Sin Escape de la Muerte


Book Description

Harris Kakoulides escribe sobre la muerte en esta historia basada en un hecho real




Muerte Collection


Book Description

All three books in John W. Wood's Muerte series, now available in one volume! Muerte - Death, It's What I Do: Ricardo 'Rico' Garcia, also known by his Marine handle, ‘Muerte', is known as a Speed Killer. Assigned to infiltrate the Mexican Cartel, Rico is given free rein to do whatever needs to be done to destroy the drug trade. But when someone from his past gets stirred into the mix, things get complicated. The two end up on a one-way ride into the desert, the results of which will wreak havoc across the United States and redefine the balance of power in the country. Muerte Resurrected: After terrorists acquire a suitcase bomb, a team of specialists is reactivated and assigned the code name 'Resurrection'. Their mission is to neutralize both the bomb and the terrorists. In command is Captain Rico Garcia. His handle is Muerte, and his Military Occupational Specialty is MOS 2666: Speed Killer. It's War You Want? I Accept: After inheriting the Guzman Cartel from her brother, Angela Guzman - also known as La Llorona - discovers that Rico Garcia was responsible for her brother's disappearance. She decides to set a trap for him in The Darien Gap: a strip of land between Panama and Columbia filled with mountainous jungles , swamps, guerrillas and drug traffickers. After the dust settles, who will make it out of the inevitable standoff alive?




Carnival de Muerte


Book Description

Welcome to underground author Robby Richardson's Carnival de Muerte. When musicians put out shortened albums, they call them EPs. When a writer puts out a small book, Robby calls them ERs. Carnival de Muerte is four ERs in one. Different nightmares and different tales that fit to every taste with some too terrifying for a solo release, Muerte is going big time. So step right in and take a read; it might be the biggest mistake you will ever make. Welcome to the terrifying sideshow known as the Carnival de Muerte.




Spanish Poetry of the Grupo Poético de 1927


Book Description

Spanish Poetry of the Grupo Poético de 1927 is an anthology of poems by members of Grupo Poético de 1927, an association of poets who sought to detach poetry from non-poetic elements such as narrative, anecdote, political or social preoccupations, or didacticism. Seven poets are represented: Pedro Salinas, Jorge Guillén, Gerardo Diego, Federico García Lorca, Vicente Aleixandre, Rafael Alberti, and Luis Cernuda. This text consists of eight chapters and begins with an introduction to changing trends in poetry in Spain between 1918 and the present. Biographical notes are included to show the effect (or lack of effect) of these movements on the individual poets. Movements such as ultraismo and maestria are discussed, along with the tercentenary of the death of Spanish poet Luis de Góngora, the crisis suffered by the Grupo, and late developments in the poets of the Grupo. The chapters that follow focus on the works of the Grupo poets. This book is written specifically for sixth-formers and undergraduates, as well as anyone with an interest in Spanish poetry.







Concerning the Angels


Book Description

First published in Spain in the summer of 1929, Concerning the Angels (Sobre los angeles) is the great Spanish poet Rafael Alberti's masterpiece, on a par with T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land, Pablo Neruda's Residencia en la tierra, and Federico Garcia Lorca's Poeta en Nueva York. It marks a major departure from the light-hearted tone of the poet's earlier verse, which was notably influence by Andalusian folksong. This bilingual text is at once intensely imaginative and intimately realistic, a lyrical illumination of the poet's "dark night of the soul." Rafael Alberti, born in 1902, is the last surviving member of the so-called Generation of 1927 that included such notable Spanish poets Federico Garcia Lorca, Vincente Alexandre, Pedro Salinas, Jorge Guillen, and Luis Cernuda. Christopher Sawyer-Laucanno lives in Massachusetts and teaches in the program in Writing and Humanistic Studies at MIT.




Memorias Y Revista


Book Description




Cracking the Advanced Placement Spanish, 2004-2005


Book Description

The fiercer the competition to get into college the more schools require that students prove themselves in other ways than SAT scores and grade point averages. The more expensive college educations become, the more students take advantage of the opportunity to test-out of first year college courses. Includes; -2 sample tests with full explanations for all answers -The Princeton Review's proven score-raising skills and techniques -Complete subject review of all the material likely to show up on the AP Spanish exam




Cracking the AP Spanish Exam, 2006-2007


Book Description

Provides techniques for achieving high scores on the AP Spanish exam and offers 2 sample tests with answers and explanations.




Woman and the Infinite


Book Description

"Woman and the Infinite demonstrates how Pedro Salinas's poetry and frequently overlooked narrative and theater reveal a preoccupation with the nature of time, especially extraordinary moments that transcend space and time. Many of these moments are intimately connected with the man-woman, yo-tu relationship. Salinas's exploration of this theme is best understood in the context of other modern literary evocations of epiphanic moments. Such literary phenomena as William Wordsworth's "spots of time" and James Joyce's "epiphanies" are among the precursors of Salinas's moments of eternity, as are moments of timelessness in works by Marcel Proust and the French Symbolist poets. Salinas's reception of the Symbolists was direct, but also refracted through his reading of the Latin American modernistas, especially Ruben Dario. In his well-known commentary on Dario, Salinas connects the perception of woman with a visionary moment of extraordinary lucidity, a connection found in his own works." "Woman is elusive for Salinas. She has a multiplicity of forms and varying identities that are expressed with mirrors and shadows or Classical and Biblical mythological archetypes. All of these are found in "Aurora de verdad" from Vispera del gozo, a narrative piece which can be read as representative of Salinas's work as a whole. Specific images in the story, including mirrored figures and references to mythological goddesses, are also key elements in a trajectory in Salinas's works in general toward an all-encompassing, absolute, and infinite moment."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved