Chaos Burning

Chaos Burning
Author: Lauren Dane
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 322
Release: 2012-06-05
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1101568887

From the “always fabulous Lauren Dane”* comes her new novel of a treacherous family legacy, a temptation just as dangerous, and an evil so depraved it can only be spoken of in whispers… The life of Lark Jaansen, hunter in Clan Gennessee, has been shaped by violence and unrest—and it defines her future. Well-trained and resilient, she’s met her militaristic match in Simon Leviathan, a warrior not of this world. Locked in mutual admiration, and a desire so hot it burns, Lark and Simon have something else in common: they love the dark, and as a shadow is cast over their world, they’re each coming into their own. A mysterious war has been waged among the Others. As witches and humans turn against each other, as faes retreat in fear, and as vampires rise, Lark and Simon discover that an unseen force is behind it. A single, hungry entity older than recorded history has returned to gorge on the magick of his victims. He is the Magister, nothing less than the end of time. Finding him is Lark and Simon’s first hope. Surviving him is their last. *Lara Adrian

The Illusions of Doctor Faustino

The Illusions of Doctor Faustino
Author: Juan Valera
Publisher: CUA Press
Total Pages: 336
Release: 2008
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0813215382

"Don Faustino Lopez de Mendoza, scion of an illustrious but impoverished family of the highest nobility, believes himself destined for great accomplishments in the literary world, sees himself as a poet of the first rank, and immerses himself in grand, if not grandiose, illusions. While living in a provincial Andalusian town and dreaming of triumphing in Madrid's artistic circles, Faustino embarks on a discovery of love with three women. How he extricates himself from each relationship and meets his sad end constitutes the denouement of this searching novel that depicts the deleterious effects of the Romantic malaise that swept through western Europe in the early part of the nineteenth century."--BOOK JACKET.

Instead of modernity

Instead of modernity
Author: Andrew Ginger
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Total Pages: 630
Release: 2020-10-13
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1526147831

This book revisits the claim that a key dimension of cultural modernity – understood as a turn to the autonomy of the signs and the erasure of the 'face of man' - arose in the mid-nineteenth century. It presents an alternative to that obsession, focusing instead on the aesthetic appreciation of forms through which connections are realised across place and time. The book is one of few to offer a comparative approach to numerous major writers and artists of this period over diverse countries. Specifically, the comparative approach overcomes the constitutively ambiguous relation between the modern and the Hispanic. The Hispanic is often imagined as at once foundational for and excluded from the modern world. Its reincorporation into the story of the mid-century unsettles the notion of modernity. The book offers instead an experiment in writing, tracing commonalities across place and time, and drawing on mid-century expressions of such likenesses.

BP 250

BP 250
Author: R. Reginald
Publisher: Wildside Press LLC
Total Pages: 250
Release: 1996-01-01
Genre: Reference
ISBN: 0809512068

An Annotated Bibliography of the First 300 Publications of the Borgo Press, 1975-1998

Pepita Jimenez: A Novel by Juan Valera

Pepita Jimenez: A Novel by Juan Valera
Author: Robert Fedorchek
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Total Pages: 329
Release: 2012-01-01
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 1800345054

Juan Valera y Alcalá-Galiano (1824-1905), one of 19th-century Spain's most well known authors, had a career in the diplomatic service with postings in Europe and the Americas. A serious student of his own and foreign literatures, Valera wrote novels, short stories, essays and literary criticism.

Pepita Jimenez: a Novel by Juan Valera

Pepita Jimenez: a Novel by Juan Valera
Author: Juan Valera
Publisher: Hispanic Classics
Total Pages: 329
Release: 2012
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0856688851

Juan Valera y Alcalá-Galiano (1824-1905), one of 19th-century Spain's most well known authors, had a career in the diplomatic service with postings in Europe and the Americas. A serious student of his own and foreign literatures, Valera wrote novels, short stories, essays and literary criticism. Fluent in a number of languages, he also translated Longus's Daphne and Chloe from Greek into Spanish. The unifying thread of his creative work is "art for art's sake," that is, beauty as the end and purpose of imaginative literature, an ideal epitomised by Pepita Jiménez , long considered one of the best half dozen novels of 19th-century Spain. When it was first published in 1874, Pepita Jiménez became an instant success. Translations abound, as do the number of editions, upwards of fifteen, many of them annotated, some of them illustrated. It tells of Luis de Vargas, a devout twenty-two-year-old seminarian who has come home to visit with his father before entering the priesthood. The storyline unfolds when he meets a comely twenty-year-old widow named Pepita Jiménez and has his religious calling put to the test. On the heels of a fictitious prologue, Valera gives the reader multiple perspectives. The first part of the novel is epistolary in form, letters that Luis writes to the Dean, who is both his uncle and his mentor at the seminary, and everything - people, places, and activities - is filtered through his eyes. The second part reverts to the traditional all-seeing narrator of the realist novel, while the third consists of letters that Pedro de Vargas, Luis's father, writes to his brother the Dean.

Juanita la Larga

Juanita la Larga
Author: Juan Valera
Publisher: CUA Press
Total Pages: 287
Release: 2006
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0813214351

"Juanita la Larga (1896) unfolds in a small town in nineteenth-century Spain and tells the story of a young girl's romance with a wealthy widower many years her senior. Appearing here for the first time in English, Valera's novel describes in detail life in an Andalusian hamlet."--BOOK JACKET.

Valera: Commander Mendoza

Valera: Commander Mendoza
Author: Susan McKenna
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Total Pages: 365
Release: 2010-06-21
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 180034502X

Juan Valera y Alcalá-Galiano (1824-1905), one of nineteenth-century Spain's most respected authors, lived an international life-a career in the diplomatic service, with postings to more than a half dozen countries in Europe and the Americas.

Commander Mendoza

Commander Mendoza
Author: Juan Valera
Publisher: Aris and Phillips Hispanic Cla
Total Pages: 365
Release: 2010
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 0856688592

"The story of Dan Fadrique Lopez de Mendoza, a man of seafaring adventures and a deist in the mould of the eighteenth-century philosophes, and Dona Blanca Roldan de Solis, a woman of unbounded pride and a Catholic driven by religious fanaticism, neither of which traits prevented her from having had an adulterous affair as a young woman in Lima, Peru, with Don Fadrique."--Back cover.

In Dialogue with Valera

In Dialogue with Valera
Author: Thomas R. Franz
Publisher: Peter Lang Incorporated, International Academic Publishers
Total Pages: 160
Release: 2000
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN:

Juan Valera (1824-1905) was Spain's only realist with a lifelong insistence that narrative privilege invention over testimony. Throughout Valera's lengthy career, his novels engaged in a running esthetic debate with those of his chief rivals, Galdós and Alas. This debate, chronicled in the present work, led to many compromises and ultimately produced, in the twentieth-century fiction of Valle-Inclán and Unamuno, a novelistic form, also detailed here, that exhibited clear debts to Valera's catalytic influence.