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Jan 1, 1971 — Jan 1, 1999· 28 yrs

UNITED KINGDOM AUTHOR · DRAMA

Sarah Kane

7
BOOKS
4.0
AVG RATING (5)
0
READERS
Brentwood, United Kingdom
Wikipedia

The Villagers said that John Redding was a queer child.

— from Complete plays, 1956

Most acclaimed

#1

Cleansed

2.0 (1)
#2

Crave

0.0 (0)

When a woman is ripe for the picking...Beth Cordova's life is no fairy tale. Having barely escaped the evil grasp of her wicked stepmother, this 'missing princess' seeks refuge in a strict commune where carnal pleasures are forbidden.Sometimes just one bite of the apple...Her world is lonely and void of intimacy, until the charming Stephen Trent arrives at the commune. Suddenly Beth yearns for a man's touch, the feel of his lips on hers...and Stephen is eager to show this pure-as-snow princess that she can still be the sensual woman she was once upon a time.Is all it takes to unleash her desires...But all is not what it seems, and the stunning beauty finds herself again in danger, her stepmother hot on her trail. The commune's founders will not tolerate the pair, yet fleeing its walls could prove fatal. Trapped in a world where passion is outlawed, can Beth live happily ever after?

#3

Complete plays

1956

0.0 (0)

"This landmark gathering of Zora Neale Hurston's short fiction - most of which appeared only in literary magazines during her lifetime and some of which has never been published - reveals the evolution of the talents of one of the most important African-American writers. Spanning the years from 1921, when Howard University's literary magazine published "John Redding Goes to Sea," to 1955, when Hurston was working on different versions of the story of the beheading of John the Baptist as told by Salome's mother, five years before her death, these stories attest to the author's tremendous range at the same time as they establish themes that recur in her longer fiction." "In such stories as "Spunk," "The Gilded Six-Bits," and "The Conscience of the Court," Hurston's customary use of metaphor and black dialect enriches her simple narratives and brings her characters vividly to life. Folklore, the cornerstone of Hurston's fiction, is integral to such stories as "Cock Robin Beale Street," "Book of Harlem," and "'Possum or Pig?" Biblical themes, another trademark Hurston offering, appear in "The Seventh Veil" and "The Bone of Contention." These and the other stories in this collection map, in rich language and imagery, Hurston's development and concerns as a writer and provide an invaluable reflection of the mind and imagination of the author of the acclaimed novel Their Eyes Were Watching God."--BOOK JACKET.

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