Browse Results

Showing 101 through 125 of 56,836 results

The Complete Idiot's Guide to Publishing Science Fiction

by Cory Doctorow Karl Schroeder

You'd like to write science fiction. Maybe you already write the stuff but haven't had any sales yet. This section can help you start out on the road to success. <P><P> There are two things you must accomplish to become a successful SF writer: become a writer of entertaining and thought-provoking stories, and market those stories successfully to a large audience. <P><P> We'll look at how you can take steps toward both these goals, by easing you into the process of writing, and showing you how to plug into the SF writing and reading communities. <P><P> The author of this book donated a digital copy to Bookshare.org. Join us in thanking Cory Doctorow for providing his accessible digital book to this community.

How Tell a Story and Others

by Mark Twain

The Humorous Story an American Development. Its Difference from Comic and Witty Stories.

The Aran Islands

by John M. Synge

Here is the complete title: Collected Plays and Poems and The Aran Islands

Women on Women: An Anthology of American Lesbian Short Fiction

by Naomi Holoch Joan Nestle

This groundbreaking collection brings together 28 stunning stories by literary talents never before assembled in a single volume. With contributions from both established and bright new voices in lesbian fiction, "Women on Women" ranges from the subtlety and restraint of Willa Cather's "Tommy, the Unsentimental" to Sapphire's daring and highly erotic "Eat" and Valerie Miner's suspenseful "Trespassing." Some of the stories are universal in theme - the joy and excitement of new romance, the ageless problems of family life, and the pain of lost love and of death. And many are written by or about members of racial, ethnic, and other minorities within the gay community. These are stories that offer stirring, eloquent, often passionate insights into the lesbian experience in a long-overdue collection that represents the best of lesbian short fiction from past to present.

Conversationally Speaking: Tested New Ways To Increase your Personal and Social Effectiveness

by Alan Garner

More than a million people have learned the secrets of effective conversation using Conversationally Speaking. This revised edition provides more ways to improve conversational skills by asking questions that promote conversation, learning how to listen so that others will be encouraged to talk, reducing anxiety in social situations and more.

The Trials Of Radclyffe Hall

by Diana Souhami

Biography of the author of The Well Of Loneliness.

Timebends: A Life

by Arthur Miller

Autobiographical writings of Arthur Miller.

Fractured English

by Richard Lederer

More bloopers of the English language.

The Tom Clancy Companion

by Martin Greenberg

A closer look at Tom Clancy and his works, including an exclusive interview.

Disguised as a Poem: My Years Teaching Poetry at San Quentin

by Judith Tannenbaum

Memoir of teaching poetry at a California prison. Includes some of the prisoners' poems.

All for Love

by Ved Mehta

Ved Mehta joined the staff of The New Yorker in the 1960s, blind since the age of four and already on his way to a career as a writer. In a series of four relationships he demanded that his lovers, like him, pretend he could see. With lyrical and stirring accuracy, Mehta revisits these love affairs today, tracing the links between his denial of his disability and the cruel transformations that each of his lovers underwent. “Poignant and occasionally hilarious.”-The New York Times Book Review. “This elegant volume remains a striking piece of insight into the nature of love.”-Publishers Weekly. “[An] excoriatingly truthful and heartbreaking account of the pursuit and loss of love. ...”-The Times of London. “A mesmerizing account ... the most arresting passages are Mehta’s mind-expanding descriptions of how he perceives the world. ”-Booklist.

Detectionary: A Biographical Dictionary

by Otto Penzler Chris Steinbrunner Marvin Lachman

The book contains a list of authors, titles, and publication years for detective fiction.

New Essays on the Sound and the Fury

by Noel Polk

William Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury met with only limited success when published in 1929, probably due to its fragmented, non-chronological structure. Since, however, it has become one of the most popular of Faulkner's novels serving as a litmus paper upon which critical approaches have tested themselves. In the introduction to this volume Noel Polk (the editor) traces the critical responses to the novel from the time of its publication to the present day. The essays that follow present contemporary reassessments of The Sound and the Fury from a variety of critical perspectives. Dawn Trouard offers us the women of The Sound and the Fury, reading against the grain of the predominant critical tradition which sees the women through the lens of masculine cultural biases. Donald M. Kartiganer comes to terms with the ways in which the novel simultaneously attracts readers and resists readings. Richard Godden discusses the relationship between incest and miscegenation. Noel Polk examines closely the way Faulkner experiments with language.

The Gothic World of Anne Rice

by Ray B. Browne Gary Hoppenstand

Directly and in considerable detail this anthology argues for the serious study of the literary oeuvre of Anne Rice, a major figure in popular literature today. This writer of gothic fiction attracts not only great general interest among readers but also much serious scholarly attention among those who recognize in her work evidence of sophisticated characterization and intricate plotting. Such readers find allusions in Rice's work to that of Horace Walpole's The Castle of Otranto, to Ann Radcliffe's gothic romances, such as The Mysteries of Udolpho, and to Bram Stoker's Dracula, as do such present-day authors as Clive Barker, Robert R. McCammon, and Stephen King. The essays in this volume assert that Rice goes far beyond the conventions of the formula to examine important contemporary social issues. Like a handful of authors working in the horror genre, Rice perceives in its otherwise predictable narrative structures a way by which a larger, more interesting cultural mythology can be developed, as the editors of this volume point out. In short, Rice may be said to search for philosophical truth, examining themes of good and evil, the influence on people and society of both nature and nurture, "the conflict and dependence of humanism and science," as one essayist states.

Theogony, Works and Days, Shield

by Apostolos N. Athanassakis Hesiod

Translation of 3 texts by Hesiod.

Writing with Style: Conversations on the Art of Writing (2nd Edition)

by John R. Trimble

The author discusses writing and its techniques with quotations and examples.

Gay Cuban Nation

by Emilio Bejel

With Gay Cuban Nation, Emilio Bejel looks at Cuba's markedly homoerotic culture through writings about homosexuality, placing them in the social and political contexts that led up to the Cuban Revolution. By reading against the grain of a wide variety of novels, short stories, autobiographies, newspaper articles, and films, Bejel maps out a fascinating argument about the way in which different attitudes toward power and nationalism struggle for an authoritative stance on homosexual issues. Through close readings of writers such as José Martí, Alfonso Hernández-Catá, Carlos Montenegro, José Lezama Lima, Leonardo Padura Fuentes, and Reinaldo Arenas, whose heartbreaking autobiography, Before Night Falls, has enjoyed renewed popularity, Gay Cuban Nation shows that the category of homosexuality is always lurking, ghostlike, in the shadows of nationalist discourse. The book stakes out Cuba's sexual battlefield, and will challenge the homophobia of both Castro's revolutionaries and Cuban exiles in the States.

Getting it Published

by William Germano

A Guide for Scholars and Anyone Else Serious About Serious Books (Chicago Guides to Writing, Editing, and Publishing)

What the People Know: Freedom and the Press

by Richard Reeves

Discusses the press and how it does and doesn't work and what needs to happen to improve things.

Line by Line: How to Edit Your Own Writing

by Claire Kehrwald Cook

How to edit your own writing.

Refine Search

Showing 101 through 125 of 56,836 results