Woodstock, a Bird's-eye View

Woodstock, a Bird's-eye View
Author: Charles M. Schulz
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2005
Genre: American wit and humor, Pictorial
ISBN: 9780345470607

A collection of Peanuts comic strips featuring Woodstock, the bird, and his best pal Snoopy.

Views and Viewmakers of Urban America

Views and Viewmakers of Urban America
Author: John William Reps
Publisher: University of Missouri Press
Total Pages: 594
Release: 1984
Genre: Canada
ISBN: 0826204163

Union list catalog of the lithographic views of cities and towns made during the 19th century.

Last Bus to Woodstock

Last Bus to Woodstock
Author: Colin Dexter
Publisher: Pan Macmillan
Total Pages: 321
Release: 2009-08-21
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0330468561

The first intriguing case that began Colin Dexter’s phenomenally successful Inspector Morse series. ‘Do you think I'm wasting your time, Lewis?’ Lewis was nobody’s fool and was a man of some honesty and integrity. ‘Yes, sir.’ An engaging smile crept across Morse’s mouth. He thought they could get on well together . . . The death of Sylvia Kaye figured dramatically in Thursday afternoon’s edition of the Oxford Mail. By Friday evening, Inspector Morse had informed the nation that the police were looking for a dangerous man. But as the obvious leads fade into twilight and darkness, Morse becomes more and more convinced that passion holds the key . . . Last Bus to Woodstock is followed by the second Inspector Morse book, Last Seen Wearing.

It's Off to Camp, Charlie Brown

It's Off to Camp, Charlie Brown
Author: Charles M. Schulz
Publisher:
Total Pages: 164
Release: 2006
Genre: Comics & Graphic Novels
ISBN: 9780345479877

Charlie Brown and his pals are off to summer camp.

From Walt to Woodstock

From Walt to Woodstock
Author: Douglas Brode
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Total Pages: 292
Release: 2014-05-02
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 0292768079

With his thumbprint on the most ubiquitous films of childhood, Walt Disney is widely considered to be the most conventional of all major American moviemakers. The adjective "Disneyfied" has become shorthand for a creative work that has abandoned any controversial or substantial content to find commercial success. But does Disney deserve that reputation? Douglas Brode overturns the idea of Disney as a middlebrow filmmaker by detailing how Disney movies played a key role in transforming children of the Eisenhower era into the radical youth of the Age of Aquarius. Using close readings of Disney projects, Brode shows that Disney's films were frequently ahead of their time thematically. Long before the cultural tumult of the sixties, Disney films preached pacifism, introduced a generation to the notion of feminism, offered the screen's first drug-trip imagery, encouraged young people to become runaways, insisted on the need for integration, advanced the notion of a sexual revolution, created the concept of multiculturalism, called for a return to nature, nourished the cult of the righteous outlaw, justified violent radicalism in defense of individual rights, argued in favor of communal living, and encouraged antiauthoritarian attitudes. Brode argues that Disney, more than any other influence in popular culture, should be considered the primary creator of the sixties counterculture—a reality that couldn't be further from his "conventional" reputation.

Place-making for the Imagination: Horace Walpole and Strawberry Hill

Place-making for the Imagination: Horace Walpole and Strawberry Hill
Author: Marion Harney
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 327
Release: 2016-04-08
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 1317080505

Drawing together landscape, architecture and literature, Strawberry Hill, the celebrated eighteenth-century ’Gothic’ villa and garden beside the River Thames, is an autobiographical site, where we can read the story of its creator, Horace Walpole. This 'man of taste' created private resonances, pleasure and entertainment - a collusion of the historic, the visual and the sensory. Above all, it expresses the inseparable integration of house and setting, and of the architecture with the collection, all specific to one individual, a unity that is relevant today to all architects, landscape designers and garden and country house enthusiasts. Avoiding the straightforward architectural description of previous texts, this beautifully illustrated book reveals the Gothic villa and associated landscape to be inspired by theories that stimulate 'The Pleasures of the Imagination' articulated in the series of essays by Joseph Addison (1672-1719) published in the Spectator (1712). Linked to this argument, it proposes that the concepts behind the designs for Strawberry Hill are not based around architectural precedent but around eighteenth-century aesthetics theories, antiquarianism and matters of 'Taste'. Using architectural quotations from Gothic tombs, Walpole expresses the mythical idea that it was based on monastic foundations with visual links to significant historical figures and events in English history. The book explains for the first time the reasons for its creation, which have never been adequately explored or fully understood in previous publications. The book develops an argument that Walpole was the first to define theories on Gothic architecture in his Anecdotes of Painting (1762-71). Similarly innovative, The History of the Modern Taste in Gardening (1780) is one of the first to attempt a history and theory of gardening. The research uniquely evaluates how these theories found expression at Strawberry Hill. This reassessment of the villa and its associated l