Roaring Boys

Roaring Boys
Author: Judith Cook
Publisher: The History Press
Total Pages: 165
Release: 2006-04-20
Genre: History
ISBN: 0752495097

With the help of anecdotes, this book aims to recreate the lives and times of the playwrights and actors such as, Shakespeare, Christopher Marlowe, and Jonson, as well as the world in which they lived from 1578 when Burbage built the first 'purpose built' theatre to 1620 when the great age came to its end.

Marmaduke: The Junior Novel

Marmaduke: The Junior Novel
Author: Gene Hult
Publisher: Harper Collins
Total Pages: 151
Release: 2010-04-27
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 0061995061

Marmaduke doen't fit in with the pedigreed dogs at the Orange County dog park. When he becomes popular, will he forget is old friends?

Scrapper John

Scrapper John
Author: Paul Bagdon
Publisher: Avon Books
Total Pages: 132
Release: 1992-03
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 9780380764167

The Indians speak of the Valley of the Spotted Horses in hushed tones. It is said no man can capture a wild horse and leave the canyon alive. But Scrapper John, orphaned son of a rugged mountain man and an Indian woman, is in need of a horse.

Ernest Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea

Ernest Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea
Author: P.G. Rama Rao
Publisher: Atlantic Publishers & Dist
Total Pages: 168
Release: 2007-12
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9788126907090

The Present Book Is An In-Depth Critical Study Of The Modern American Classic, Ernest Hemingway S The Old Man And The Sea, Which Won The Pulitzer Prize In 1952 And The Nobel Prize In 1954.This Study, While Keeping The Novel Under The Critical Lens, Examines It Against The Backdrop Of Hemingway S Aesthetic Convictions And Overall Literary Achievement. It Throws Light On The Various Dimensions Of Not Only The Novel But Hemingway S Craftsmanship Like His Use Of Suggestion And Symbolism, His Inimitable Style, His Manipulation Of Narrative Perspective, And The Way He Projects His Philosophical Theme Of The Ephemeral Versus The Everlasting, Which Is Dramatized In The Old Man And The Sea.The Present Book Will Definitely Prove Useful To Students, Researchers As Well As Teachers Of English Literature Interested In The Study Of Hemingway And His Works.

The Story of Davy Crockett

The Story of Davy Crockett
Author: Walter Retan
Publisher: Gareth Stevens Publishing
Total Pages: 120
Release: 1997
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 9780836814859

Describe the life of Davy Crockett, one of the Old West's outstanding hunters, frontiersmen, and legislators.

Turnaround

Turnaround
Author: Tom Stoddard
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1996
Genre: Football coaches
ISBN: 9781881320708

By 1958 the once formidable University of Alabama football program had reached an all-time low -- only four wins in three years. A savior was found in Paul Bear Bryant, and he was given free rein to work his miracle. Turnaround offers the first comprehensive look at how Bear Bryant turned the Tide. Through interviews with players and coaches, detailed accounts of practice sessions, play-by-play recountings of the games from Bears inaugural year, and photos from the 1958 season, Turnaround is a look at the culture of the '50s, Alabama's love affair with football, and the relentless quest of a fascinating man for the keys to victory.

Cormac McCarthy

Cormac McCarthy
Author: Robert L. Jarrett
Publisher: Macmillan Reference USA
Total Pages: 200
Release: 1997
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN:

In this astute and learned analysis of McCarthy's fiction, Robert Jarrett looks at all seven of the novels published to date and responds to much of the current (and proliferating) critical thought about McCarthy. After an introductory biographical chapter, Jarrett addresses what he considers the two phases of McCarthy's fiction: as a regional writer of the Appalachian South, whose work mixes modernist and realistic techniques and merges contemporary fiction with the tradition of Southern literature (as in The Orchard Keeper [1965], Outer Dark [1968], Child of God [1973], and Suttree [1979]), and as a bold experimenter in form and style, with a keenly rendered postmodern esthetic (as in Blood Meridian [1985], All the Pretty Horses, and The Crossing [1994]). Jarrett regards McCarthy's early novels as attempts to write a modern fiction of the twentieth-century Tennessee hill country, comparable to what local-color realists or regionalists accomplished in the nineteenth century and to what William Faulkner accomplished in his mixture of modernism and regionalism in his Yoknapatawpha fiction. It is during his second phase, Jarrett points out, that the locales of McCarthy's novels shift to the Southwest, and any appearance they give of being popular westerns becomes only a disguise. In the final chapter Jarrett stresses three distinctive aspects of McCarthy's fiction: the diverse and idiosyncratic style of the narrative discourse, the central theme of the quest undertaken through a visionary landscape, and the role of interpolated tales. Drawing keenly on literary theory to synthesize the various strands of McCarthy's unique narrative voice, Jarrett concludes that while the author's tales -often steeped in violence - may not tell us what we want to hear, the enduring pleasure of his novels lies in their imaginative and stylistic power.