Tess of the D'Urbervilles
Author : Thomas Hardy
Publisher :
Page : 284 pages
File Size : 35,34 MB
Release : 1892
Category : English fiction
ISBN :
Author : Thomas Hardy
Publisher :
Page : 284 pages
File Size : 35,34 MB
Release : 1892
Category : English fiction
ISBN :
Author : National Council of Teachers of English
Publisher :
Page : 148 pages
File Size : 43,61 MB
Release : 1975
Category : English language
ISBN :
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 2126 pages
File Size : 14,32 MB
Release : 2003
Category : Periodicals
ISBN : 9780835245463
Author : R. R. Bowker LLC
Publisher :
Page : 868 pages
File Size : 27,13 MB
Release : 1983
Category : Education
ISBN : 9780835216005
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 928 pages
File Size : 32,21 MB
Release : 1989
Category : Education
ISBN :
Author : Daniel Pool
Publisher : Simon and Schuster
Page : 422 pages
File Size : 30,58 MB
Release : 2012-10-02
Category : Education
ISBN : 143914480X
A “delightful reader’s companion” (The New York Times) to the great nineteenth-century British novels of Austen, Dickens, Trollope, the Brontës, and more, this lively guide clarifies the sometimes bizarre maze of rules and customs that governed life in Victorian England. For anyone who has ever wondered whether a duke outranked an earl, when to yell “Tally Ho!” at a fox hunt, or how one landed in “debtor’s prison,” this book serves as an indispensable historical and literary resource. Author Daniel Pool provides countless intriguing details (did you know that the “plums” in Christmas plum pudding were actually raisins?) on the Church of England, sex, Parliament, dinner parties, country house visiting, and a host of other aspects of nineteenth-century English life—both “upstairs” and “downstairs. An illuminating glossary gives at a glance the meaning and significance of terms ranging from “ague” to “wainscoting,” the specifics of the currency system, and a lively host of other details and curiosities of the day.
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 2200 pages
File Size : 31,89 MB
Release : 2000
Category : Home video systems industry
ISBN :
Author : Barbara Schlatter
Publisher :
Page : 84 pages
File Size : 37,84 MB
Release : 1994
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 9781560772996
Author : Ronald Carter
Publisher : Psychology Press
Page : 598 pages
File Size : 23,19 MB
Release : 2001
Category : English language
ISBN : 9780415243179
This is a guide to the main developments in the history of British and Irish literature, charting some of the main features of literary language development and highlighting key language topics.
Author : Cat Marnell
Publisher : Simon and Schuster
Page : 384 pages
File Size : 42,38 MB
Release : 2017-01-31
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 1476752419
From the New York Times bestselling author and former beauty editor Cat Marnell, a “vivid, maddening, heartbreaking, very funny, chaotic” (The New York Times) memoir of prescription drug addiction and self-sabotage, set in the glamorous world of fashion magazines and downtown nightclubs. At twenty-six, Cat Marnell was an associate beauty editor at Lucky, one of the top fashion magazines in America—and that’s all most people knew about her. But she hid a secret life. She was a prescription drug addict. She was also a “doctor shopper” who manipulated Upper East Side psychiatrists for pills, pills, and more pills; a lonely bulimic who spent hundreds of dollars a week on binge foods; a promiscuous party girl who danced barefoot on banquets; a weepy and hallucination-prone insomniac who would take anything—anything—to sleep. This is a tale of self-loathing, self-sabotage, and yes, self-tanner. It begins at a posh New England prep school—and with a prescription for the Attention Deficit Disorder medication Ritalin. It continues to New York, where we follow Marnell’s amphetamine-fueled rise from intern to editor through the beauty departments of NYLON, Teen Vogue, Glamour, and Lucky. We see her fight between ambition and addiction and how, inevitably, her disease threatens everything she worked so hard to achieve. From the Condé Nast building to seedy nightclubs, from doctors’ offices and mental hospitals, Marnell “treads a knife edge between glamorizing her own despair and rendering it with savage honesty.…with the skill of a pulp novelist” (The New York Times Book Review) what it is like to live in the wild, chaotic, often sinister world of a young female addict who can’t say no. Combining “all the intoxicating intrigue of a thriller and yet all the sobering pathos of a gifted writer’s true-life journey to recover her former health, happiness, ambitions, and identity” (Harper’s Bazaar), How to Murder Your Life is mesmerizing, revelatory, and necessary.