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Jan 1, 1903 — —· 123 yrs

BIOGRAPHY · FICTION

Rupert Croft-Cooke

Also known as: Rupert Croft Cooke, Rupert Croft- Cooke

19
BOOKS
4.0
AVG RATING (2)
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THE HISTORY OF HOMOSEXUALITY in the United States armed forces has been a struggle between two intransigent factsthe persistent presence of gays within the military and the equally persistent hostility toward them.

— from Conduct Unbecoming

Most acclaimed

#2

Buffalo Bill

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A biography of the flamboyant Buffalo Bill, who at fourteen rode for the pony express, later became a famous scout for the cavalry, and finally became the dashing showman of the "Wild West Circus."

#1

The long way home

2001

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THE LAST THING RITA NEEDED WAS MORE TROUBLE.... Spitfire Rita Warren had made some big mistakes before leaving her hometown and heading for the bright lights of the big city. Now she was back, to make things right. To prove that she was a good as everyone else in town. Good enough to love. Good enough to deserve the best.... LIEUTENANT "MAC" MCGRAW HAD TROUBLE WRITTEN ALL OVER HIM! . Though the sexy officer was ornerier than a bee-stung bear, Rita could see right through the bluster to the man underneath -- a soldier tormented by memories. But McGraw was too good a man to bury himself with guilt. Too good a man to deny himself a family. And Rita was the woman to prove to him the best was yet to come....

#3

Rudyard Kipling

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Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936) remains one of the most popular British authors of all time. In this controversial new biography he is subjected to the psychological scrutiny for which Martin Seymour-Smith is celebrated, and the personality that emerges is quite different from the traditional image of the Laureate of the Empire portrayed by past critics. Born in Bombay, Kipling spent much of his childhood with foster parents in Southsea, and went to school in Westward Ho! before returning to India as a journalist. In 1889 he came back to England, via the Far East and the USA, and cemented the success he had enjoyed through his writing in India. In 1892 he married, and settled in Vermont for four years. It was here that he wrote his most famous work, The Jungle Book. After further travels and a spell at Rottingdean, Kipling moved to Bateman's in Sussex, where he lived for the rest of his life. In 1907 he became the first British author to be awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. Martin Seymour-Smith explores beyond this exterior of conventional respectability and discovers territory uncharted by previous biographers -- all of whom have preserved the myth. He examines Kipling's life and work with rigor and insight, and unfolds the extraordinary and deeply moving story of this much-loved and much-criticized author who has come to occupy his own special place in the canon of English literature. Kipling can never be the same again. - Jacket flap.

Books

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