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Dorothy Parker (née Rothschild; August 22, 1893 – June 7, 1967) was an American poet and writer of fiction, plays and screenplays based in New York; she was known for her caustic wisecracks, and eye for 20th-century urban foibles.
A Journey into Dorothy Parker’s New York by Kevin C. Fitzpatrick (foreword) (2005) The Portable Dorothy Parker (editor, foreword) (2006) The Ladies of the Corridor by Dorothy Parker and Arnaud D’Usseau (editor, foreword) (2008) Complete Poems by Dorothy Parker (foreword) (2010) Alpine Giggle Week by Dorothy Parker (editor, foreword) (2014)
Marcus Paus has set to music poets and writers such as Dorothy Parker, W. B. Yeats, Oscar Wilde, Siegfried Sassoon, Richard Wilbur, William Shakespeare, Christina Rossetti, Emily Dickinson and Anne Frank, and Norwegians André Bjerke, Jens Bjørneboe, Arne Garborg, Knut Hamsun, Johan Falkberget, Harald Sverdrup and Ole Paus.
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"Here We Are" is a short story by American writer Dorothy Parker, first published in Cosmopolitan Magazine on March 31, 1931. The story, written almost entirely as dialogue, describes a tense scene between a newly married couple traveling by train to New York City for the first night of their honeymoon.
Read more:Dorothy Parker's Life of Counterpoints The contestant agreed with Jennings' assessment of the famed poet's 20th-century observation, replying, "very." Wallace's fellow competitor, health ...
We are magic. With that power comes the ability to make anything happen, including love. The energy we give to matters and others can make change happen.
Paus' Hate Songs is based on the poem "Women: A Hate Song" published by Parker in Vanity Fair in 1916 [5] and subsequent poems that have been described as "a photo-book of New York with the female caricatures that Parker abhorred or despised, notably idle bourgeois ladies, who were the object of patriarchal worship as angelic domestic creatures ...