D. H. Lawrence's most controversial novel was published in Florence in 1928 by one of his friends, and in Paris the next year. Because of its overt sexuality and liberal use of four-letter words, LADY CHATTERLEY'S LOVER was declared obscene and actually went to trial; the complete text did not appear in England until 1960. The novel tells the ...
Based very closely on D.H. Lawrence's own life, SONS AND LOVERS (1913) tells the story of young Paul Morel, son of the troubled union of an educated, upwardly mobile mother and an ill-tempered, unlettered coal miner father who speaks in a broad dialect. Although in later life Lawrence regretted his brutal portrait of his father, the hero of the ...
Prima Ballerina Gelsey Kirkland writes vividly about her years as a dancer, and in particular the hardships a dedicated dancer must endure. She also reveals candid truths about her relationships with George Balanchine and Mikhail Baryshnikov.
D. H. Lawrence considered WOMEN IN LOVE, his sequel to THE RAINBOW, to be his best novel. It traces the stories of Ursula and Gudrun Brangwen, particularly their romantic entanglements and dilemmas. Ursula marries Rupert Birkin--Lawrence's alter ego--a thoroughly modern and enlightened young man who believes in ideal love based on passion, ...
The ideal book for the AP* English Language course. "The Language of Composition" is the first textbook built from the ground up to help students succeed in the new AP English Language course. Written by a team of experts with experience in both high school and college, this text focuses on teaching students the skills they need to read, write, ...
D. H. Lawrence's THE RAINBOW, declared obscene when it was published in 1915, is the passionately written chronicle of three generations of a Nottingham farming family. Tom Brangwen marries a widow named Lydia Lensky; Lydia's daughter Anna marries her cousin Will, a woodcarver, and has a large family. Their daughter, Ursula, leaves their simple ...
This was Lawrence's last novel, providing the final treatment of the themes and motifs that had appeared in his work from the earliest period onwards. The book follows the relationship between Constance Chatterly and Mellors. Includes Lawrence's essay "A Propos of Lady Chatterly's Lover".
Lawrence's essays on American writers--including Franklin, Hawthorne, and Whitman--are inventive, illuminating, brilliant, and decidedly eccentric. While they were in progress, he described them to a friend as "a thrilling blood-and-thunder, your-money-or-your-life kind of thing: hands up America!" They were published in the English Review in 1918 ...
The reverent tale of a young girl's emotional awakening in the elemental presence of a gypsy. In this story, as in "Lady Chatterley's Lover", Lawrence explores the possibilities of a new physical basis for social relationships.
D. H. Lawrence's most controversial novel was published in Florence in 1928 by one of his friends, and in Paris the next year. Because of its overt sexuality and liberal use of four-letter words, LADY CHATTERLEY'S LOVER was declared obscene and actually went to trial; the complete text did not appear in England until 1960. The novel tells the ...
Lawrence's short and lyrical 1929 novel retells the life of Christ. Resurrected, he does not return to the heaven of his Father but enters into an erotic relationship with a priestess of Isis and conceives a child who will become--quite literally--his body and blood. THE MAN WHO DIED is a symbolic statement of one of Lawrence's overriding beliefs, ...
ST. MAWR, a short novel from 1925, tells the story of a young woman's devotion to a horse whom she considers superior to the men in her life. THE MAN WHO DIED (1929) is an unorthodox retelling of the life of Christ in which, after his resurrection, he impregnates a priestess of Isis.
In the judgment of many, Lawrence's expansive genius found its happiest expression within disciplined limits, for in his short stories and short novels his powers are never weakened by the repetitions which mar some of his longer works. As a short-story writing, Lawrence at his best was unexcelled.
This collection includes all the poems from the incomplete "Collected Poems" of 1929 and from the separate smaller volumes issued during Lawrence's lifetime; uncollected poems; an appendix of juvenilia and another containing variants and early drafts; and all Lawrence's critical introductions to his poems. It also includes full textual and ...
Lawrence's 1923 novel draws on his own experience as a traveler in Australia the preceding year. The main characters, Richard and Harriet Somers, are based in part on Lawrence and his wife Frieda; in particular, Somers and Lawrence share the humiliating experience of being examined and declared physically unfit for military service, an episode ...
Alvina Haughton meets a flamboyant Neapolitan dancer named Ciccio, and rebels, at last, against the repressive life of a conventional, proper upper-class woman. In 1920, Lawrence's novel won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize--the only official literary honor he ever received.
The poetry of D. H. Lawrence is full of vivid observations of nature and of human psychology. His subjects include specific plants and animals (snakes, fish, flowers), polemics against modern society, and the tormenting twists and turns of romantic relationships--based on his own long, passionate marriage to Frieda von Richthofen. Usually in free ...
Set vividly in Mexico, THE PLUMED SERPENT is a powerful, sometimes obscure, frequently overwrought novel about an Irishwoman named Kate Leslie. Traveling to Mexico after the death of her husband, she is repelled by the culture of bullfights and macho cruelty until she becomes involved with Don Cipriano, who is engaged in a revival of the old Aztec ...
The poetry of D. H. Lawrence is full of vivid observations of nature and of human psychology. His subjects include specific plants and animals (snakes, fish, flowers), polemics against modern society, and the tormenting twists and turns of romantic relationships--based on his own long, passionate marriage to Frieda von Richthofen. Usually in free ...
This novel is the story of Siegmund, a musician in an unhappy marriage who pursues a former pupil, Helena. He persuades Helena to accompany him on a vacation. Although she accepts his company, she fails to respond to his passion and Siegmund is left in despair. Siegmund's conflict lies in his intense need to break with his past and his ...
Based on a single-source reference on critical care medicine, this pocket-sized manual provides clinicians and residents with instant guidance on critical situations. Its coverage includes complications, oxygen delivery, multiple system organ failure, trauma, burns, transplantation, infectious disorders, neuropsychiatric disorders, pulmonary ...
Thoroughly updated for its Seventh Edition, this best-selling volume of the "House Officer Series" is a succinct, symptom-oriented pocket guide to the diagnosis, treatment, and management of common neurologic disorders. Each chapter opens with a clinical case study and proceeds to classification of symptoms, history, physical examination, ...
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