...
The literary critic Ian Fletcher notes that Chesterton's "Saffron Park", with which the novel begins, is a parody of the garden suburb of Bedford Park in Chiswick, with its red brick buildings, "the outburst of a speculative builder" (Jonathan Carr), "faintly tinged with art" (the suburb was considered aesthetic, and was home to many artists ...