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The Runaway (Paperback)
Elizabeth Anna Hart; Illustrated by Gwen Raverat; Afterword by Anne Harvey, Frances Spalding
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R538
Discovery Miles 5 380
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This novel for grown-up children and childish grown-ups was first
published in 1872 and is evocative and surprisingly modern.
This volume contains speeches suitable for performance at
auditions, individual acting classes, competitions, festivals and
examinations. Ranging from early Elizabethan to contemporary
literature, the pieces are varied in content, tone and style and
are equipped with an introduction which sets the context for each
piece. The speeches have been chosen by drama teacher and
adjudicator Anne Harvey. The volume includes work by Ayckbourn,
Congreve, Sarah Daniels, Dickens, Athol Fugard, Graham Greene, John
Godber, David Hare, Ibsen, Sharman Macdonald, Irish Murdoch, Dennis
Potter, Tom Stoppard and many others.
As Vernon Scannell points out in his introduction, the poetry and
prose of Edward Thomas (1878-1917) has always attracted an admiring
and devoted readership, especially among other poets, who have
valued it for its great originality and beauty. In this anthology
of poems for and about Edward Thomas, Anne Harvey has compiled a
fascinating testimony of the influence Thomas has had both on his
contemporaries and on subsequent generations of poets. Among the
elegies and tributes of his contemporaries are poems by Robert
Frost, Walter de la Mare, Eleanor Farjeon, W. H. Davies, Wilfrid
Gibson and Ivor Gurney; a younger generation is represented by Alun
Lewis, Norman Nicholson and Geoffrey Grigson; and then to give an
impression of the enduring importance of Thomas there are poems by
distinguished writers of the present time, including Derek Walcott,
Elizabeth Jennings, Dannie Abse, P.J. Kavanagh, Peter Porter, Alan
Brownjohn, Gavin Ewart, Leslie Norris, Elizabeth Bartlett, Michael
Longley, Jeremy Hooker and Andrew Motion.
Today, for instance, they arranged a birthday party for me...They'd
really pushed the boat out - lots of cakes, jellies, crisps, etc.
And a great pile of sweetie-bags for me. Great, I thought. Finally
my parents are giving me the lifestyle I deserve. Then they went
and spoiled it by inviting a whole bunch of other toddlers to share
the goodies ' - Simon Brett, Little Sod. Party Pieces takes the
reader through the course of the party, from conception to its,
sometimes messy, aftermath. Judith Martin gives us Miss Manners'
Guide to Excruciatingly Bad Behaviour on parties; Virginia Graham
writes bitingly of the cocktail party, and Ogden Nash of the couple
nervously waiting for their party to begin, in 'The Darkest
Half-Hour'. The trials of party games are revealed by Jilly Cooper,
while Virginia Woolf, Noel Coward and Mike Leigh also share their
views. Mixing modern quotes with selections from the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries, and including poetry, prose and drama, this is
a wonderful mix of the sharp and acerbic, the funny and wry. A
jolly mixture with a dash of bitters, Party Pieces is the perfect
stocking filler for anyone who's overindulged - and even for those
who haven't.
In this lively illustrated anthology, Anne Harvey recreates the
spirit of childhood Christmases past, from Washington Irving's
Christmas Day in 1820 to the twentieth century. E.H. Shepard
humorously recalls recycling Christmas cards, a popular practice
following the first seasonal card in 1843, and Quentin Blake
vividly captures the yearly creation of the Christmas Pudding.
Clement C. Moore's famous poem 'The Night Before Christmas' evokes
childhood memories, and we share the delight of Fanny Longfellow's
children who every year received letters from a very busy Santa
Claus. Remembering the novelty of snowman-building,
tree-decorating, parties, crackers and mistletoe; sympathising with
the agonising task of thank-you letters, and the unrelieved joy of
receiving notes from Father Christmas, Anne Harvey gathers together
a delightful festive collection that will appeal to children and
adults everywhere.
Larger numbers of English Language Learners are entering school
each year. These students need to be able to hear and manipulate
sounds in order to match them with print. Phonemic awareness is a
first step in learning to read. Equipped with the information in
this book, teachers and parents will be successful with the task of
teaching students to read.
Selected by Anne Harvey, an experienced actress, director, writer
and adjudicator, these scenes are suitable for performance at
auditions, solo acting classes, festivals and examinations. Ranging
from Renaissance to contemporary literature, the pieces are varied
in content, tone and style and are equipped with an introduction
setting the context. Writers include: Edward Bond, Ken Campbell,
David Crampton, Caryl Churchill, Noel Coward, Monica Dickens, Lisa
Evans, Dario Fo, John Ford, David Hare, Jonathan Harvey, Lillian
Hellman, Adrian Henri, Robert Holman, Moliere, Willy Russell, Diane
Samuels, G B Shaw, David Storey, Frank Wedekind and many more...
Anne Harvey recreates the magic and spirit of childhood Christmases
through a collection of pieces of poetry, prose and illustration
covering the past two centuries, reminding us of the excitement and
anticipation felt by children at Christmas time. Their expectations
and experiences at Christmas: the food and the presents, the
preparation, the enigma of Father Christmas, the knobbly stocking,
the magical tree, the sense of wonder as well as those moments of
fear and disappointment, are all captured. Extracts from writers
and artists including Quentin Blake, Alison Uttley, A.A Milne, and
Tolkien vividly remember the excitement of hanging the stockings,
making Christmas Puddings, singing carols, and decorating the tree.
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