Paddy-The-Next-Best-Thing


Book Description

DigiCat Publishing presents to you this special edition of "Paddy-The-Next-Best-Thing" by Gertrude Page. DigiCat Publishing considers every written word to be a legacy of humankind. Every DigiCat book has been carefully reproduced for republishing in a new modern format. The books are available in print, as well as ebooks. DigiCat hopes you will treat this work with the acknowledgment and passion it deserves as a classic of world literature.




Paddy, the Next Best Thing


Book Description

"Paddy (she ought to have been a boy but was "the next best thing") adores her sister Eileen and her father. When either of these is threatened, Paddy becomes a veritable little fury. Three years before the play starts Eileen has met and been attracted by the attentions of Laurence Blake. Soon she finds Blake is more attracted by her own vivid personality than by the sweet but careless Eileen. This arouses Paddy's hatred, and we get a series of amusing scenes between the man and the maid. In the last act Paddy's resistance is vanquished, and Eileen is happy in the love that stood at her elbow for many years."










The Griffith Project, Volume 10


Book Description

No other silent film director has been so extensively studied as D. W. Griffith. However, only a small group of his more than five hundred films had been the subject of a systematic analysis. Now, for the first time in film studies, the complete creative output of Griffith - from 'Professional Jealousy '(1907) to 'The Struggle' (1931) - is explored in this multi-volume collection of contributions from an international team of leading scholars in the field. Created as a companion to the ongoing retrospective held by the Pordenone Silent Film Festival, 'The Griffith Project 'is now an indispensable guide to his work. This is the final volume of the project.




Cambridge Magazine


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The Girl from Gneeveguilla


Book Description

Memoir of Peggy O'Neil, 1920s star of the stage and screen in America, London and Dublin, records her early life and development of her career in the theatre. Peggy considered herself an 'all Irish girl'.







S.A. Pictorical


Book Description