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This volume offers a new introduction which provides a wide-ranging
survey of criticism of "Macbeth" and four new essays. The new
essays from Muriel Bradbrook, Malcolm Evans, Graham Holderness and
Germaine Greer bring this edition up-to-date with current critical
approaches. The essays are contributed by - A.C. Bradley, S. Freud,
G. Wilson Knight, C. Spurgeon, J. Masefield, C. Brooks, L.C.
Knight's, M. Bradbrook, G. Holderness, G. Greer and M. Evans.
This two-volume anthology celebrates four centuries of English poetry, from the Elizabethan era to the present day. This, the second of the two volumes, includes, Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, Keates, Tennyson, Browning, Yeates, Betjeman, Auden, Larkin, Hughes and Heaney, together with a generous selection from less-renowned writers.
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The Contenders (Paperback)
John Wain; Designed by Andy Vella
bundle available
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R400
Discovery Miles 4 000
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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These plays cover one thousand years of the ancient world from the
golden age of Athens to 5th century Alexandria. The protagonists
are Anaxagoras, Archimedes and Hypatia, scientists, mathematicians,
philosophers. All three of them came into conflict with the
prevalent views of the time. Anaxagoras maintained that the sun was
a big burning rock of the size of the Peleponnesus. He was
condemned to death on the charge of impiety. Archimedes, the first
example of the efficacy of technology combined with science, built
fortifications that could withstand the might of the Roman Army.
His popular fame rests on him shouting Eureka and jumping naked out
of his bath when he discovered the laws of Hydrostatics. He is also
known by his statement: 'give me a fixed point and I shall move the
Earth.' Hypatia was a philosopher and mathematician, a believer in
the old faith. She was hacked to death by a bunch of monks at the
instigation of Cyril, a Saint of the Christian Church.
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Young Shoulders (Paperback)
John Wain; Designed by Andy Vella
bundle available
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R396
Discovery Miles 3 960
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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' A] triumph of mature observation and art.' - "Daily Telegraph"
'A winter's tale of light and laughter.' - "Sunday Times"
'What is especially enjoyable is the rough-edged tenderness and
kindness of Mr Wain's concern ... probably his most substantial
achievement to date.' - Robert Nye, "Saturday Times Review"
' S]ubstantial and serious ... sustains a vigorous narrative line
- he has always been an excellent storyteller.' - "Times Literary
Supplement"
' A] love affair between its author and North Wales itself.... It
is a novel with its heart in the right place, and it knows where
the right place is.' - "The Observer"
'Clever and entertaining.' - "The Guardian"
Roger Furnivall is a forty-year-old philologist with no money and
no sex life. But he thinks he's found a way to solve both problems:
a cushy university post in Sweden pays well and promises access to
plenty of beautiful blondes. There's just one catch: the job
requires a knowledge of Welsh. Taking a sabbatical in North Wales
to learn the language, Roger expects a long and dreary winter of
linguistic study, but instead quickly finds himself drawn into the
drama of local affairs. A large corporation seeking a monopoly has
squeezed every bus operator out of business but one: taciturn
hunchback Gareth Jones is the lone holdout. Seeing in this one
man's struggle for survival against the faceless forces of
corporate greed a problem more important than any he has ever
faced, Roger is moved to help. But when the company's hired thugs
begin to make attempts on his life, Roger discovers that his winter
in the hills may end up being much more than he had bargained for
...
John Wain (1925-1994) catapulted to fame with "Hurry on Down"
(1953), the defining novel of what the media called the 'Angry
Young Men' movement, but it was in his later works, in which he
explored the unresolved place of the individual in a world of
social change driven by abstract and impersonal economics, that he
was at his best. This edition of "A Winter in the Hills" (1970),
one of his finest novels, includes a new foreword by Will Wain.
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The Smaller Sky (Paperback)
John Wain; Introduction by Alice Ferrebe
bundle available
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R531
Discovery Miles 5 310
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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'A classic.' - Susan Hill, author of "The Woman in Black" and "I'm
King of the Castle"
'John Wain's best novel in a long time . . . an interesting story
. . . stunning.' - "The Observer"
'John Wain's contribution to the gathering army of lone, upset
figures is a notable one.' - William Trevor, "Books and Bookmen"
'Harrowing but deeply compassionate . . . marks a new and
impressive development in Mr. Wain's writing.' "British Book News"
'This searching novel throws a critical spotlight on the life that
the modern world compels us to lead.' - "Encounter"
Arthur Geary, a 45-year-old research scientist, quits his job and
leaves his wife and children, taking up residence in a hotel near
Paddington Station, where he passes all his time sitting on the
platforms, watching the people and trains come and go. Overwhelmed
by the stresses of modern life, including his difficult job and
failing marriage, Geary finds the limitless sky of London
unbearable and seeks refuge beneath the 'smaller sky' of the
glass-roofed station. But when friends and family become concerned
with his unusual behaviour, and he begins to be hounded by
psychiatrists and television reporters, Geary's search for peace
and freedom becomes increasingly desperate . . .
One of the great English men of letters of the 20th century, John
Wain (1925-1994) won almost every major British literary award
during a career that spanned five decades, and his works are now
being rediscovered. "The Smaller Sky" (1967), a classic novel of
alienation and despair, is one of Wain's most enduring achievements
and returns to print for the first time in more than 35 years. This
edition includes a new introduction by Alice Ferrebe.
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R406
Discovery Miles 4 060
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