Exercises in Style

Exercises in Style
Author: Raymond Queneau
Publisher: New Directions Publishing
Total Pages: 212
Release: 1981
Genre: French fiction
ISBN: 9780811207898

Queneau uses a variety of literary styles and forms in ninety-nine exercises which retell the same story about a minor brawl aboard a bus.

Exercises in Style

Exercises in Style
Author: Raymond Queneau
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2008
Genre: French fiction
ISBN: 9781847490735

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Exercises in Style

Exercises in Style
Author: Raymond Queneau
Publisher: Calder Publications Limited
Total Pages: 197
Release: 1998-01-01
Genre: Experimental fiction, French
ISBN: 9780714542386

Exercises in Programming Style

Exercises in Programming Style
Author: Cristina Videira Lopes
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 306
Release: 2014-06-02
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 1482227371

Using a simple computational task (term frequency) to illustrate different programming styles, Exercises in Programming Style helps readers understand the various ways of writing programs and designing systems. It is designed to be used in conjunction with code provided on an online repository. The book complements and explains the raw code in a way that is accessible to anyone who regularly practices the art of programming. The book can also be used in advanced programming courses in computer science and software engineering programs. The book contains 33 different styles for writing the term frequency task. The styles are grouped into nine categories: historical, basic, function composition, objects and object interactions, reflection and metaprogramming, adversity, data-centric, concurrency, and interactivity. The author verbalizes the constraints in each style and explains the example programs. Each chapter first presents the constraints of the style, next shows an example program, and then gives a detailed explanation of the code. Most chapters also have sections focusing on the use of the style in systems design as well as sections describing the historical context in which the programming style emerged.

99 Ways to Tell a Story

99 Ways to Tell a Story
Author: Matt Madden
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 210
Release: 2005-10-25
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 1596090782

99 Ways to Tell a Story is a series of engrossing one-page comics that tell the same story ninety-nine different ways. Inspired by Raymond Queneau’s 1947 Exercises in Style, a mainstay of creative writing courses, Madden’s project demonstrates the expansive range of possibilities available to all storytellers. Readers are taken on an enlightening tour—sometimes amusing, always surprising—through the world of the story. Writers and artists in every media will find Madden’s collection especially useful, even revelatory. Here is a chance to see the full scope of opportunities available to the storyteller, each applied to a single scenario: varying points of view, visual and verbal parodies, formal reimaginings, and radical shuffling of the basic components of the story. Madden’s amazing series of approaches will inspire storytellers to think through and around obstacles that might otherwise prevent them from getting good ideas onto the page. 99 Ways to Tell a Story provides a model that will spark productive conversations among all types of creative people: novelists, screenwriters, graphic designers, and cartoonists.

The Flight of Icarus

The Flight of Icarus
Author: Raymond Queneau
Publisher: New Directions Publishing
Total Pages: 200
Release: 1973
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780811204835

The Flight of Icarus is Raymond Queneau's only novel written in the form of a play: seventy-four short scenes, complete with stage directions. Consciously parodying Pirandello and Robbe-Grillet, it begins with a novelist's discovery that his principal character, Icarus by name, has vanished. This in turn, sets off a rash of other such disappearances.

HELP Elementary

HELP Elementary
Author: Andrea M. Lazzari
Publisher: LinguiSystems
Total Pages: 207
Release: 1993
Genre: Hearing disorders
ISBN: 9781559992596

Exercises in (Mathematical) Style

Exercises in (Mathematical) Style
Author: John McCleary
Publisher: The Mathematical Association of America
Total Pages: 289
Release: 2017-05-17
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 0883856522

Hover over the image to zoom. Click the image for a popup.Email a Friend About This ItemLogin to Submit a Review inShare John McCleary In Exercises in (Mathematical) Style, the author investigates the world of that familiar set of numbers, the binomial coefficients. While the reader learns some of the properties, relations, and generalizations of the numbers of Pascal's triangle, each story explores a different mode of discourse - from arguing algebraically, combinatorially, geometrically, or by induction, contradiction, or recursion to discovering mathematical facts in poems, music, letters, and various styles of stories. The author follows the example of Raymond Queneau's Exercises in Style, giving the reader 99 stories in various styles. The ubiquitous nature of binomial coefficients leads the tour through combinatorics, number theory, algebra, analysis, and even topology. The book celebrates the joy of writing and the joy of mathematics, found by engaging the rich properties of this simple set of numbers.

The Sunday of Life

The Sunday of Life
Author: Raymond Queneau
Publisher: New Directions Publishing
Total Pages: 204
Release: 1977
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780811206457

The Sunday of Life, the late Raymond Queneau's tenth novel, was first published in French by Gallimard in 1951 and is now appearing for the first time in this country. In the ingenuous ex-Private Valentin Bru, the central figure in The Sunday of Life, Queneau has created that oddity in modern fiction, the Hegelian naif. Highly self-conscious yet reasonably satisfied with his lot, imbued with the good humor inherent in the naturally wise, Valentin meets the painful nonsense of life's adventures with a slightly bewildered detachment.

We Always Treat Women Too Well

We Always Treat Women Too Well
Author: Raymond Queneau
Publisher: New York Review of Books
Total Pages: 204
Release: 2003-01-31
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781590170304

We Always Treat Women Too Well was first published as a purported work of pulp fiction by one Sally Mara, but this novel by Raymond Queneau is a further manifestation of his sly, provocative, wonderfully wayward genius. Set in Dublin during the 1916 Easter rebellion, it tells of a nubile beauty who finds herself trapped in the central post office when it is seized by a group of rebels. But Gertie Girdle is no common pushover, and she quickly devises a coolly lascivious strategy by which, in very short order, she saves the day for king and country. Queneau's wickedly funny send-up of cheap smut—his response to a popular bodice-ripper of the 1940s—exposes the link between sexual fantasy and actual domination while celebrating the imagination's power to transmute crude sensationalism into pleasure pure and simple.