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Showing 1 - 8 of 8 matches in All Departments
This volume argues that a renewed commitment to sound macroeconomic policies and structural reforms is needed for countries in South East Europe, or 'the Balkans' achieve to sustainable prosperity, along with enhanced support from the international community. New fiscal and financial architecture has valuable lessons for policymakers in SEE.
A charming memento of the Victorian era's literary colossus, The Daily Charles Dickens is a literary almanac for the ages. Tenderly and irreverently anthologized by Dickens scholar James R. Kincaid, this collection mines the British author's beloved novels and Christmas stories as well as his lesser-known sketches and letters for "an around-the-calendar set of jolts, soothings, blandishments, and soarings." A bedside companion to dip into year round, this book introduces each month with a longer seasonal quote, while concise bits of wisdom and whimsy mark each day. Hopping gleefully from Esther Summerson's abandonment by her mother in Bleak House to a meditation on the difficult posture of letter-writing in The Pickwick Papers, this anthology displays the wide range of Dickens's stylistic virtuosity-his humor and his deep tragic sense, his ear for repetition, and his genius at all sorts of voices. Even the devotee will find between these pages a mix of old friends and strangers-from Oliver Twist and Ebenezer Scrooge to the likes of Lord Coodle, Sir Thomas Doodle, Mrs. Todgers, and Edwin Drood-as well as a delightful assortment of the some of the novelist's most famous, peculiar, witty, and incisive passages, tailored to fit the season. To give one particularly apt example: David Copperfield blunders, in a letter of apology to Agnes Wickfield, "I began one note, in a six-syllable line, `Oh, do not remember'-but that associated itself with the fifth of November, and became an absurdity." Never Pecksniffian or Gradgrindish, this daily dose of Dickens crystallizes the novelist's agile humor and his reformist zeal alike. This is a book to accompany you through the best of times and the worst of times.
From his precocious childhood to the end of what he calls his
"amatory career," an adventurous Victorian known only as "Walter"
records a breathtaking carnal epic through hundreds of sexual
encounters with one or more nursemaids, prostitutes, cousins,
actresses, workingmen, and other men's wives. In ruling everything
sexual within the realm of possibility, Walter reveals "varied
delights...whims and fancies normal and abnormal," sexual violence,
fetishes--and sometimes, surprisingly, love. From his many
escapades, he learns an invaluable lesson: "One can never know too
much concerning human nature." Portraying an era of notorious
repression, in which the appearance of propriety had to be strictly
maintained, "My Secret Life" provides a rare look at the hidden
side of Victorian life: the upstairs and downstairs encounters
where nothing is "proper"--or forbidden. First published in London
around 1900, this landmark work freshly illuminates the complex
sexual dynamics of a society strictly divided between rich and
poor, male and female, sexual and chaste. In James Kincaid's
abridgment, Walter and his world come to vivid life in new and
often surprising ways.
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