Man & Beast Revisited


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American Traditions in Watercolor


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Shows more than sixty watercolors by various Amerian artists, describes the background of each work, and discusses the technique of Homer and Sargent




PLAINS INDIAN SCULPTURE PB


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"Shows examples of pipes, effigies, war clubs, bowls, spoons, and whistles, discusses themes and carving techniques, and looks at the place of these objects in the Indians' culture"--Amazon.com.







Central Plains Prehistory


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Courage to Stand Alone


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The author U.G. Krishnamurti was a speaker and philosopher. This collection of talks from Amsterdam in the early 1980s has some of his best and most startling ideas. This interview transcript discusses these questions: Do you have the guts to question the spiritual journey you've been led to believe is the path to enlightenment? Is enlightenment even real? Where do these questions come from? What do you seek?




Joseph Cornell


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The first retrospective of the work of Joseph Cornell in the past 20 years reflects a personal exploration of art and culture that represent his belief in art as an uplifting voyage into the imagination.




G. K. Chesterton


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A Life of Matthew G. Lewis


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Matthew Lewis (17775-1818), author of The Monk—one of the most famous of gothic novels—is attracting increasing attention for his own talent and his pre-eminence in the gothic school. The gothic mode, aside from its intrinsic interest, is important because of its distinct influence in British, continental, and American literature. Yet a full-length biography of Lewis has not appeared since 1839. For the nonspecialist seeking an introduction to Romanticism and the Regency, Lewis is a valuable man to know, with his varied literary interests—poetry, the novel, drama—and his wide acquaintance: royalty, the peerage, literary celebrities like Byron, Scott, Shelley, Sheridan, and the theatrical world. As a writer he showed uncanny anticipation of popular literary trends and a talent for the spectacular. This new biography, based on information which has appeared since 1839 and on new material, presents the whole man, not a selection of eccentricities. It includes treatment of all his works and a section of newly edited correspondence.




G.F. Watts


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