Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Grandmothers: Four Short Novels is collection of four novellas published in 2003 by 2007 Nobel laureate Doris Lessing. The 2013 Australian-French film Adore (alternatively known as Adoration ) is based on the story The Grandmothers .
The Grandmothers: Four Short Novels (2003) (filmed as Two Mothers) Cat Tales. Particularly Cats (stories and nonfiction, 1967) Particularly Cats and Rufus the Survivor (stories and nonfiction, 1993) The Old Age of El Magnifico (stories and nonfiction, 2000) On Cats (2002) – omnibus edition containing the above three books
The Grandmothers is a 1927 novel by Glenway Wescott which received the Harper Novel Prize. [1] [2] Based upon Wescott's own life and family, [3] it is told through the eyes of young Alwyn Tower who leaves the farm to live in Europe, but who remains haunted by his long-dead family members – grandparents, great-uncles and aunts, whose lives were shattered by the Civil War.
The Grandmothers: Four Short Novels; M. The Making of the Representative for Planet 8 (opera) P. Prisons We Choose to Live Inside; U. Under My Skin (book)
Fielding wrote four novels about the character (including Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason and Bridget Jones’s Baby), and the movie adaptations have taken in more than $800 million at the box ...
The Golden Notebook is a 1962 novel by the British writer Doris Lessing.Like her two books that followed, it enters the realm of what Margaret Drabble in The Oxford Companion to English Literature called Lessing's "inner space fiction"; [citation needed] her work that explores mental and societal breakdown.
$13.94 at amazon.com. In the Likely Event by Rebecca Yarros (2023). Average Goodreads rating: 4.21 A standout reader review: “This book moved me in ways I can’t explain. From the emotional ...
The Marriages Between Zones Three, Four and Five is a 1980 science fiction novel by Doris Lessing. It is the second book in her five-book Canopus in Argos series, the first being Shikasta (1979). It was first published in the United States in March 1980 by Alfred A. Knopf , and in the United Kingdom in May 1980 by Jonathan Cape .