books tagged “American literature” (american literature / American Literature)

books tagged “American literature”


Find signed collectible books by ''
  • Schwartz, Delmore: In Dreams Begin Responsibilities
    In Dreams Begin Responsibilities
    by Delmore Schwartz, James Atlas, Irving Howe
    ISBN 0811206807 (0-8112-0680-7)
    Softcover, New Directions Publishing Corporation

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'In Dreams Begin Responsibilities'
  • Atlas, James: In Dreams Begin Responsibilities and Other Stories
  • James, Henry: James: Literary Criticism Vol. 2 : European Writers and Prefaces to the New York Edition
  • Jennie Gerhardt
    by Theodore Dreiser
    ISBN 076619745X (0-7661-9745-X)
    Softcover, Kessinger Pub Co

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Jennie Gerhardt'
    Book summary:

    Selected by Choice magazine as an Outstanding Academic Title

    "She was horrified, stunned, like a bird in the grasp of a cat, but somehow through it all was something terrific, inviting, urging, was speaking to her. He released her from his grasp. 'We won't do any more of this here, but you belong to me'."

    Jennie Gerhardt was Theodore Dreiser's second novel and his first commercial success. It is regarded as one of his three best novels, along with Sister Carrie and An American Tragedy. This edition presents the text as it was originally written, restoring the novel to its complete form.

    [via]

  • Bach, Richard: Jonathan Livingston Seagull
  • The Joy Luck Club
    by Amy Tan
    ISBN 0804106304 (0-8041-0630-4)
    Softcover, Random House Publishing Group

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Joy Luck Club'
    Book summary:

    Four mothers, four daughters, four families whose histories shift with the four winds depending on who's "saying" the stories. In 1949 four Chinese women, recent immigrants to San Francisco, begin meeting to eat dim sum, play mahjong, and talk. United in shared unspeakable loss and hope, they call themselves the Joy Luck Club. Rather than sink into tragedy, they choose to gather to raise their spirits and money. "To despair was to wish back for something already lost. Or to prolong what was already unbearable." Forty years later the stories and history continue.

    With wit and sensitivity, Amy Tan examines the sometimes painful, often tender, and always deep connection between mothers and daughters. As each woman reveals her secrets, trying to unravel the truth about her life, the strings become more tangled, more entwined. Mothers boast or despair over daughters, and daughters roll their eyes even as they feel the inextricable tightening of their matriarchal ties. Tan is an astute storyteller, enticing readers to immerse themselves into these lives of complexity and mystery. [via]

  • Killer Angels
    by Michael Shaara
    ISBN 0808598104 (0-8085-9810-4)
    Hardcover, Bt Bound

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Killer Angels'
    Book summary:

    This novel reveals more about the Battle of Gettysburg than any piece of learned nonfiction on the same subject. Michael Shaara's account of the three most important days of the Civil War features deft characterizations of all of the main actors, including Lee, Longstreet, Pickett, Buford, and Hancock. The most inspiring figure in the book, however, is Col. Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, whose 20th Maine regiment of volunteers held the Union's left flank on the second day of the battle. This unit's bravery at Little Round Top helped turned the tide of the war against the rebels. There are also plenty of maps, which convey a complete sense of what happened July 1-3, 1863. Reading about the past is rarely so much fun as on these pages. [via]

  • The Kitchen God's Wife
    by Amy Tan
    ISBN 080410753X (0-8041-0753-X)
    Softcover, Random House Publishing Group

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Kitchen God's Wife'
    Book summary:

    "Tan is one of the prime storytellers writing fiction today."
    NEWSWEEK
    Winnie and Helen have kept each other's worst secrets for more than fifty years. Now, because she believes she is dying, Helen wants to expose everything. And Winnie angrily determines that she must be the one to tell her daughter, Pearl, about the past--including the terible truth even Helen does not know. And so begins Winnie's story of her life on a small island outside Shanghai in the 1920s, and other places in China during World War II, and traces the happy and desperate events tha led to Winnie's coming to America in 1949.
    "The kind of novel that can be read and reread with enormous pleasure."
    CHICAGO TRIBUNE [via]

