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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Lillian Faderman

Lillian - Straße der Sünde

Lillian - Straße der Sünde

Christopher Crane

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2016
nidottu
Gefallene Engel haben Schreckliches mit Lillian vor: Sie benutzen sie, um aus ihrer tausendj hrigen Gefangenschaft zu entkommen. Ihr Ziel? Die R ckkehr auf die Erde. Die Auswirkungen? Gigantische Bastardmonster. Lillian muss eine Reihe von H llenqualen durchleiden. Ihr zur Seite steht Frank, die Liebe ihres Lebens. Er h lt bedingungslos zu ihr und hofft auf ein baldiges Ende des Albtraums. Werden die Engel triumphieren? Kann Frank Lillians Leiden Einhalt gebieten, oder werden aus zwei Liebhabern am Ende doch noch bittere Feinde?Liebe, Tod, Blutrunst und Leidenschaft: Lillian - Die Stra e der S nde
Lillian on Sunday

Lillian on Sunday

Lionel Walfish

Friesenpress
2021
pokkari
Lillian on Sunday: Stories of the Human Heart is an elegant collection of highly entertaining, provocative short stories exploring the rich nature of human existence. From love stories to city fables to ghost stories, these illuminating tales are filled with engaging individuals coming face-to-face with the unexpected realities of life. Some of the stories are finely chiseled vignettes, ending with a gut punch. Others are insightful, intense character studies leaving the reader with a poignancy that lingers: A lonely woman picks up a young and handsome stranger in a Montreal park and discovers there is more than meets the eye...a retired high school Latin teacher receives a cryptic note from a former student and is forced to face his past...a down on her luck ex-food critic in London cooks up a brilliant scheme to keep on eating for free...an anxious woman from Long Island tries hypnotherapy to get over her fear of flying and ends up taking the trip she will never forget...an actor's 'big night' on Broadway goes horribly off script when an audience member tries to steal the show...Lillian on Sunday takes the traditions of the classics and gives them a current, sophisticated twist. Charming, dark, and often wickedly humorous, these exquisitely crafted stories move, surprise and delight.
Lillian on Sunday

Lillian on Sunday

Lionel Walfish

Friesenpress
2021
sidottu
Lillian on Sunday: Stories of the Human Heart is an elegant collection of highly entertaining, provocative short stories exploring the rich nature of human existence. From love stories to city fables to ghost stories, these illuminating tales are filled with engaging individuals coming face-to-face with the unexpected realities of life. Some of the stories are finely chiseled vignettes, ending with a gut punch. Others are insightful, intense character studies leaving the reader with a poignancy that lingers: A lonely woman picks up a young and handsome stranger in a Montreal park and discovers there is more than meets the eye...a retired high school Latin teacher receives a cryptic note from a former student and is forced to face his past...a down on her luck ex-food critic in London cooks up a brilliant scheme to keep on eating for free...an anxious woman from Long Island tries hypnotherapy to get over her fear of flying and ends up taking the trip she will never forget...an actor's 'big night' on Broadway goes horribly off script when an audience member tries to steal the show...Lillian on Sunday takes the traditions of the classics and gives them a current, sophisticated twist. Charming, dark, and often wickedly humorous, these exquisitely crafted stories move, surprise and delight.
Lillian's Fish

Lillian's Fish

James Menk

Peachtree Publishers
1997
sidottu
A band of family pets secretly embark on a mission to find a fish that has mysteriously disappeared in this illustrated middle grade tale of family and friendship. When Lillian turns six, her favorite gift is an extraordinary fish whose body shimmers with all the colors of the rainbow. But when the brand-new birthday fish disappears, Lillian is devastated. While she and her brothers try to unravel the mystery, the other family pets―the horse, the goat, the dog, the cat, the turtle, the spider, and the bird―secretly band together to find out what has happened to the little fish. A trail of clues soon leads the animals on a fantastic adventure along the river and deep into the woods, where they encounter new places and strange creatures. James Menk's delightful, lively tale of discovery and friendship will enchant readers of all ages. Louisa Bauer's captivating drawings bring this charming story of children and their pets to life.
Lillian Hellman

Lillian Hellman

Deborah Martinson

Basic Civitas Books
2011
pokkari
Few literary celebrities have lived with more abandon and under a brighter spotlight than Lillian Hellman. Even fewer have been doubted as absolutely as Hellman, famously denounced by rival Mary McCarthy. Attacked by critics and idealized by admirers, Hellman's determination to control and manipulate her image helped make her a figure of unknowable half-truths and rumors. Until now.Lillian Hellman: A Life with Foxes and Scoundrels is the first biography of the iconoclastic playwright written with the full cooperation of her family, friends, and inner circle. Deborah Martinson moves beyond the myths around Hellman and finds the sassy, outrageous woman committed to writing, to politics, and to having her say. Martinson's research through interviews, archives, recently declassified CIA files, and her unprecedented access to Hellman's confidants paints the most complete, and surprisingly admiring, portrait of this remarkable writer that we've ever had.Distinctly American a New Orleans Jew with one foot in Manhattan and one in Hollywood, a writer whose experience spanned the Great Depression, the Cold War, and the Nixon years Hellman lives again in this riveting biography, facing the world with wit, truth, lies, and chutzpah.
Lillian Hellman

