Carey's Library of Choice Literature
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Publisher :
Page : 640 pages
File Size : 23,3 MB
Release : 1836
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Author :
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Page : 640 pages
File Size : 23,3 MB
Release : 1836
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Author : Jane Cutler
Publisher : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Page : 40 pages
File Size : 33,70 MB
Release : 1996
Category : Juvenile Fiction
ISBN : 9780395681916
All of his neighbors have suggestions for how to get rid of the snails in his garden, but Mr. Carey isn't interested.
Author : John Carey
Publisher : Faber & Faber
Page : 191 pages
File Size : 13,34 MB
Release : 2012-12-20
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0571265103
Professor John Carey shows how early twentieth-century intellectuals imagined the 'masses' as semi-human swarms, drugged by popular newspapers and cinema, and ripe for extermination. Exposing the revulsion from common humanity in George Bernard Shaw, Ezra Pound, D. H. Lawrence, E. M. Forster, Virginia Woolf, H. G. Wells, Aldous Huxley, W. B. Yeats and other canonized writers, he relates this to the cult of the Nietzschean Superman, which found its ultimate exponent in Hitler. Carey's assault on the founders of modern culture caused consternation throughout the artistic and academic establishments when it was first published in 1992.
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Page : 534 pages
File Size : 41,8 MB
Release : 1836
Category : American literature
ISBN :
Containing the best works of the day in biography, history, travels, novels, poetry, etc.
Author : St. Louis Public School Library
Publisher :
Page : 422 pages
File Size : 33,63 MB
Release : 1870
Category : Classified catalogs
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Page : 740 pages
File Size : 38,59 MB
Release : 1835
Category : Engineering
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Author : Scott Holland Goodnight
Publisher :
Page : 268 pages
File Size : 14,31 MB
Release : 1907
Category : American periodicals
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Author : Alexander Vietts Blake
Publisher :
Page : 376 pages
File Size : 42,97 MB
Release : 1847
Category : American literature
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Author : Sarah Wadsworth
Publisher : Liverpool University Press
Page : 302 pages
File Size : 13,38 MB
Release : 2006-01-01
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9781558495418
Tracing the segmentation of the literary marketplace in 19th century America, this book analyses the implications of the subdivided literary field for readers, writers, and literature itself.
Author : Siddhartha Mukherjee
Publisher : Simon and Schuster
Page : 624 pages
File Size : 18,30 MB
Release : 2016-05-17
Category : Medical
ISBN : 1476733538
The #1 NEW YORK TIMES Bestseller The basis for the PBS Ken Burns Documentary The Gene: An Intimate History Now includes an excerpt from Siddhartha Mukherjee’s new book Song of the Cell! From the Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Emperor of All Maladies—a fascinating history of the gene and “a magisterial account of how human minds have laboriously, ingeniously picked apart what makes us tick” (Elle). “Sid Mukherjee has the uncanny ability to bring together science, history, and the future in a way that is understandable and riveting, guiding us through both time and the mystery of life itself.” —Ken Burns “Dr. Siddhartha Mukherjee dazzled readers with his Pulitzer Prize-winning The Emperor of All Maladies in 2010. That achievement was evidently just a warm-up for his virtuoso performance in The Gene: An Intimate History, in which he braids science, history, and memoir into an epic with all the range and biblical thunder of Paradise Lost” (The New York Times). In this biography Mukherjee brings to life the quest to understand human heredity and its surprising influence on our lives, personalities, identities, fates, and choices. “Mukherjee expresses abstract intellectual ideas through emotional stories…[and] swaddles his medical rigor with rhapsodic tenderness, surprising vulnerability, and occasional flashes of pure poetry” (The Washington Post). Throughout, the story of Mukherjee’s own family—with its tragic and bewildering history of mental illness—reminds us of the questions that hang over our ability to translate the science of genetics from the laboratory to the real world. In riveting and dramatic prose, he describes the centuries of research and experimentation—from Aristotle and Pythagoras to Mendel and Darwin, from Boveri and Morgan to Crick, Watson and Franklin, all the way through the revolutionary twenty-first century innovators who mapped the human genome. “A fascinating and often sobering history of how humans came to understand the roles of genes in making us who we are—and what our manipulation of those genes might mean for our future” (Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel), The Gene is the revelatory and magisterial history of a scientific idea coming to life, the most crucial science of our time, intimately explained by a master. “The Gene is a book we all should read” (USA TODAY).