  • Percy, Walker: Lancelot
    Lancelot
    by Walker Percy
    ISBN 0804103801 (0-8041-0380-1)
    Softcover, Ballantine Books

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Lancelot'
  • Fiedler, Leslie: Love and Death in the American Novel
  • Love Medicine
    by Louise Erdrich
    ISBN 080502798X (0-8050-2798-X)
    Hardcover, Henry Holt & Co

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Love Medicine'
    Book summary:

    Expanded to include never-before-published chapters, this collection of interrelated stories of love, betrayal, mystery, and madness concerns men and woman bound by blood, legend, tradition, and need. 10,000 first printing. [via]

  • The March
    by E.L. Doctorow
    ISBN 0812976150 (0-8129-7615-0)
    Softcover, Random House Inc

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The March'
    Book summary:

    As the Civil War was moving toward its inevitable conclusion, General William Tecumseh Sherman marched 60,000 Union troops through Georgia and the Carolinas, leaving a 60-mile-wide trail of death, destruction, looting, thievery and chaos. In The March, E.L. Doctorow has put his unique stamp on these events by staying close to historical fact, naming real people and places and then imagining the rest, as he did in Ragtime.

    Recently, the Civil War has been the subject of novels by Howard Bahr, Michael Shaara, Charles Frazier, and Robert Hicks, to name a few. Its perennial appeal is due not only to the fact that it was fought on our own soil, but also that it captures perfectly our long-time and ongoing ambivalence about race. Doctorow examines this question extensively, chronicling the dislocation of both southern whites and Negroes as Sherman burned and destroyed all that they had ever known. Sherman is a well-drawn character, pictured as a crazy tactical genius pitted against his West Point counterparts. Doctorow creates a context for the march: "The brutal romance of war was still possible in the taking of spoils. Each town the army overran was a prize... There was something undeniably classical about it, for how else did the armies of Greece and Rome supply themselves?"

    The characters depicted on the march are those people high and low, white and black, whose lives are forever changed by war: Pearl, the newly free daughter of a white plantation owner and one of his slaves, Colonel Sartorius, a competent, remote, almost robotic surgeon; several officers, both Union and Confederate; two soldiers, Arly and Will, who provide comic relief in the manner of Shakespeare's fools until, suddenly, their roles are not funny anymore.

    Doctorow has captured the madness of war in his description of the condition of a dispossessed Southern white woman: "What was clear at this moment was that Mattie Jameson's mental state befitted the situation in which she found herself. The world at war had risen to her affliction and made it indistinguishable." And later, " This was not war as adventure, nor war for a solemn cause, it was war at its purest, a mindless mass rage severed from any cause, ideal, or moral principle."

    As we have come to expect, Doctorow puts the reader in the picture; never more so than in recalling "The March" and letting us see it as a cautionary tale for our times. --Valerie Ryan [via]

  • Melville
    by Herman Melville, Harrison Hayford
    ISBN 0940450240 (0-940450-24-0)
    Hardcover, Penguin Group USA

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Melville'
    Book summary:

    Herman Melville's dark and brilliant late works contain some of his most powerful writing. After "Moby-Dick" he turned from the high seas to record his keen, bleak vision of life at home in America. "Pierre," "Israel Potter," and "The Confidence-Man," satirical dissections of moral breakdown and social hypocrisy, anticipate modernist fiction with their black humor and formal experimentation. With them here are "The Piazza Tales"--including "Bartelby the Scrivener," "The Encantadas," and "Benito Cereno"--and the haunting, posthumously published masterpiece, "Billy Budd, Sailor." Rounding out this third volume of Melville's complete prose in the Library of America are many pieces rarely collected, including magazine stories, comic sketches, and reviews of Nathaniel Hawthorne, Francis Parkman, and James Fenimore Cooper. [via]

  • McCullers, Carson: The Member of the Wedding
    The Member of the Wedding
    by Carson McCullers
    ISBN 0877207569 (0-87720-756-9)
    Softcover, Amsco School Pubns Inc