Lillian Hellman

Salem Press Inc
2011
sidottu
Lillian Hellman, one of the foremost American playwrights of the twentieth century, was also an acclaimed autobiographer and controversial public figure because of her political commitments. That she was also a superb screenwriter in the heyday of Hollywood movies enhances her cultural importance. As with any writer, however, certain of her works have tended to define her place in the American literary canon and have dominated discussions of her politics.The Children's Hour not only marks her first great success in the theater but also defines many of the melodramatic qualities of her plays. It also demonstrates a political sensibility that was distrustful of authority and keenly aware of the tyranny of majority opinion. In Hellman's plays evil triumphs because of the passivity of characters who recognize but cannot bring themselves to oppose it. The play is often revived and remains as popular as Hellman's masterpiece, The Little Foxes.Of course, the accusation leveled at the two female teachers in The Children's Hour—that they are engaged in an unnatural relationship—stirred enormous controversy when the play was first produced in 1934. Analysis shows how The Children's Hour draws on a nineteenth-century ideology that regarded sex between women as a kind of contaminating disease that would infect society.Further, another essay considers how Hellman's clever adaptation of The Children's Hour for the screen—retitled as These Three—continues to receive significant attention. In the most searching examination of the play and film, the essay argues forcefully that by capitulating to too many Hollywood conventions Hellman diluted her significant focus on how power is wielded in society.In a second essay, William Wyler's remake of The Children's Hour, which does include the charge of lesbianism, is reviewed. But the second Hollywood version of Hellman's play hardly more satisfying than the first because, like the first, the second contrives an ending that softens the play's attack on society.There is a consideration of what the playwright learned from Wyler, who collaborated with Hellman on screen versions of The Children's Hour, Dead End, and The Little Foxes, and from renowned cinematographer Gregg Toland.The Little Foxes is discussed, defending the accuracy of the playwright's portrayal of the post-Civil War South and her ironic view of its history. It's noted that Hellman's critical view of the South comes from her bifurcated upbringing in New Orleans and New York City. Similarly, Geraldine Thorsten provides a much-needed corrective to critics who believe that Hellman's later play, Toys in the Attic, borrows heavily from Tennessee Williams. Quite the contrary: Hellman in all likelihood influenced Williams, setting the stage for the kind of candid examination of the South that distinguishes the work of both playwrights.Hellman provides an even more critical view of the South in Another Part of the Forest, which proved disappointing to reviewers when it premiered on Broadway but has received a more respectful hearing from later critics.The Cold War period had an enormous influence on both Hellman's playwriting and her politics. Under attack for her pro-Communism and for a style of playwriting that had come to seem out-of-date, Hellman reflected on her career and on how she might continue to function in the theater. A retrospective, self-critical temper informs The Autumn Garden and Toys in the Attic, her last two successes on the Broadway stage.The probing of human motivation in Hellman's last two successful plays seems, in retrospect, part of her transition to the meditative memoir, a form of literature that rejuvenated her writing career. Hellman was an innovator, adapting the hard-boiled, terse, and elliptical style of writers such as Ernest Hemingway and Dashiell Hammett to the memoir form. Hellman reached the apogee of her achievement in this genre in Pentimento's "Julia." This story is perhaps the best example of Hellman's treatment of her own life in terms of the themes in her writing.The attack on Hellman's veracity escalated when Scoundrel Time, her memoir of the Cold War, received an initially favorable response from several reviewers. The counterattack exposed Hellman's misstatements about historical events such as the perjury trials of Alger Hiss and her self-serving and tendentious accounts of how liberals failed to defend those like Hellman herself who were summoned by congressional committees to recant their leftist politics and to inform on their comrades.Whatever ultimate judgment is rendered on Hellman's work as playwright, screenwriter, and memoirist, the remarkable range of her achievement is undeniable. In her controversial memoirs, her characterizations of her politics and of her era will remain debatable. Quite aside from the critical dialogue about Hellman's work, however, is the energy that propels her writing—an outrage fueled by her exposure of injustice and her struggle to define the individual who forges an identity in a contentious society. Her work is likely to last because it represents her vital argument with society and with herself.Each essay is 5,000 words in length, and all essays conclude with a list of "Works Cited," along with endnotes. Finally, the volume's appendixes offer a section of useful reference resources:A chronology of the author's lifeA complete list of the author's works and their original dates of publicationA general bibliographyA detailed paragraph on the volume's editorNotes on the individual chapter authorsA subject index