Broken Umbrellas
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Broken Umbrellas
Author | : Kate Spohn |
Publisher | : Viking Childrens Books |
Total Pages | : 32 |
Release | : 1994 |
Genre | : Homeless persons |
ISBN | : 9780670857692 |
A woman who spends her time picking up all sorts of things on the streets didn't always live this way.
Brolliology
Author | : Marion Rankine |
Publisher | : Melville House |
Total Pages | : 193 |
Release | : 2017-11-07 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 1612196713 |
A fun, illustrated history of the umbrella's surprising place in life and literature Humans have been making, using, perfecting, and decorating umbrellas for millennia--holding them over the heads of rulers, signalling class distinctions, and exploring their full imaginative potential in folk tales and novels. In the spirit of the best literary gift books, Brolliology is a beautifully designed and illustrated tour through literature and history. It surprises us with the crucial role that the oft-overlooked umbrella has played over centuries--and not just in keeping us dry. Marion Rankine elevates umbrellas to their rightful place as an object worthy of philosophical inquiry. As Rankine points out, many others have tried. Derrida sought to find the meaning (or lack thereof) behind an umbrella mentioned in Nietzsche's notes, Robert Louis Stevenson wrote essays on the handy object, and Dickens used umbrellas as a narrative device for just about everything. She tackles the gender, class, and social connotations of carrying an umbrella and helps us realize our deep connection to this most forgettable everyday object--which we only think of when we don't have one.
Broken Necks
Author | : Ben Hecht |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 360 |
Release | : 1926 |
Genre | : Chicago (Ill.) |
ISBN | : |
More stories from Hecht's early days as a reporter on the Chicago Daily News, a continuation of sorts of his first book,1001 Afternoons in Chicago (1922).
St. Peter's Umbrella
Author | : Kálmán Mikszáth |
Publisher | : Good Press |
Total Pages | : 172 |
Release | : 2021-04-25 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : |
St. Peter's Umbrella is an 1895 novel by the Hungarian writer Kálmán Mikszáth. The story is set in the rural region to the north of Hungary, now Slovakia, where Mikszáth was born. This is the territory of the Palóc people, celebrated by Mikszáth in his writings, especially the short stories A Jó Palócok (translated as The Good People of Palocz). The characters in the story are small town middle class and the local peasantry. The novel is in five sections, the first establishing the legend of 'St Peter's umbrella'. The key character is the young priest, János Bélyi, who has just arrived in his first parish, Glogova, so poor that the living barely supports a priest. Within a couple of weeks, a neighbor from his home village appears. He brings news of the priest's widowed mother's death, and deposits on him his two-year-old sister. How, János wonders, can he care for his sister when the parish hardly provides enough for him? He goes to the church to seek guidance, leaving little Veronica asleep in her basket on the verandah. A sudden storm with torrential rain interrupts his prayers and he hurries back to the sleeping child, only to find her perfectly dry, her basket covered by a ragged red umbrella. The villagers, having seen an old Jew in the neighborhood, with the umbrella, decide that he closely resembles the picture of Saint Peter in their church: they are convinced that the saint has visited their village. The red umbrella becomes a miraculous object of veneration, its widespread fame bringing visitors and prosperity to the village, and to its priest.
Garuna's Adventures
Author | : Anurag Kharpate |
Publisher | : Anurag Kharpate |
Total Pages | : 34 |
Release | : |
Genre | : |
ISBN | : |
A science fiction story on future of human race unleashing the mysteries of space and time.
Roving Bill Aspinwall
Author | : Owen Clayton |
Publisher | : Feral House |
Total Pages | : 396 |
Release | : 2022-04-19 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 1627311270 |
Ladies’ man. Child soldier. War hero. Egotist. Tramp. Drunkard. Published author. Each of these descriptions captures some part of William ‘Roving Bill’ Aspinwall’s life, and yet none does him justice. Born one of 23 siblings, married 5 times, wounded fighting for the Union in one of the bloodiest battles of the American Civil War, kicked out of numerous jobs and solders’ homes for drunkenness, and having spent decades wandering as penniless vagabond, Bill also kept up a 24-year correspondence with John James McCook, Professor of Modern Languages at Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut. In so doing Bill provided the earliest and best account of life on the road by an American hobo. Written between 1893 and 1917, Roving Bill Aspinwall: Dispatches from a Hobo in Post-Civil War America tells Bill’s story entirely in his own words. Describing experiences on the road, the people he meets, his dalliances with women and his memories of the Civil War, the letters are a rich and unique correspondence. Having been physically and mentally scarred at the 1843 Battle of Champion Hill, Bill details his lifelong battle with booze. He also gives first-hand accounts of men thrown out of work during the economic Panic of 1893, of wandering around the country as an itinerant umbrella-mender, of working in factories, farms and even a circus, as well as his visit to the St. Louis World’s Fair in 1903. Bill's words are the real voice of a nineteenth-century hobo.
The Yachtville Boys
Author | : Caroline E. Kelly Davis |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 164 |
Release | : 1869 |
Genre | : Baseball stories |
ISBN | : |