Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
His novels include “How to Read the Air,” “All Our Names” and “Someone Like Us,” which was published July 30. 8:15 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 15, readings by Carmen Giménez and Dinaw Mengestu
The letters are being written (in 2020) because all telecommunications in Mexico have been disabled by the United States. Daniel Glattauer: Gut gegen Nordwind (German) 2006 Email E-mail correspondence between a man and a woman who fall in love despite never meeting Daniel Handler: Why We Broke Up: 2011 A letter Illustrated by Maira Kalman ...
A collection of poker stories. Author is believed to be another pseudonym of S. W. Erdnase. [6] The Autobiography of a Flea, erotic novel published in 1901. The Expert at the Card Table by S. W. Erdnase, a book on sleight-of-hand with cards for card advantage play and magic, self-published in 1902 in Chicago.
The book's preface is dated 17 July 1989, with the historian contextualizing the letters, though he vows to "step aside" and let the reader take their own interpretation from them. The bulk of the narrative is made up of correspondence between elderly farmer Jacob Semmes Franklin and his nephew John Semmes Franklin, born 1920.
More than 100 letters that never reached the crew of a French warship have been read for the first time since they were sent 265 years ago. Rare ‘treasure box’ of French letters opened and ...
William Thomas Gaddis Jr. (December 29, 1922 – December 16, 1998) was an American novelist. [1] [2] The first and longest of his five novels, The Recognitions, was named one of TIME magazine's 100 best novels from 1923 to 2005 [3] and two others, J R and A Frolic of His Own, won the annual U.S. National Book Award for Fiction. [4]
As Freddie Eugene Owens lives the last hours of his life, USA TODAY is sharing some of the South Carolina death row inmate's handwritten letters to a woman he loved. At times furious and at others ...
William Robertson Davies CC OOnt FRSL FRSC (28 August 1913 – 2 December 1995) was a Canadian novelist, playwright, critic, journalist, and professor. He was one of Canada's best known and most popular authors and one of its most distinguished "men of letters", a term Davies gladly accepted for himself. [1]