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Illuminations by Arthur Rimbaud | Quarterly Conversation
Arthur Rimbaud wrote the poems that were eventually published under the title Illuminations between the ages of seventeen and twenty. John Ashbery, whose has just translated the forty-two poems (plus one fragment) traditionally grouped under that title, is eighty-three. Rimbaud, when he wrote the
n+1: All the Libraries, A Stage
The performance started with three actors standing behind the reference desk of the DeWitt Wallace Periodical Room, alternately reading sentences from the first pages of the novels. Across from them, Rubin projected a column of text from each novel that highlighted lines as they were spoken. The
Literary Review - Tim Tzouliadis on Spies by John Earl Haynes
Book Review: "Revisionist history is often a bitter pill to swallow, especially when the consensus has permeated the very language of the debate. In the early 1950s, one crucial issue divided American public opinion, and continued to do so for decades."
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GuidePosts: Perspective and commentary by Marshall Breeding
LTG Home | lib-web-cats | industry news | Member Login | Register Library Technology Guides Blog content LTG home industry news libwebcats bibliography library companies guides systems librarian automation marketplace library tech reports site statistics automation history A graphic view of mergers
all of me - bookforum.com / syllabi
Pretty much every fiction writer has had their readers guess (and ask) what real events inspired them. Some writers complicate that guessing game by inserting their actual names into their work. Roberto Bolaño and Paul Auster have made cameo appearances in their books the way Hitchcock walked
New fiction: Petals of blood | The Economist
Log in Register My account Email address Password Remember me Forgot password? Newsletters RSS Subscribe Classifieds Tuesday September 21st 2010 Search Home World All World United States Britain
THE CRITICAL FLAME :: Richard Nash on The Late Age of Print
Richard Nash on The Late Age of Print Nostalgia on the Bookshelf a review by Richard Nash It is impossible to talk about books, nowadays; to talk about books without nostalgia creeping into the discourse; though perhaps, to speak the lingo, perhaps twas always so.
T.C. Boyle's When the Killing's Done: animal rights activism vs. environmentalism on two California
When T.C. Boyle swaggered onto the literary scene in the 1980s, brandishing flamboyantly bizarre short stories in one hand and wildly satirical novels like Water Music and Budding Prospects in the other, the exuberance of his sentences was often more impre
This Woman Is Dangerous - The New York Review of Books
An article by Michael Dirda from The New York Review of Books, July 2, 2009
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