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Member of the Wedding'
    Book summary:

    Twelve-year-old Frankie Adams, longing at once for escape and belonging, takes her role as "member of the wedding" to mean that when her older brother marries she will join the happy couple in their new life together. But Frankie is unlucky in love; her mother is dead, and Frankie narrowly escapes being raped by a drunken soldier during a farewell tour of the town. Worst of all, "member of the wedding" doesn't mean what she thinks. A gorgeous, brief coming-of-age novel. [via]

  • Bloom, Harold: The Member of the Wedding
  • The Member of the Wedding: A Play
    by Carson McCullers
    ISBN 0811216551 (0-8112-1655-1)
    Softcover, New Directions

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Member of the Wedding: A Play'
    Book summary:

    Winner of the New York Drama Critics Circle Award: At the suggestion of her friend Tennessee Williams, Southern writer Carson McCullers adapted her novella The Member of the Wedding into a touching and poignant play that was an enormous success when it opened on Broadway in 1950, and has long since become a classic of the American theater.

    With compassion, veracity and wit, in The Member of the Wedding Carson McCullers depicts the intrinsically enmeshed lives of whites and blacks in the American South. Julie Harris became a star playing the awkward, twelve-year-old tomboy Frankie Adams, who falls deeply in love with her older brother and his fiance. Exhilarated by her naive conviction that being a member of their wedding means she will become what she calls the "we of me," Frankie is devastated when she learns she is not invited on the honeymoon. Bernice Sadie Brown, who has experienced a lifetime of love and loss, is a surrogate mother for Frankie. Portrayed on stage and in the film versions by the great Ethel Waters, Bernice is an epic character, fiercely loyal, down-to-earth, and centered by deep faith. [via]

  • The Minotaur Takes a Cigarette Break
    by Steven Sherrill
    ISBN 0895871971 (0-89587-197-1)
    Hardcover, John F Blair Pub

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Minotaur Takes a Cigarette Break'
    Book summary:

    In this debut novel, Steven Sherrill follows the minotaur--a mythological creature with the body of a man and the head of a bull--through two weeks of his life as a cook at a steakhouse in the contemporary American South. Once a devourer of virgins and lads, time and circumstances have diminished his power considerably.

    Through the Minotaur's experiences, Sherrill spotlights the alienation and loneliness that are part of our society. During the two-week period we follow the Minotaur, we meet memorable characters along the way from his co-workers at the restaurant to his neighbors at the trailer park. Sherrill also manages to make mundane doings--kitchen work, car repair, personal grooming--interesting and even exciting at times. By the end of the novel, the reader is pulling for the Minotaur to find the brief moment of happiness that he has sought for so many centuries. [via]

  • Norris, Frank: Octopus
  • Welty, Eudora: One Writer's Beginnings
    One Writer's Beginnings
    by Eudora Welty
    ISBN 0816139148 (0-8161-3914-8)
    Hardcover, Thorndike Pr

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'One Writer's Beginnings'
  • The Outsiders
    by S. E. Hinton, Christopher Sergel
    ISBN 0871292777 (0-87129-277-7)
    Softcover, Dramatic Pub Co

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Outsiders'
    Book summary:

    According to Ponyboy, there are two kinds of people in the world: greasers and socs. A soc (short for "social") has money, can get away with just about anything, and has an attitude longer than a limousine. A greaser, on the other hand, always lives on the outside and needs to watch his back. Ponyboy is a greaser, and he's always been proud of it, even willing to rumble against a gang of socs for the sake of his fellow greasers--until one terrible night when his friend Johnny kills a soc. The murder gets under Ponyboy's skin, causing his bifurcated world to crumble and teaching him that pain feels the same whether a soc or a greaser. This classic, written by S. E. Hinton when she was 16 years old, is as profound today as it was when it was first published in 1967. [via]

  • Burroughs, William S.: The Place of Dead Roads
    The Place of Dead Roads
    by William S. Burroughs
    ISBN 0805015418 (0-8050-1541-8)
    Softcover, Holt & Company, Henry

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Place of Dead Roads'
    Book summary:

    A good old-fashioned shoot-out in the American West of the frontier days serves as the springboard for this hyperkinetic adventure in which gunslingers lead by Kim Carson fight for galactic freedom.AUTHORBIO: William S. Burroughs was born in St. Louis in 1914.His many other works include NAKED LUNCH and JUNKY.Described by Norman Mailer as one of Americas few writers genuinely possessed by genius, he died in 1997.

