The Collected Fables of Ambrose Bierce


Book Description

"Bierce's fables are distinguished for their biting wit and their cynical reflection of the political and social events of his time. Local and national political figures; corrupt lawyers, judges, and clergymen; and even incidents in the Spanish-American War are all mercilessly lampooned. The fables not only testify to Bierce's hatred of "hypocrisy, cant, and all sham" but provide a window into late nineteenth-century American society. S. T.




The Devil's Topographer


Book Description

"The Devil's Topographer explores the wider implications of Bierce's contribution to war short fiction and the significance of the war story as a subgenre in American literature. This volume is a significant contribution to the body of literary commentary on Ambrose Bierce and to the study of the development of the American short story."--Jacket.




The Collected Works of Ambrose Bierce


Book Description

This book is the seventh of a 12-volume set of Bierce's works and contains "The Devil?s Dictionary."







A Much Misunderstood Man


Book Description

"The binding thread throughout this edited collection of Ambrose Bierce's letters is the argument that Bierce has too often vilified as a cynical misanthrope. Joshi and Schultz believe that Bierce's human side has been ignored by scholars, and they work here to rectify this oversight. The importance of this collection is underscored by the fact that no collection of Bierce's letters has been published since 1922. This selection represents a sampling of nearly one-half million words of Bierce's correspondence, which Joshi and Schultz are the first to gather and transcribe." "The letters reveal many sides of Bierce that he deliberately concealed in his literary work: the caring father who keenly felt the deaths of his two sons and took constant interest in the welfare of his only daughter; the literary giant of San Francisco who gathered around him a substantial cadre of disciples whose work he encouraged and meticulously criticized; the vigorous castigator of chicanery, hypocrisy, and injustice wherever he saw it; and the author of coyly flirtatious letters to a number of female correspondents. For the first time, a well-rounded picture of Bierce the man and writer emerges in his own words. The volume ends chillingly with Bierce's last surviving letter, written from Chihuahua, Mexico, on December 26, 1913, which concludes: "As for me, I leave here tomorrow for an unknown destination." Bierce was never heard from again." "The letters have been scrupulously edited from manuscript sources and exhaustively annotated to elucidate obscure historical, literary, and other references."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved







Twentieth-century Literary Criticism


Book Description

Excerpts from criticism of the works of novelists, poets, playwrights, and other creative writers, 1900-1960.




Famous Lines


Book Description

This scientific detective story is the first book which explains clearly the science used by paleontologists, and the new, cutting-edge techniques that led to the discovery of Seismosaurus, the longest dinosaur yet known--and possibly the largest land animal to have ever lived. Gillette's first-person account of the project answers the most frequently asked questions about Seismosaurus: How was it discovered? How do we know it is a new species? How did it die? Part catalogue of the workings of paleontological science in the 1990s, the book also illustrates the exciting collaboration between Gillette, the chemists and physicists who helped to reconstruct Seismosaurus.




The Collected Works of Ambrose Bierce


Book Description

Ambrose Gwinnett Bierce, known in journalistic circles as 'Bitter Bierce' was by turns a Civil War soldier, journalist, columnist, editor, editor, fabulist and satirist, and author of short stories. He is chiefly remembered today for "The Cynic's Word Book," aka "The Devil's Dictionary." The stories in this volume are principally science fiction satires, where the narrator finds himself in another land, observing absurd situations. "Bits of Autobiography" is exactly as advertised, and deals with anecdotes of his Civil War experiences and other personal observations, colored by his individual, iconoclastic, contentious and continual nonconformity.




Ashes of the Mind


Book Description

How Northern writers came to grips with the mixed legacy of the Civil War.