Love's Madness

Love's Madness
Author: Helen Small
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 282
Release: 1996
Genre: English fiction
ISBN: 9780198184911

Love's Madness is an important new contribution to the interdisciplinary study of insanity. Focusing on the figure of the love-mad woman, it presents a significant reassessment of the ways in which British medical writers and novelists of the nineteenth century thought about madness, femininity, and narrative convention. The book centers around studies of novels by Jane Austen, Sir Walter Scott, Charlotte Bront , Wilkie Collins, and Charles Dickens, as well as of previously neglected writings by Charles Maturin, Lady Caroline Lamb, and Edward Bulwer-Lytton, among others.

Shakespeare Survey: Volume 55, King Lear and Its Afterlife

Shakespeare Survey: Volume 55, King Lear and Its Afterlife
Author: Peter Holland
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 436
Release: 2002-10-24
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9780521815871

Shakespeare Survey is a yearbook of Shakespeare studies and production. Each volume is devoted to a theme, or play, or group of plays; each also contains a section of reviews of criticism and performance. For the first time, numbers 1-50 are being reissued in paperback.

A Mind Apart

A Mind Apart
Author: Mark S. Bauer
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 433
Release: 2009
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 0195336402

--Book Jacket.

Tom Connor's Gift

Tom Connor's Gift
Author: David Allan Cates
Publisher:
Total Pages: 350
Release: 2014-10-15
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780962378959

A recently-widowed doctor, stunned by grief, retreats to a cabin on Montana's Rocky Mountain Front. Inside she has a puppy and a stack of letters from an old lover. Outside, there's a bear. As she revisits the letters from Tom Connor, we come to see, through his eyes, the dusty, broken alleys of Central America during the war years. The two narratives taken together explore themes of life-long love, about what we can see only when we are ready to see, and how hope can grow in the darkest of places. The third in what the author sees as his "homecoming trilogy" (after "Hunger in American" and "Ben Armstrong's Strange Trip Home"), "Tom Connor's Gift" shines a light on the transformative act of storytelling itself, and is destined to be received as one of the most important novels of the year. David Allan Cates's "Tom Connor's Gift" is extraordinary. The prose is ravishing, the characters are surprising and irresistible, and many of its scenes are so intensely moving that they bring tears of gratitude and pleasure. The book praises long marriage and long friendship, but what I especially appreciate about its vision is how sexually liberating it is for both men and women. Cates is a fierce and fearless writer One finishes this novel feeling wiser, more alive, and spiritually refreshed. David Huddle Sadness and madness, grief and delirium. "Tom Connor's Gift" delivers us precious monsters: our first true love and our true lasting love. Coursing between anecdote and musing, this is a novel only grownups can understand. It is smart and ecstatic and will break your goddamn heart. Bryan Di Salvatore David Allan Cates evokes the human heart out of the landscape, blending the two with so much subtlety and skill that the very world in this novel shimmers with yearning. Tom Connor is as complex and fascinating a character as I have read in contemporary fiction, and Cates has an uncanny ability to evoke the beautiful and terrifying, the feverish and gritty Central American world Connor travels through. "Tom Connor's Gift" is a journey into the heart of two continents-and the continent of the human heart-an exploration of dissolution and loyalty, naivete and cynicism, grief and renewal. In this novel, they all find their place. Kent Myers "Tom Connor's Gift" is the gift we all seek, the gift of love in the face of grief, violence, loss, and heartbreak. In a deeply felt and vividly told story, David Cates connects the interior lives of a farm woman in the wilderness grieving her husband's death and her long-lost lover-a wandering man torn by the beauties and terrors of Central America. Annick Smith "Tom Connor's Gift" is a fearless and instructive odyssey into the rustic places of the heart that still baffle and dictate our lives. Rick DeMarinis "Tom Connor's Gift" is a gift all right-hilarious and moving-a two for one: two voices, two stories, two struggles to come to terms with love and longing, in prose that is vivid, urgent, brave, and true. Dinah Lenney Put a widow in a cabin at the edge of Montana's Rocky Mountain Front with nothing but memories and a marauding bear outside to keep her company and what do you get? A tenderly-told tale of grief, recovery, and a message of love from the past. David Allan Cates's "Tom Connor's Gift" is indeed a gift to readers looking for a novel that will ask them to slow down and think about questions like "How do we endure suffering? And how-when life has flung us far and wide-how do we get home again?" David Abrams "Tom Connor's Gift" is a wonderful book, standing on its tiptoes, stretching out its fingers to brush against a magical realism that is transformative. Mark Metcalf"

The Stoic in Love

The Stoic in Love
Author: Anthony David Nuttall
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 240
Release: 1989
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780389208877

Contents: Two Unassimilable Men; Hamlet: ^R Conversations with the dead; Measure for Measure: ^R The bed-trick; Shallow's Orchard, Adam's Garden; The Stoic in Love; Fishes in the Trees; Causal Dum: A note on^R Aeneid, vi. 585-6; Ovid Immoralised: The method of wit in Marvell's 'The Garden'; Gulliver among the Horses; Moving Cities: Pope as translator and transposer; Adam's Dream and Madeline's; Jack the Giant-Killer; Personality and Poetry; Is there a Legitimate Reductionism?; Did Meursault Mean to Kill the Arab? The intentional fallacy fallacy; Publications; Index

The Common Asphodel

The Common Asphodel
Author: Robert Graves
Publisher: Ardent Media
Total Pages: 350
Release: 1970
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN:

A collection of essays by the author of "The White Goddess," linked together by some common assumptions regarding the nature of poetry. The title of the book, according to the writer, "is shorthand for saying that the popular view of what poetry is, or ought to be, has for centuries been based on sentimental misapprehensions."

Poor Tom

Poor Tom
Author: Simon Palfrey
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 283
Release: 2014-09-10
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 022615078X

King Lear is perhaps the most fierce and moving play ever written. And yet there is a curious puzzle at its center. The figure to whom Shakespeare gives more lines than anyone except the king—Edgar—has often seemed little more than a blank, ignored and unloved, a belated moralizer who, try as he may, can never truly speak to the play’s savaged heart. He saves his blinded father from suicide, but even this act of care is shadowed by suspicions of evasiveness and bad faith. In Poor Tom, Simon Palfrey asks us to go beyond any such received understandings—and thus to experience King Lear as never before. He argues that the part of Edgar is Shakespeare’s most radical experiment in characterization, and his most exhaustive model of both human and theatrical possibility. The key to the Edgar character is that he spends most of the play disguised, much of it as “Poor Tom of Bedlam,” and his disguises come to uncanny life. The Edgar role is always more than one person; it animates multitudes, past and present and future, and gives life to states of being beyond the normal reach of the senses—undead, or not-yet, or ghostly, or possible rather than actual. And because the Edgar role both connects and retunes all of the figures and scenes in King Lear, close attention to this particular part can shine stunning new light on how the whole play works. The ultimate message of Palfrey’s bravura analysis is the same for readers or actors or audiences as it is for the characters in the play: see and listen feelingly; pay attention, especially when it seems as though there is nothing there.

In the Country of the Heart

In the Country of the Heart
Author: P. R. Anderson
Publisher: Jacana Media
Total Pages: 158
Release: 2004
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9781919931562

Love poems written by South Africans, and set in its police vans and bluegum trees, its backyards and its bedrooms, are collected in this anthology.