The Priesthood Quartette

The Priesthood Quartette
Author: Keith Wilson
Publisher: iUniverse
Total Pages: 150
Release: 2001-07-30
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0595193161

"Keith Wilson's Thantog (part of The Priesthood Quartette) is a sequence of poems in priestly voices, heard from the ancient civilizations...dancing is meaning as it evolves in Wilson's beautifully measured poems. . . ." --from "The Passionate Few" Hayden Carruth, Harper's "Keith Wilson's voice, whether from deserts of New Mexico or the streets of Romania become a familiar one to many of us. We have been called to see in new ways through his always fresh and clear language for territories as close as the brush and hills just past our back gates to the those as distant and foreign as the tombs of Transylvania. It is therefore particularly exciting to be presented with this heretofore unpublished group of poems emanating from yet another facet of this man's personality." --Dave Slagel, Poet

Hip Priest

Hip Priest
Author: Simon Ford
Publisher:
Total Pages: 306
Release: 2003
Genre: Rock groups
ISBN: 9780704381674

East/west Quartet

East/west Quartet
Author: Ping Chong
Publisher: Theatre Communications Grou
Total Pages: 238
Release: 2004
Genre: Drama
ISBN: 9781559362290

Publisher Description

The Gandhi Quartet

The Gandhi Quartet
Author: Chaman Lal Nahal
Publisher: Allied Publishers
Total Pages: 560
Release: 1993
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9788170231004

Novels about India's freedom movement and the partition of India, 1947.

The Jerusalem Quartet

The Jerusalem Quartet
Author: Edward Whittemore
Publisher: Open Road Media
Total Pages: 2064
Release: 2013-11-18
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1480465283

DIVDIVA special four-in-one edition of Edward Whittemore’s epic Jerusalem Quartet/divDIV In Sinai Tapestry, it is 1840, and Plantagenet Strongbow, the twenty-ninth duke of Dorset, seven-feet-seven-inches tall and the greatest swordsman and botanist of Victorian England, walks away from the family estate and disappears into the Sinai Desert carrying only a large magnifying glass and a portable sundial. He emerges forty years later as an Arab holy man and anthropologist, now the author of a massive study of Levantine sex—and the secret owner of the Ottoman Empire./divDIV In Jerusalem Poker, on New Year’s Eve, 1921, three men sit down to a poker game. The Great Jerusalem Poker Game, as it’s eventually known, continues for the next twelve years. The players are as exotic as the game: Cairo Martyr, a one-time African slave, now the Middle East’s chief supplier of aphrodisiac mummy dust; Joe O’Sullivan Beare, an Irish tradesman with a specialty in sacred phallic amulets; and Munk Szondi, an Austro-Hungarian Imperial Army colonel turned dedicated Zionist. And they are playing for no less than the control of Jerusalem itself./divDIV In Nile Shadows, in 1941, a hand grenade explodes in a Cairo bar, taking the life of Stern, a petty gunrunner and morphine addict. His death could easily go unnoticed as Rommel’s tanks charge through the desert in an attempt to open the Middle East to Hitler’s forces. Yet the mystery behind Stern’s death is a top priority for intelligence experts. Master spies from three countries converge on Joe O’Sullivan Beare, who is closer to Stern than anyone, in an effort to unravel the disturbing puzzle. The search for the truth about Stern leads O’Sullivan Beare through the slums of Cairo to a decaying former brothel called the Hotel Babylon./divDIV And in Jericho Mosaic, Yossi is an ideal agent for the Mossad. He’s recruited by an agent named Tajar, and code-named “the Runner.” Thus begins the longest-running and most successful operation in the history of Israeli intelligence. Meanwhile, in the desert oasis of Jericho, Abu Musa, an Arab patriarch, and Moses the Ethiopian, meet each day over games of shesh-besh and glasses of Arak to ponder history and humanity. We learn about the friendship of Yossi’s son, Assaf, an Israeli soldier badly wounded during the Six Day War, and Yousef, a young Arab teacher who, in support of the Palestinian cause, decides to live as an exile in the Judean wilderness./divDIV/div/div

Madeleine L'Engle: The Polly O'Keefe Quartet (LOA #310)

Madeleine L'Engle: The Polly O'Keefe Quartet (LOA #310)
Author: Madeleine L'Engle
Publisher: Library of America
Total Pages: 993
Release: 2018-09-25
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 1598535994

