India. The Passion play


Book Description
















A Passion Play


Book Description

An intimate, yet thorough, look at one of Britain’s biggest ever bands




The Passion Play


Book Description

Reprint of the original.




Passion Play


Book Description

By the author of The Painted Bird and Being There: the story of a roving polo player who seeks fulfillment through transgression: “his best novel yet” (The Harvard Crimson). William Kennedy wrote in The Washington Post that “the Kosinski hero is unique in literature, as recognizable as the Hemingway hero used to be.” In Passion Play, Kosinski conjures Fabian, perhaps the most romantic, violent, and lust-driven hero of them all. A modern knight-errant of his own moral code, Fabian roams America in his custom-built VanHome, his refuge, transport, and stable for his two horses. His livelihood is polo—not the millionaire’s team sport, but the life-threatening duel of clashing horsemen. The prize is more than money and honor; it is the awareness of having drawn upon every resource of body and mind, of man and horse in danger. Passion Play is a masterpiece of violence and seduction, love and loss, by one of the world’s greatest writers.




The Travail of the Flag


Book Description

Men and women through the decades have died and prayed that our flag would always continue to fly with honor. This is the story of our flag and a remarkable painting honoring those who have made American great!




Scenes from the Passion


Book Description

The Book Scenes from the Passion comprises of 10 major staged scenes. Starting from the first scene: The Agony in the Garden through the tenth scene: The Resurrection, the writer boldly and vividly displays the heart- rending physical sufferings of Jesus Christ, who has been known through the centuries as The Man of Sorrows. The scenes, portraying the Triple Denial of Peter, the Scourging at the pillar, Trial before Pilate, Crucifixion, take the audience into the microscopic details of the brutal innocence and dehumanized sufferings of Jesus Christ. The Resurrection scene, however, suddenly turns the sorrowful tears of the audience, into tears of immense and unending joy.




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