|
Showing 1 - 15 of
15 matches in All Departments
Published in 1890, this novel reflects the social reform ideology
of the US women's movement in the late nineteenth century. Its
theme is the destructive effect of the 'demon' alcohol on the
family. The Baptist Messenger, a black religious publication,
called it 'one of the silent, yet powerful agents at work to break
down unreasonable prejudice, which is a hindrance to both races.'
When Bernie Jones went to war in 1918 he was part of a transition
that changed the whole nature of our country. Born just before the
turn of the Century, he grew up in a day when Kansas City, Missouri
was on the dividing live between a maturing nation and the old wild
west. He and his gang of boyhood friends looked on their advent
into the United States Army as a great camp-out with little chance
of real action. It was supposed that the German forces would fold
the minute they saw fresh new troops opposite them in the trenches
of France. It didn't happen. They fought fierce last-ditch
engagements at Chateau Thierry, Saint Mihiel, and especially the
Argonne. Bernie and his friends find their moments-of-truth in that
last desperate fighting. When the smoke clears, he is left alone to
go home to an uncertain future in a country that would never again
be isolated. His stressed-out mind is full of bloody images and
self-doubts, leaving him to rely on a tenuous faith that promises
to keep him alive until the time when he can reorient himself and
begin life over again.
|
The Hazeley Family (Hardcover)
A.E. Johnson; Introduction by Barbara Christian
|
R2,521
R1,932
Discovery Miles 19 320
Save R589 (23%)
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
When first published by the American Baptist Publication Society in
1894, The Hazeley Family was advertised as 'a book that should be
in every Sunday-school library'. The novel is typical of the 'angel
of the home' romances written by American women in the later
nineteenth century. It tells how the moral fibre of Flora Hazeley
keeps her family together - a constant concern in Afro-American
literature and life. The characters are 'non-racial', one of the
tactics that many black writers used to overcome the racial
sterotypes demanded by the white establishment.
"Puss in Boots," "Blue Beard," "Tom Thumb," and other beloved fairy
tale classics, as set down by the man who first rescued them from
the oral tradition in the 17th century. Contains six color plates
and 30 black-and-white illustrations.
|
Old-Time Stories (Paperback)
W.Heath Robinson; Translated by A.E. Johnson; Charles Perrault
|
R383
Discovery Miles 3 830
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
|
Old-Time Stories (Paperback)
W.Heath Robinson; Translated by A.E. Johnson; Charles Perrault
|
R383
Discovery Miles 3 830
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
When Bernie Jones went to war in 1918 he was part of a transition
that changed the whole nature of our country. Born just before the
turn of the Century, he grew up in a day when Kansas City, Missouri
was on the dividing live between a maturing nation and the old wild
west. He and his gang of boyhood friends looked on their advent
into the United States Army as a great camp-out with little chance
of real action. It was supposed that the German forces would fold
the minute they saw fresh new troops opposite them in the trenches
of France. It didn't happen. They fought fierce last-ditch
engagements at Chateau Thierry, Saint Mihiel, and especially the
Argonne. Bernie and his friends find their moments-of-truth in that
last desperate fighting. When the smoke clears, he is left alone to
go home to an uncertain future in a country that would never again
be isolated. His stressed-out mind is full of bloody images and
self-doubts, leaving him to rely on a tenuous faith that promises
to keep him alive until the time when he can reorient himself and
begin life over again.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|