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F Scott Fitzgerald is widely praised as the finest and most
celebrated novelist of twentieth century America. His reputation is
infinitely more lustrous since his untimely death than it was for
much of his twenty-year literary career and is largely based on his
1925 novel, The Great Gatsby, as well as on the colourful and
tragic incidents of his personal life. His alcoholism; his fairy
tale marriage to the beautiful Zelda Sayre, and her gradual descent
into schizophrenia; the incandescent blossoming and dissipation of
his literary gifts have all added to his legend. Fitzgerald was an
individual who seemed to be composed of opposites and who,
fittingly, could have been one of his own characters. He was
charming, witty and in love with the magic and splendour of life,
but also felt compelled to embrace the darkness. As a writer, his
perception of the world around him was so finely tuned and acute
that his life and career were a mirror of the 1920s and 30s, so
that just as the Jazz Age gave way to the Depression, Fitzgerald's
dazzling and youthful success yielded to drunkenness, despair and
what he termed 'emotional bankruptcy'. This Pocket Essentials
examines both Fitzgerald's life and writing and probes the
infinitely complex and symbiotic relationship between the two,
revealing the man behind the myth and behind some of the finest
prose of all time.
From its position at the heart of the ancient city of York, York
Minster formed the focus of a community for centuries, while
performing a national role as the seat of Britain's second
Archbishop. Today, nearly 1500 years after the earliest traces of
Christian worship in York, the Minster remains a vigorous spiritual
centre of outreach and renewal. York Minster: A Living Legacy
brings the past to life through beautifully illustrated text that
reveals the many hidden corners of the Minster today, as well as
the beauties of its structure and glass. York Minster is a portrait
of the Minster community, its day-to-day life, the people who make
the Minster work and the skills of the craft workshops that
maintain its fabric for future generations. "There are many fine
books about the architectural beauties of the Minster, but this is
the first to celebrate the people who have made the Minster what it
was and is, and the people who to our own day care for it, serve
its mission and devote their time and skill to it. Here, too, we
gather the recollections and the thoughts of people who in the
living past have been part of the human fabric of the Minster." -
The Very Rev. Keith Jones, Dean of York
Presents a simple setting of the Magnificat for SATB and organ with
optional brass quintet (2 trumpets, horn, 2 trombones).
What Shall We Sing? is suitable for SATB and organ.
From its position at the heart of the ancient city of York, York
Minster has for centuries formed the focus of a community, while
performing a national role as the seat of Britain's second
Archbishop. Today, nearly 1500 years after the earliest traces of
Christian worship in York, the Minster remains a vigorous spiritual
centre of outreach and renewal. This is also a portrait of the
Minster community, its day-to-day life, the people who make the
Minster work and the skills of the craft workshops that maintain
its fabric for future generations.
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Paperback
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R383
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