    [via]

  • Plexus (0802151795) by Miller, Henry
    Plexus
    by Henry Miller
    ISBN 0802151795 (0-8021-5179-5)
    Softcover, Grove Pr

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Plexus'
  • Princess Bride
    by William Goldman
    ISBN 0808586998 (0-8085-8699-8)
    Hardcover, Bt Bound

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Princess Bride'
    Book summary:

    The Princess Bride is a true fantasy classic. William Goldman describes it as a "good parts version" of "S. Morgenstern's Classic Tale of True Love and High Adventure." Morgenstern's original was filled with details of Florinese history, court etiquette, and Mrs. Morgenstern's mostly complimentary views of the text. Much admired by academics, the "Classic Tale" nonetheless obscured what Mr. Goldman feels is a story that has everything: "Fencing. Fighting. Torture. Poison. True love. Hate. Revenge. Giants. Hunters. Bad men. Good men. Beautifulest ladies. Snakes. Spiders. Beasts of all natures and descriptions. Pain. Death. Brave men. Coward men. Strongest men. Chases. Escapes. Lies. Truths. Passion. Miracles."

    Goldman frames the fairy tale with an "autobiographical" story: his father, who came from Florin, abridged the book as he read it to his son. Now, Goldman is publishing an abridged version, interspersed with comments on the parts he cut out.

    Is The Princess Bride a critique of classics like Ivanhoe and The Three Musketeers, that smother a ripping yarn under elaborate prose? A wry look at the differences between fairy tales and real life? Simply a funny, frenetic adventure? No matter how you read it, you'll put it on your "keeper" shelf. --Nona Vero [via]

  • Cather, Willa: The Professor's House
    The Professor's House
    by Willa Cather
    ISBN 0766198200 (0-7661-9820-0)
    Softcover, Kessinger Pub Co

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Professor's House'
    Book summary:

    The scholarly edition of The Professor's House incorporates into its textual analysis findings from a recently discovered and significantly reworked draft of the novel. Willa Cather's perennial claims that there were no extant drafts make this discovery especially important to Cather scholars.

    Written in 1925, when she was fifty-two years old, The Professor's House was Cather's seventh novel. Cather explained that in this novel she had attempted two structural experiments. The first experiment she took from the practice of early French and Spanish novelists of inserting a "nouvelle into the roman," hence the first-person "Tom Outland's Story" wedged between the other two parts of the novel. Second, she compared the novel's structure to a sonata form in music, with the center section in significant contrast to the surrounding sections

    Behind the understated prose relating the story of Professor Godfrey St. Peter, who, despite his success, experiences at midcareer a profound disappointment with life, is the fierce account of how he decides to continue living despite those disappointments. Tom Outland's thrilling tale of a long-lost civilization is both an ironic contrast to the professor's staid outer life and a mirror of the imaginative interior life he experiences in his attic study.

    [via]

  • Quicksand and Passing
    by Nella Larsen
    ISBN 0813511704 (0-8135-1170-4)
    Softcover, Rutgers Univ Pr

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Quicksand and Passing'
    Book summary:

    Nella Larsen's novels Quicksand (1928) and Passing (1929) document the historical realities of Harlem in the 1920s and shed a bright light on the social world of the black bourgeoisie. The novels' greatest appeal and achievement, however, is not sociological, but psychological. As noted in the editor's comprehensive introduction, Larsen takes the theme of psychic dualism, so popular in Harlem Renaissance fiction, to a higher and more complex level, displaying a sophisticated understanding and penetrating analysis of black female psychology.


