Kirjahaku
Etsi kirjoja tekijän nimen, kirjan nimen tai ISBN:n perusteella.
1000 tulosta hakusanalla Nathaniel Popper
Biographical Sketches Of General Nathaniel Massie, General Duncan McArthur, Captain William Wells And General Simon Kenton
John McDonald
Kessinger Publishing
2007
sidottu
The Remains Of Nathaniel Appleton Haven, With A Memoir Of His Life
George Ticknor
Kessinger Pub
2007
pokkari
Memoir Of Nathaniel Hawthorne, With Stories Now First Published In This Country
H. A. Page
Kessinger Pub
2007
pokkari
Wishes aren't born on birthday cakes or on lost eyelashes. They're not found at the bottom of a well or in a fountain collecting old coins. They don't fall from shooting stars, and they don't dance with the dandelions blowing in the wind. But wishes, oh yes, wishes most certainly do come true. Just ask Elliot Church. For the past 40 years, Elliot has battled the sorrow and regret of a terrible mistake he made many years ago. Now, with his health ailing, he takes a train across the Alaskan wilderness on a journey to make amends. Along the way, he meets an inquisitive, little girl and recounts the magical tales of his childhood spent with his best friend, Wisher, the rambunctious, wide-eyed dreamer next door. Wisher has an incredible gift... he can wish things true. He has the magical ability to close his eyes and bring the unimaginable to life, turning one magnificent adventure after the next into their wildest dreams come true. But with such a gift comes a devastating secret. A secret that's been living and breathing deep inside Wisher's heart. Will Elliot uncover the secret, or will it stay buried with Wisher forever? Will he ever find it in his heart to forgive his best friend? Can he find the courage to forgive his mother and father for their past? And more importantly, will one last wish be enough to save him? Because after all, a wish in itself isn't magical, but rather the heart that chases after it.
Auroral Exuma (Letters to Nathaniel)
Kevin Mooney; Kayleigh Mooney
New-Wolf Moon Publishing
2020
nidottu
Kayleigh Mooney was physically killed in a horrible, innocent car accident at 15, leaving an earth sized physical hole in her grieving family, filled and overflowing now in her abundant spiritual presence. in her continuation of her life, she and her father continue writing together, as she uses his hands and his pen to blend their writing styles. This is the third lyrical book of family love and unbreakable bonds in a series that includes "Exuma Infinite," and "Ceili Cay, Exuma;" in this third book, a sister sends her brother letters from Heaven by writing with her father, keeping their eternal bond strong and connected; continuing to teach him about his life as well as teaching him about the vibrant beauty of the Higher Life, with its color, and oceans, its whales, the universe and all of its majesty.
Women's Issues in Nathaniel Hawthorne's the Scarlet Letter
Greenhaven Press
2008
pokkari
Death Or Damnation: Nathaniel Drinkwater Omnibus 4
Richard Woodman
Little, Brown Book Group
2002
pokkari
* Fact and fiction are combined to produce a fascinating recreation of a bygone world at war. * The fourth omnibus of a successful adventure series featuring Nathanial Drinkwater.
THE SHADOW OF THE EAGLE - 1814: Napoleon has abdicated and the 'Great War' is at an end. As King Louis XVIII is escorted back to France by an Allied squadron, tensions remain. Attending King Louis, Captain Nathaniel Drinkwater receives secret intelligence of an imminent threat to peace and risks his life and reputation to prevent disaster befalling his country...EBB TIDE - 1843: Captain Sir Nathaniel Drinkwater has been drawn out of retirement to inspect lighthouses on the west coast of England. However, tragedy strikes, and Drinkwater is suddenly confronted with the spectre of his past life: the sins and follies, valour and heroics, triumphs and disasters.Plus THE STEEPLE ROCK and THE NIGHT ATTACK: two short stories of Nathaniel Drinkwater's youthful exploits which, with a valediction, On Nathanial Drinkwater, specially written by prize-winning author Richard Woodman, concludes the history of this popular sea-hero.
Most students of American literature probably can recall the playful French nom de plume-Monsieur de l'Aub pine-that Nathaniel Hawthorne occasionally employed to disguise some of his early attempts at authorship. But very few will know that Monsieur de l'Aub pine enjoyed a surprisingly intelligent critical reception in France during his lifetime. No fewer than six-often startling-essays about the American author appeared in leading French periodicals from 1852 to 1864. The French Face of Nathaniel Hawthorne, edited by Michael Anesko and N. Christine Brookes, recuperates these lost (or forgotten) critical assessments, making available to English readers for the first time the full texts of these extraordinary contemporaneous French critical essays. Besides offering elegantly rendered (and helpfully annotated) translations of the essays, Anesko and Brookes analyze them in relation to their immediate historical context and examine their unexpected relevance to later critical trends and arguments. Literary scholarship in our own time calls more and more for the enlargement of perspective and the adaptation of our reading practices to dismantle the narrower limits of nationalist traditions. The French Face of Nathaniel Hawthorne is a remarkable body of work that can help scholars better understand
Although most writers on Nathaniel Hawthorne touch on the importance of Salem, Massachusetts, to his life and career, no detailed study has been published on the powerful heritage bequeathed to him by his ancestors and present to him during his years in that town. In The Salem World of Nathaniel Hawthorne, Margaret B. Moore thoroughly investigates Hawthorne's family, his education before college (about which almost nothing has been known), and Salem's religious and political influences on him. She details what Salem had to offer Hawthorne in the way of entertainment and stimulation, discusses his friends and acquaintances, and examines the significant role of women in his life - particularly Mary Crowninshield Silsbee and Sophia Peabody. By tracing the effect of Salem on Hawthorne's writing, The Salem World of Nathaniel Hawthorne makes clear that Hawthorne not only was aware of his ""own dear native place"" but also drew upon it consciously and subconsciously in his work. This book contributes to a better understanding of Hawthorne as man and writer and of Salem's vital part in his life and work.