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A New Directions book

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About Author

Alfred Jarry

Alfred Jarry (Laval, 8 de septiembre de 1873 - París, 1 de noviembre de 1907) fue un dramaturgo, novelista y poeta francés, conocido por sus hilarantes obras de teatro y su estilo de vida disoluto y excéntrico. Fuente: Wikipedia

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Books in this Series

Collected Poems, 1934-1952

4.5 (2)
14

Presents poems compiled by the author as representations of his best work, including the poems "In The Beginning" and "Vision and Prayer."

Dragon country

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5

Dragon Country, the country of pain, is an uninhabitable country which is inhabited. Williams expresses the theme of endured but unendurable pain which runs through all of these eight plays.

Turtle Island

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11

These Pulitzer Prize-winning poems and essays by the author of No Nature range from the lucid, lyrical, and mystical to the political. All, however, share a common vision: a rediscovery of North America and the ways by which we might become true natives of the land for the first time.

Trilogy

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3

This reissue of the classic Trilogy, by H.D. (Hilda Doolittle, 1886-1961), now includes a new introduction and a large section of referential notes for readers and students, compiled by Professor Aliki Barnstone. As civilian war poetry (written under the shattering impact of World War II), Trilogy's three long poems rank with T. S. Eliot's Four Quartets and Ezra Pound's Pisan Cantos. The first book of the Trilogy, published in the midst of the "fifty thousand incidents" of the London blitz, maintains the hope that though "we have no map;/ possibly we will reach haven,/heaven." Tribute to the Angels describes new life springing from the ruins, and finally, in The Flowering of the Rod - with its epigram, "... pause to give/ thanks that we rise again from death and live" - faith in love and resurrection is realized in lyric and strongly Biblical imagery.

Kingdom of earth

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10

Three people - a tubercular man, his foolish new wife, and his virile half-brother - are caught in an isolated farmhouse in the path of a Mississippi flood.

The Asian journal of Thomas Merton

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3

Merton's pilgrimage to Asia, reaching out in ecumenism to Islam, Zen, Sufism, and Buddhism, but not breaking from his Christian roots.

Ren jian shi ge

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15

Details the life of a troubled young man from a well-off family from Japan's far north who is incapable of revealing his true self to others.

The Innocent Party

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In this collection of prize-winning stories, characters struggle to understand what happens when the innocent party becomes the guilty party. With magical realist flair, secrets are aired with dirty laundry, but the stains never come clean. Carol Anshaw writes, “Aimee Parkison offers a distinct new voice to contemporary fiction. Her seductive stories explore childhood as a realm of sorrows, and reveal the afflictions of adults who emerge from this private geography.”

Out cry

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10

The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts presents the David Merrick production, Michael York, in "Out Cry," by Tennessee Williams, with Cara Duff-MacCormick, production lighted and designed by Jo Mileziner, costumes designed by Sandy Cole, directed by Peter Glenville.

Bread in the wilderness

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8

"This book is not a systematic treatise, but only a collection of personal notes on the Psalter. They are the notes of a monk, written in the monastic tradition, and one supposes that they might appeal above all to monks. But in this mysterious age, there is no telling whom the book may reach--although no one expects it to reach everybody. As for those readers who can only regard the Psalms as "literature" ... this book will at least offer them some of the reasons why the Psalter seems to be more than literature to those of us who have made it our bread in the wilderness." [Prologue].

A voyage to Pagany

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An autobiographical travelogue in the form of a novel.

Small Craft Warnings

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4

Williams sets up camp on O'Neill's turf: a bar at the end of the world, shrouded in ocean fog, in which a collection of misfits huddle like birds evading a storm. Unlike O'Neill's eternally damned pipe-dreamers, Williams' crass menagerie of barflies (an itinerant beautician, her loutish boyfriend, a lovesick short-order cook, the girl he's in love with, and an alcoholic doctor) survive on hope and the possibility of heaven.

Footprints

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Margaret Fishback was a young woman searching for direction when she was inspired to write the poem "Footprints". The creation of the poem, its subsequent loss, and astonishing rediscovery are intertwined with a life full of challenge, adversity, and joy.

The Setting Sun

4.4 (8)
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When William Merrick of the U.S. Consulate in Hakodate Japan is tasked to rescue a group of shipwrecked Americans en route to the Shogunate Capital of Edo, he unwittingly becomes swept up in a deadly plot by a secretive faction whose aim is to overthrow the Old Order of the Tokugawa Shogunate whose dwindling 266 year rule is under threat from open rebellion and all out civil war. In a feudal land ruled by powerful Samurai Warlords divided by loyalties between their Emperor and Shogun, the balance of power and the future of an Empire rests with one man under The Setting Sun.

Aguila o sol? =

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En la totalidad de la obra literaria de Octavio Paz, ¿Águila o sol? guarda un sitio preponderante. Escrito en prosa, este libro canta lo circunstancial y lo anecdótico, y al mismo tiempo hace renacer constantemente, mediante un alto sentido lírico, la sensibilidad, la belleza, el reino secreto de la poesía.

Camino Real

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7

In this phantasmagorical play, the Camino Real (pronunciation: Cá-mino Réal) is a long highway, a dead end, a police state in a vaguely Latin American country, a nightmare, and an inescapable condition. Characters from history and literature -- Don Quixote, Casanova, Camille, Lord Byron -- inhabit a place where corruption, starvation, indifference and greed have immobilized anyone who tries to escape. Then, into this netherworld, the archetypal Kilroy arrives -- a sailor and all-American guy with "a heart as big as the head of baby." Like others before him in the Camino Real, Kilroy is robbed, conned, turned into a patsy, and he very nearly breaks ... but not quite. When this experimental epic opened on Broadway in 1953, it confounded the critics, but not the audiences. The play's iconic/ironic humor, playful conceits, and towering concerns about society's demand for conformity, the courage of the artist, and the power of compassion have made it a classic.

Open eye, open heart

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1

Selected works reveal the modern poet's thoughts on personal, social and political concerns.

The Rose Tattoo

4.5 (2)
24

Serafina Delle Rose is a restless widow whose intense and absorbing instinct for love drives everything before it. The figure of this extraordinary woman dominates the small town where she and her friends are living and embodies the exultation and danger of unbridled passion. Her story, and that of the lover she chooses and the daughter she denies, are forged into a play of power, humanity, and soaring emotion. Set among a colony of Sicilian fisher-folk on the American Gulf Coast, THE ROSE TATTOO is the story of a woman for whom love was stronger than death.

From snow and rock, from chaos

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Hayden Carruth's From Snow and Rock, from Chaos - his first book since For You (1970) - contains a selection of his best short poems written between 1965 and 1972.