    [via]

  • Melville, Herman: Redburn
    Redburn
    by Herman Melville
    ISBN 0810100169 (0-8101-0016-9)
    Softcover, Northwestern Univ Pr

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Redburn'
  • Melville, Herman: Redburn, His First Voyage: Being the Sailor-Boy Confessions and Reminiscences of the Son-Of-A-Gentleman, in the Merchant Service
  • Rendezvous at the Straits: Fur Trade And Military Activities at Fort de Buade And Fort Michilimackinac, 1669v1781
    by Timothy J. Kent
    ISBN 0965723046 (0-9657230-4-6)
    Hardcover, Silver Fox Enterprises

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Rendezvous at the Straits: Fur Trade And Military Activities at Fort de Buade And Fort Michilimackinac, 1669v1781'
    Book summary:

    First published in 1959, Shirley Jackson's The Haunting of Hill House has been hailed as a perfect work of unnerving terror. It is the story of four seekers who arrive at a notoriously unfriendly pile called Hill House: Dr. Montague, an occult scholar looking for solid evidence of a "haunting"; Theodora, his lighthearted assistant; Eleanor, a friendless, fragile young woman well acquainted with poltergeists; and Luke, the future heir of Hill House. At first, their stay seems destined to be merely a spooky encounter with inexplicable phenomena. But Hill House is gathering its powers-and soon it will choose one of them to make its own. [via]

    More editions of Rendezvous at the Straits: Fur Trade And Military Activities at Fort de Buade And Fort Michilimackinac, 1669v1781:

  • James, Henry: The Sacred Fount
    The Sacred Fount
    by Henry James
    ISBN 0811212793 (0-8112-1279-3)
    Softcover, New Directions

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Sacred Fount'
  • Dick, Philip K.: A Scanner Darkly
    A Scanner Darkly
    by Philip K. Dick
    ISBN 0879979232 (0-87997-923-2)
    Softcover, New Amer Library

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'A Scanner Darkly'
  • Whitman, Walt: Selected Poems by Walt Whitman
    Selected Poems by Walt Whitman
    by Walt Whitman, Lisa Lipkin
    ISBN 0785812830 (0-7858-1283-0)
    Hardcover, Book Sales

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Selected Poems by Walt Whitman'
  • Shadows On The Rock
    by Willa Cather, Frederick M. Link, David Stouck, John J. Murphy
    ISBN 0803215320 (0-8032-1532-0)
    Hardcover, Univ of Nebraska Pr

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Shadows On The Rock'
    Book summary:

    Shadows on the Rock, written after Willa Cather discovered Quebec City during an unplanned stay in 1928, is the second of her "Catholic" historical novels and reflects her fascination with finding a little piece of France in eastern Canada. Set in the late seventeenth century, the novel centers on the activities of the widowed apothecary Euclide Auclair and his young daughter, Cecile. To Auclair's house and shop come trappers, missionaries, craftsmen, the indigentthose seeking cures, a taste of France, or liberation from the corruptions caused there by the excesses of the French court. Set against these fictional characters, historical personages such as Bishop Laval, Count Frontenac, and others contend in the political life of the vast colony.
     
    This edition, which is approved by the Modern Language Association, will be of special importance to Cather scholars. Not only is Cather's mining of historical sources explored in extensive explanatory notes, but a recently discovered reworked draft of the novel has been incorporated into the textual analysis. There is also a generous illustration section with maps of the setting.
    [via]

  • Chabon, Michael: Summerland: Library Edition
    Summerland: Library Edition
    by Michael Chabon
    ISBN 0786816155 (0-7868-1615-5)
    Softcover, Disney Pr

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Summerland: Library Edition'
    Book summary:

    In Summerland, his first novel for young readers, Pulitzer Prize-winning author Michael Chabon attempts an American Narnia. Inspired by Lewis and Tolkien, he's created his own magical landscape on which to paint a sweeping fantasy quest, but mixes the same ingredients--folklore and new inventions--in a distinctively American way.

