A Mentor Book
Description
Portrays America's most famous slave rebel and the insurrection he led in southeastern Virginia's Southampton County in August, 1831.
How the series evolves
Books in this Series
The Fires of Jubilee
Portrays America's most famous slave rebel and the insurrection he led in southeastern Virginia's Southampton County in August, 1831.
New writing from the Middle East
A unique collection of post-WWII stories, poems, and dramas by authors ranging from Nobel Prize candidates to extraordinary talents whose works are translated into English for the first time! Includes Arabic, Armenian, Persian, Israeli, and Turkish, in styles ranging from traditional to avant-garde and subjects from the deeply personal to passionately political.
Man
Written in response to the causes contributing to the rise of Adolf Hitler, Sheed describes and refutes the disordered thinking about the nature of man. Only by knowing the truth about man can any reform of the social order be accomplished.
The Ambidextrous Universe
From where does the difference between left and right come? Is it a fundamental property of the universe, or is it arbitrary?
Woman in sexist society ; studies in power and powerlessness
This volume is an anthology of articles written by some 30 female scholars and writers. Each woman draws upon mastery of her discipline and on a commitment to eliminating the social and personal costs of sexism; and also the arguments from current social customs and "Nature" that the editors feel lock both men and women into life-denying stereotypes of masculinity and femininity.
Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology
Today man's mind is under attack by all the leading schools of philosophy. We are told that we cannot trust our senses, that logic is arbitrary, that concepts have no basis in reality. Ayn Rand opposes that torrent of nihilism, and she provides the alternative in this eloquent presentation of the essential nature--and power--of man's conceptual faculty. She offers a startlingly original solution to the problem that brought about the collapse of modern philosophy: the problem of universals. This brilliantly argued, superbly written work, together with an essay by philosophy professor Leonard Peikoff, is vital reading for all those who seek to discover that human beings can and should live by the guidance of reason.
The contemporary American poets
This is a collection of poems by many American poets, from 1940 to late 1960s. The poems therefore have a broad range, both in terms of content and style. Many of the poems are reflective, and introspective, whether it is about the self, or personal relationships, or about society at large. In many poems, the poets draw upon nature as an inspiration and metaphor for describing the emotions and feelings that are such an integral part of human life and relationships. Here is a very limited list of poets and their poems: A. R. Ammons: “Bridge”; “Corson's Inlet” Marvin Bell - “Things we dreamt we died for” Elizabeth Bishop - “At the Fishhouses” Allan Ginsberg - “A Supermarket in California” Carolyn Kizer - “The Great Blue Heron” William H. Matchett - “Water Ouzel” Sylvia Plath - “The Moon and the Yew Tree” Mark Strand (editor); “Keeping Things Whole”
The teachings of the mystics
"The Teachings of the Mystics is a 1960 work of popular philosophy by the Princeton philosopher Walter T. Stace that lays out his philosophy of mysticism and compiles writings on mystical experience from across religious traditions. The book’s comprehensive selections met with broadly positive responses. An introductory chapter lays out Stace’s philosophy and psychology of mysticism. He defines the principal characteristic of mystical experience as "the apprehension of an ultimate nonsensuous unity in all things",and differentiates it from occult, parapsychological phenomena, visions, voices, and anything "misty" or vague. Stace distinguishes between two types of mystical experience: extrovertive mysticism experiences unity in the world through the physical senses, while an introvertive type experiences unity in the self. Stace sees introvertive mysticism as more important and the focus of The Teachings of the Mystics. He proposes that there is a core to mystical experience, which is more basic and important than superficial differences over time and across cultures. This hypothesis can only be justified by a survey of mystics’ descriptions of their experiences – the book purports to be that. Stace chooses texts that describe mystical experience, rather than interpret or analyse it." Cited at
Jefferson
All the neighborhood boys and girls work at earning money to give Jefferson a surprise birthday party.
Il Paradiso
The Divine Comedy stands as one of the towering creations of world literature, and its climactic section, the Paradiso, is perhaps the most ambitious poetic attempt ever made to represent the merging of individual destiny with universal order. Having passed through Hell and Purgatory, Dante is led by his beloved Beatrice to the upper sphere of Paradise, wherein lie the sublime truths of Divine will and eternal salvation, to at last experience a rapturous vision of God.
Die Cultur der Renaissance in Italien
Jacob Burckhardt was born in 1818 in Basel, Switzerland. He studied history at the University of Berlin and taught art history and the Italian Renaissance in Berlin and Basel. His essay, as he called The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy, was first published in 1860. Rich in its detailed account of the arts, fashions, manners, and thought of one of the most innovative eras in human history, this brilliant panorama of Renaissance life is also a thorough examination of the nature of civilization and of our place within it. Burckhardt's encyclopedic knowledge, his mastery of style, and his genius for synthesis make this one of the few classics of history and the prototype for cultural history. Burckhardt's The Age of Constantine the Great and Cicerone were published in his lifetime, and The History of Greek Civilization and Reflections on World History after his death in 1897.