Chapbooks


Book Description




Chapbooks


Book Description




Chap-books of the Eighteenth Century


Book Description

This book contains a collection of chapbooks from the eighteenth century, which were small booklets containing popular stories, songs, and ballads. Some of the stories included in the book are: "The History of Joseph and his Brethren," "The Wandering Jew," "The History of Dr. John Faustus," "Tom Thumb," "The Life and Death of Fair Rosamond," and "The Surprizing Life and Most Strange Adventures of Robinson Crusoe." The book also includes cookery receipts and Aesop's fables.




Chapbooks


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The Victorian City


Book Description

This volume traces the modern critical and performance history of this play, one of Shakespeare's most-loved and most-performed comedies. The essay focus on such modern concerns as feminism, deconstruction, textual theory, and queer theory.




Cobwebs to Catch Flies


Book Description

Developments in juvenile literature, social customs, fashion styles, and the changing role of children in society are reflected in illustrations from reading, alphabet, counting, religious, social studies, and science books




The Banbury Chapbooks


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Obsolete Spells


Book Description

A collection of rare pagan poetry and purple prose from the heart of the 1920s counterculture. Victor Neuburg is most famous for two things: discovering Dylan Thomas, and being the man that Aleister Crowley once turned into a camel. Obsolete Spells offers another side of Neuburg, through his own poems and the strange books of Vine Press, the hand-operated imprint he ran from his West Sussex cottage between 1920 and 1930. Neuburg's youth involved terrifying-yet-farcical years as Crowley's lover, victim, and magickal sidekick. His later period, as editor of the influential "Poet's Corner" column for the Sunday Referee, found him a key figure in London's literary scene. But in between, Neuburg acted as a conduit for bohemian writers, arts luminaries, and the sexually adventurous: Peter Warlock set his words to music, singer Marian Anderson lived in his spare room, and he was a fixture at utopian community, the Sanctuary. Through it all, he turned the handle on the Vine Press: books of nature writing and anonymous song; poems and artwork worthy of The Wicker Man, side-by-side with a book on cricket. Obsolete Spells offers a selection of Neuburg's work and others from Vine Press books--over-the-top hymns to the Old Gods, tales from a utopian landscape, and more, most of which has been out of print for a century.