    The plot is simple and pure, but takes a long time to tell. The setting is Clam Island, Washington, specifically the area on the western tip of the island known as the Summerlands, which enjoys zero rainfall and yearlong fine weather. Ethan Feld, a self-described really bad ball player, is recruited by a 100-year-old scout called Mr. Chiron "Ringfinger" Brown. Ethan is needed to help the ferishers, essentially fairies, to save their world from eradication. On the great infinite tree of worlds, Summerland is on the boundary between two such worlds, and a particularly destructive fairy called Coyote and his band of warriors are nearby and threatening to destroy everything.

    Heroes are desperately needed to counter this threat, and their journey involves a lot of baseball, but also encounters with giants, bat-winged goblins, sea monsters, and assorted cunning magic. The novel features an ensemble cast of equal parts that shine and fade in turn, and yet the undoubtedly fine writing fails to mask the enormity and complexities of the world in which they travel, and the bad guys getting their comeuppance always seems so far away. Readers need to savor every word in Summerland to extract the best flavors from it. (Ages 10 and older.) --John McLay, Amazon.co.uk [via]

  • Tales and Sketches
    by Nathaniel Hawthorne, Roy Harvey Pearce
    ISBN 0940450038 (0-940450-03-8)
    Hardcover, Library of America

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Tales and Sketches'
    Book summary:

    "Tales and Sketches" offers what no reader has ever been able to find--an authoritative edition of Hawthorne's complete stories in a single comprehensive volume. Here is everything from his three collections, "Twice-told Tales," "Mosses from an Old Manse," "The Snow-Image, and Other Twice-told Tales," his two books of stories for children based on classical myths, "A Wonder Book for Girls and Boys" and "Tanglewood Tales," and sixteen uncollected stories. The unique arrangement by order of publication charts Hawthorne's evolution into one of the most powerful and experimental writers of American fiction. From familiar but always surprising works like "Young Goodman Brown," to masterly fables like "My Kinsman, Major Molineux," to lesser known gems like "The Wives of the Dead," these haunting stories of love and guilt, of duty and licence, of the fateful ties of family and nation, show why Hawthorne is a great artist, and an astonishingly contemporary one. [via]

  • Tanglewood Tales
    by Nathaniel Hawthorne
    ISBN 0812565150 (0-8125-6515-0)
    Softcover, Tor Books

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Tanglewood Tales'
    Book summary:

    Tor Classics are affordably-priced editions designed to attract the young reader. Original dynamic cover art enthusiastically represents the excitement of each story. Appropriate "reader friendly" type sizes have been chosen for each titleoffering clear, accurate, and readable text. All editions are complete and unabridged, and feature Introductions and Afterwords.

    This edition of Tanglewood Tales includes a Foreword, Biographical Note, and Afterword from the Publisher.

    Set sail with the greatest heroes of all time. Take up arms as they battle terrifying monsters. Be thrilled as they match wits with the gods. Enter a world of magic and intrigue and adventure in these exciting retellings of the greatest legends of Greek mythology.

    Theseus. With the help of Ariadne he battles the ferocious Minotaur-a hulking beast who is half-man and half-bull!

    Circe. She is a beguiling enchantress who charms Odysseus with an intoxicating potion that turns men into pigs! Luckily, Odysseus has a few tricks up his sleeve.

    Cadmus. He sets off to rescue his sister Europa, who has been abducted by a bull. But the bull is none other than mighty Zeus himself!

    Jason. After many adventures he and his Argonauts find the Golden Fleece-tucked away in a sacred grove and guarded by a ferocious dragon!

    Here are the most exciting tales of the ancient Greeks, written especially for young people by one of our greatest authors.
    [via]

  • Morrison, Toni: Tar Baby
    Tar Baby
    by Toni Morrison
    ISBN 0816132933 (0-8161-3293-3)
    Hardcover, G K Hall & Co

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Tar Baby'
  • Olsen, Tillie: Tell Me a Riddle
    Tell Me a Riddle
    by Tillie Olsen, Deborah Silverton Rosenfelt
    ISBN 081352136X (0-8135-2136-X)
    Hardcover, Rutgers Univ Pr

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Tell Me a Riddle'
  • The Thin Man
    by Dashiell Hammett
    ISBN 0893403296 (0-89340-329-6)
    Softcover, John Curley & Assoc

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Thin Man'
    Book summary:

    The Thin Man, Dashiell Hammett's classic tale of murder in Manhattan, became the popular movie series with William Powell and Myrna Loy, and both the movies and the novel continue to captivate new generations of fans.

