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In 1913, an unlikely friendship blossomed between Henry Ford and
famed naturalist John Burroughs. When their mutual interest in
Ralph Waldo Emerson led them to set out in one of Ford’s Model Ts
to explore the Transcendentalist’s New England, the trip would
prove to be the first of many excursions that would take Ford and
Burroughs, together with an enthusiastic Thomas Edison, across
America. Their road trips—increasingly ambitious in
scope—transported members of the group to the 1915
Panama–Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco, the
Adirondacks of New York and the Green Mountains of Vermont, finally
paving the way for a grand 1918 expedition through southern
Appalachia. In many ways, their timing could not have been worse.
With war raging in Europe and an influenza pandemic that had
already claimed thousands of lives abroad beginning to plague the
United States, it was an inopportune moment for travel.
Nevertheless, each of the men who embarked on the 1918 journey
would subsequently point to it as the most memorable vacation of
their lives. These travels profoundly influenced the way Ford,
Edison, and Burroughs viewed the world, nudging their work in new
directions through a transformative decade in American history. In
American Journey, Wes Davis re-creates these landmark adventures,
through which one of the great naturalists of the nineteenth
century helped the men who invented the modern age reconnect with
the natural world—and reimagine the world they were creating.
Never before has there been a single-volume anthology of modern
Irish poetry so significant and groundbreaking as An Anthology of
Modern Irish Poetry. Collected here is a comprehensive
representation of Irish poetic achievement in the twentieth and
twenty-first centuries, from poets such as Austin Clarke and Samuel
Beckett who were writing while Yeats and Joyce were still living;
to those who came of age in the turbulent '60s as sectarian
violence escalated, including Seamus Heaney and Michael Longley; to
a new generation of Irish writers, represented by such diverse,
interesting voices as David Wheatley (born 1970) and Sinead
Morrissey (born 1972). Scholar and editor Wes Davis has chosen work
by more than fifty leading modern and contemporary Irish poets.
Each poet is represented by a generous number of poems (there are
nearly 800 poems in the anthology). The editor's selection includes
work by world-renowned poets, including a couple of Nobel Prize
winners, as well as work by poets whose careers may be less well
known to the general public; by poets writing in English; and by
several working in the Irish language (Gaelic selections appear in
translation). Accompanying the selections are a general
introduction that provides a historical overview, informative short
essays on each poet, and helpful notes-all prepared by the editor.
Murder, spies, lost cities, blackmail and ghostly monks. All can be
found inside these pages. Written between 1949 and 1955 and revised
in 2013: The Noose Is Waiting The Hidden City Of Ffan Su Dearest
Heart Blackmail For Breakfast The Night Of Screaming Terror Five
tales of crime, adventure and horror await...
Hanson and Hopkins, Private Investigators, because even during
wartime infidelity and divorce were good business. Murder wasn't
their usual line, but when one of their clients is killed they feel
obliged to investigate. They never expected it to lead them into a
world of Nazi sympathisers, spies and Hitler's plans to invade
England!
In the bleakest years of the Second World War when it appeared that
nothing could slow the advance of the German army, Hitler set his
sights on the Mediterranean island of Crete, the ideal staging
ground for domination of the Middle East. But German command had
not counted on the strength of the Cretan resistance or the
eccentric band of British intelligence officers who would stand in
their way, conducting audacious sabotage operations in the very
shadow of the Nazi occupation force. The Ariadne Objective tells
the remarkable story of the secret war on Crete from the
perspective of these amateur soldiers who found themselves serving
because, as one of them put it, they had made 'the obsolete choice
of Greek at school'. John Pendlebury, a swashbuckling archaeologist
with a glass eye and a swordstick; Xan Fielding, a writer who would
later produce the English translations of books like Bridge on the
River Kwai and Planet of the Apes; Sandy Rendel, a future Times
reporter, who prided himself on a disguise that left him looking
more ragged and fierce than the Cretans he fought alongside; and
Patrick Leigh Fermor, the future travel-writing luminary who, as a
teenager in the early 1930s, walked across Europe, a continent
already beginning to feel the effects of Hitler's rise to power.
Having infiltrated occupied Crete, these British gentleman spies
teamed with Cretan partisans to carry out a cunning plan to disrupt
Nazi manoeuvres, culminating in a daring, high-risk plot to abduct
the island's German commander. In this thrilling and little known
episode of Second World War history, Wes Davis paints a brilliant
portrait of some extraordinary characters and tells a story of
triumph against all the odds.
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