A Wrinkle in Time was only the beginning—now, discover the thrilling adventures of Meg Murry’s daughter, Polly, in this gorgeous deluxe edition of a beloved children’s classic. Madeleine L’Engle’s A Wrinkle in Time is one of the most beloved and influential novels for young readers ever written, a thrilling tale in which fourteen-year-old Meg Murry and her schoolmate Calvin O’Keefe use a tesseract to travel across space and time to save Meg’s scientist father from dire forces threatening the universe. But A Wrinkle in Time was only the beginning of the adventure. Now, for the first time, L’Engle’s iconic classic and all seven of its sequels—the complete Kairos (“cosmic time”) novels—are collected in a deluxe two-volume Library of America edition, together with never-seen-before deleted passages and hard-to-find essays in which L’Engle reflects on her work. This second volume gathers the final four Kairos novels, in which Meg and Calvin’s daughter Polly takes center stage. In The Arm of the Starfish, Polly disappears, and Calvin’s research assistant is implicated in her kidnapping. In Dragons in the Waters, Polly and her brother Charles are on a steamer bound for Venezuela when they help solve a murder connected to a stolen portrait of Simon Bolivar. Polly receives an education in different kinds of love in A House Like a Lotus. And in An Acceptable Time, Polly is lured through a tesseract by a friend who may be hoping to sacrifice Polly in order to save himself. A companion volume gathers the first four Kairos Novels, the Wrinkle in Time quartet, which also includes A Wind in the Door, A Swiftly Tilting Planet, and Many Waters. LIBRARY OF AMERICA is an independent nonprofit cultural organization founded in 1979 to preserve our nation’s literary heritage by publishing, and keeping permanently in print, America’s best and most significant writing. The Library of America series includes more than 300 volumes to date, authoritative editions that average 1,000 pages in length, feature cloth covers, sewn bindings, and ribbon markers, and are printed on premium acid-free paper that will last for centuries.

Quartet in Heaven

Quartet in Heaven
Author: Sheila Kaye-Smith
Publisher: DigiCat
Total Pages: 202
Release: 2022-08-10
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

In this religious biography, the writer details the lives of four influential women in the Catholic Church, examining them as saints. Kaye-Smith attempted to present more of a psychological study of these women than a biographical one. Contents include: Forward The Matrons Caterina Fiesca Adorna Cornelia Connelly The Maidens Isabella Rosa De Santa Maria De Flores Thérèse Martin Some Notes on the Nature of Sanctity

The Squire Quartet

The Squire Quartet
Author: Brian W. Aldiss
Publisher: Open Road Media
Total Pages: 926
Release: 2018-07-03
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1504054466

Four loosely linked realistic novels from “one of Britain’s most accomplished and versatile writers” (The Guardian). A Hugo and Nebula Award–winning science fiction writer, British novelist Brian W. Aldiss also regularly “returned to earth with distinction,” penning realistic works, including the Squire Quartet (The New York Times). Comprised of “loosely interconnected novels following many characters through a twenty-first century landscape of insidious new technology and international political turmoil” (Booklist), here is the complete series from this “ambitious and gifted writer” (The Guardian). Life in the West: Thomas C. Squire, creator of the hit documentary series Frankenstein Among the Arts, one-time secret agent, and founder of the Society for Popular Aesthetics, is attending an international media symposium in Sicily. It is here that he becomes involved with the lovely but calculating Selina Ajdina. Alongside the drama of the conference is the story of Squire’s private life—the tale of his infidelity, the horrifying circumstances surrounding his father’s death, and the threatened future of his ancestral home in England. “[A] novel of ideas that is also eminently readable . . . a virtuoso performance.” —Publishers Weekly Forgotten Life: Analyst Clement Winters is trying to write a biography of his recently deceased older brother, Joseph. Through the writings Joseph left behind—letters, diaries, notes, and confessions—Clement realizes how vastly his perception of his sibling differs from reality. As Clement tries to make sense of Joseph’s life, he uncovers dark corners of his family history and even his own existence. “A realistic novel . . . imaginative richness . . . [a] many-layered venture into the extraordinariness of ordinary lives.” —The New York Times Remembrance Day: When four people are killed by a terrorist bombing in a small British seaside hotel, an American academic examines the details of the victims’ lives and histories to find the relationship between them and their fate. “Aldiss discovers fresh and arresting nuances in the dichotomy between blind chance and predestination in human affairs . . . original, disturbing, and memorable.” —Kirkus Reviews Somewhere East of Life: Architectural historian Roy Burnell has been tasked with traveling the globe and listing architectural gems in danger of being destroyed. But when Burnell is in Budapest, ten years of his memory, including his sexual experiences, are stolen. In this near future, where thieves sell memories on the black market, Burnell tries to resume his life, while also searching for the “bullet” that will restore his memory. “Intelligent, funny, and hopeful in spite of itself.” —Kirkus Reviews

Songs of Myself: Quartet

Songs of Myself: Quartet
Author: Ojaide, Tanure
Publisher: Kraft Books
Total Pages: 185
Release: 2016-12-19
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9789183313

Songs of Myself: Quartet is deeply rooted in the indigenous African poetic tradition. The great udje poets first composed songs paying tribute to the god of songs, followed by songs of self-exhortation,and then songs mocking themselves before satirizing others. This collection incorporates some of these aspects of the oral poetic genre in its four-part structure. It deals with self-examination and the minstrel’s alter-ego as a way of attempting to know himself. So, there is self-mockery that justifies mocking others. The four parts of the collection are: “Pulling the Thread of the Loom,” “Songs of Myself,” “Songs of the Homeland Warrior,” and “Secret Love and Other Poems.”