    Nick and Nora Charles, accompanied by their schnauzer, Asta, are lounging in their suite at the Normandie in New York City for the Christmas holiday, enjoying the prerogatives of wealth: meals delivered at any hour, theater openings, taxi rides at dawn, rubbing elbows with the gangster element in speakeasies. They should be annoyingly affected, but they charm. Mad about each other, sardonic, observant, kind to those in need, and cool in a fight, Nick and Nora are graceful together, and their home life provides a sanctuary from the rough world of gangsters, hoodlums, and police investigations into which Nick is immediately plunged.

    A lawyer-friend asks Nick to help find a killer and reintroduces him to the family of Richard Wynant, a more-than-eccentric inventor who disappeared from society 10 years before. His former wife, the lush and manipulative Mimi, has remarried a European fortune hunter who turns out to be a vindictive former associate of her first husband and is bent on the ruin of Wynant's family fortune. Wynant's children, Dorothy and Gilbert, seem to have inherited the family aversion to straight talk. Dorothy, who has matured into a beautiful young woman, has a crush on Nick, and so, in a hero-worshipping way, does mama's boy Gilbert. Nick and Nora respond kindly to their neediness as Nick tries to make sense of misinformation, false identities, far-fetched alibis, and, at the center of the confusion, the mystery of The Thin Man, Richard Wynant. Is he mad? Is he a killer? Or is he really an eccentric inventor protecting his discovery from intellectual theft?

    The dialogue is spare, the locales lively, and Nick, the narrator, shows us the players as they are, while giving away little of his own thoughts. No one is telling the whole truth, but Nick remains mostly patient as he doggedly tries to backtrack the lies. Hammett's New York is a cross between Damon Runyon and Scott Fitzgerald--more glamorous than real, but compelling when visited in the company of these two charmers. The lives of the rich and famous don't get any better than this! --Barbara Schlieper [via]

  • Hawthorne, Nathaniel: Twice-Told Tales
    Twice-Told Tales
    by Nathaniel Hawthorne
    ISBN 0814202020 (0-8142-0202-0)
    Hardcover, Ohio State Univ Pr

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'Twice-Told Tales'
    Book summary:

    Twice-Told Tales is a short story collection in two volumes by Nathaniel Hawthorne first published in the spring of 1837. The stories had all been previously published in magazines and annuals, hence the name. -- Excerpted from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Contents: The Gray Champion Sunday At Home The Wedding Knell The Minister's Black Veil The Maypole Of Merry Mount The Gentle Boy Mr. Higginbotham's Catastrophe Little Annie's Ramble Wakefield A Rill From The Town-pump The Great CarbuncleThe Prophetic PicturesDavid SwanSights From A Steeple The Hollow Of The Three Hills The Toll-Gatherer's DayThe Vision of The Fountain Fancy's Show-boxDr. Heidegger's Experiment Legends of The Province House:I Howe's Masquerade II Edward Randolph's Portrait III Lady Eleanore's Mantle IV Old Esther Dudley The Haunted Mind The Village UncleThe Ambitious Guest The Sister-Years Snowflakes The Seven Vagabonds The White Old Maid Peter Goldthwaite's Treasure Chippings With A Chisel The Shaker Bridal Night-SketchesEndicott And The Red Cross The Lily's QuestFootprints On The Seashore Edward Fane's Rosebud The Threefold Destiny More e-Books from MobileReference - Best Books. Best Price. Best Search and Navigation (TM) All fiction books are only $0.99. All collections are only $5.99Designed for optimal navigation on Kindle and other electronic devices Search for any title: enter mobi (shortened MobileReference) and a keyword; for example: mobi ShakespeareTo view all books, click on the MobileReference link next to a book title Literary Classics: Over 10,000 complete works by Shakespeare, Jane Austen, Mark Twain, Conan Doyle, Jules Verne, Dickens, Tolstoy, and other authors. All books feature hyperlinked table of contents, footnotes, and author biography. Books are also available as collections, organized by an author. Collections simplify book access through categorical, alphabetical, and chronological indexes. They offer lower price, convenience of one-time download, and reduce clutter of titles in your digital library. Religion: The Illustrated King James Bible, American Standard Bible, World English Bible (Modern Translation), Mormon Church's Sacred Texts Philosophy: Rousseau, Spinoza, Plato, Aristotle, Marx, Engels Travel Guides and Phrasebooks for All Major Cities: New York, Paris, London, Rome, Venice, Prague, Beijing, Greece Medical Study Guides: Anatomy and Physiology, Pharmacology, Abbreviations and Terminology, Human Nervous System, Biochemistry College Study Guides: FREE Weight and Measures, Physics, Math, Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Statistics, Languages, Philosophy, Psychology, Mythology History: Art History, American Presidents, U.S. History, Encyclopedias of Roman Empire, Ancient Egypt Health: Acupressure Guide, First Aid Guide, Art of Love, Cookbook, Cocktails, Astrology Reference: The World's Biggest Mobile Encyclopedia; CIA World Factbook, Illustrated Encyclopedias of Birds, Mammals [via]

  • The Woman Warrior
    by Maxine Hong Kingston
    ISBN 0808589768 (0-8085-8976-8)
    Hardcover, Bt Bound

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'The Woman Warrior'
    Book summary:

    'A brilliant memoir ...it is about being Chinese in the way A Portrait of the Artist is about being Irish; it is an investigation of soul, not landscape, its sources are dream and memory, myth and desire; its crises are the crises of a heart in exile from roots that bind and terrorize it ...Maxine Hong Kingston writes with bitter and relentless love. Her voice, now, is as clear as the voice of Ts'ai Yen, who sang her sad, angry songs of China to the barbarians. It is as fierce as a warrior's voice, and as eloquent as any artist's' Jane Kramer, New York Times Book Review 'This is a delightful book ...tells more than I ever imagined about the strangeness of being Chinese and a woman; it also gives a superb account of what it's like simply to be alive' Victoria Radin, New Society 'A strange, enchanting book ...As a manual of self-discovery through the channels and terrors of one's own rejected communal memory, it is unbeatable' Clancy Sigal, Guardian 'As a dream -- of the "female avenger" -- it is dizzying, elemental, a poem turned into a sword ...reimagining the past with such dark beauty, such precision and anger that you feel you have saddled the Tao dragon and see all through the fiery eye of God' John Leonard, New York Times 'A book of fierce clarity and originality' Newsweek [via]

  • A Wrinkle in Time: Library Edition
    by Madeleine L'Engle
    ISBN 0786273356 (0-7862-7335-6)
    Softcover, Thorndike Pr

    Find This Book

     

    Find signed collectible books: 'A Wrinkle in Time: Library Edition'
    Book summary:

    Everyone in town thinks Meg is volatile and dull-witted and that her younger brother Charles Wallace is dumb. People are also saying that their father has run off and left their brilliant scientist mother. Spurred on by these rumors, Meg and Charles Wallace, along with their new friend Calvin, embark on a perilous quest through space to find their father. In doing so they must travel behind the shadow of an evil power that is darkening the cosmos, one planet at a time.

    Young people who have trouble finding their place in the world will connect with the "misfit" characters in this provocative story. This is no superhero tale, nor is it science fiction, although it shares elements of both. The travelers must rely on their individual and collective strengths, delving deep into their characters to find answers.

    A classic since 1962, Madeleine L'Engle's A Wrinkle in Time is sophisticated in concept yet warm in tone, with mystery and love coursing through its pages. Meg's shattering yet ultimately freeing discovery that her father is not omnipotent provides a satisfying coming-of-age element. Readers will feel a sense of power as they travel with these three children, challenging concepts of time, space, and the power of good over evil. (Ages 9 to 12) [via]