Dear Murderer

Dear Murderer
Author: Ronda Bungay
Publisher: Random House Uk Limited
Total Pages: 213
Release: 1997
Genre: Lawyers
ISBN: 9781869413149

Mike Bungay was New Zealand's best-known criminal defence lawyer, but died in 1993 after a series of heart operations. His wife, Ronda, worked with him on many cases. This is her account of Mike as he really was.

Dear Dr. Thompson

Dear Dr. Thompson
Author: Matthew L. Moseley
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Total Pages: 282
Release: 2016-01-05
Genre:
ISBN: 9781517359584

Where serving a life sentence in prison, twenty-five-year-old Lisl Auman wrote an off-chance letter to legendary Gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson to complain that his books were not available in the prison library. Auman's tragic story began in 1997 when she took a ride in the Thunder Chicken--a freshly stolen red Trans Am--with skinhead Matthaeus Jaehnig. Their brief and devastating journey resulted in the death of Denver Policy Officer Bruce VanderJagt. Jaehnig shot VanderJagt then turned the gun on himself--all while Auman was already in handcuffs in a police cruiser. Two officers later said they saw Auman hand Jaehnig the murder weapon and she was sentenced to life without parole. Communications strategist Matthew Moseley also wrote his own memo to Thompson, outlining how to organize a grassroots campaign to free Lisl Auman from prison and to take on the draconian felony murder law. Dear Dr. Thompson chronicles Lisl's epic struggles and takes you inside the last--and perhaps greatest--Gonzo campaign.

Structures of Desire

Structures of Desire
Author: Tony Williams
Publisher: SUNY Press
Total Pages: 236
Release: 2000-08-10
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9780791446447

Examines the cultural, historical, and ideological factors influencing British cinema during World War II and the postwar years, with attention to male-female relationships as well as to utopian desires for a better postwar world.

Bad

Bad
Author: Murray Pomerance
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 376
Release: 2012-02-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0791485811

Violence and corruption sell big, especially since the birth of action cinema, but even from cinema's earliest days, the public has been delighted to be stunned by screen representations of negativity in all its forms—evil, monstrosity, corruption, ugliness, villainy, and darkness. Bad examines the long line of thieves, rapists, varmints, codgers, dodgers, manipulators, exploiters, conmen, killers, vamps, liars, demons, cold-blooded megalomaniacs, and warmhearted flakes that populate cinematic narrative. From Nosferatu to The Talented Mr. Ripley, the contributors consider a wide range of genres and use a variety of critical approaches to examine evil, villainy, and immorality in twentieth-century film.

Dear Killer

Dear Killer
Author: Katherine Ewell
Publisher: Harper Collins
Total Pages: 218
Release: 2014-04-01
Genre: Young Adult Fiction
ISBN: 006225782X

Full of "can't look away" moments, Dear Killer is a psychological thriller perfect for fans of gritty realistic fiction such as Dan Wells's I Am Not a Serial Killer and Jay Asher's Thirteen Reasons Why, as well as television's Dexter. Rule One—Nothing is right, nothing is wrong. Kit looks like your average seventeen-year-old high school student, but she has a secret—she's London's notorious "Perfect Killer." She chooses who to murder based on letters left in a secret mailbox, and she's good—no, perfect—at what she does. Her moral nihilism—the fact that she doesn't believe in right and wrong—makes being a serial killer a whole lot easier . . . until she breaks her own rules by befriending someone she's supposed to murder, as well as the detective in charge of the Perfect Killer case. As New York Times bestselling author of the Gone series Michael Grant says, Dear Killer is "shocking, mesmerizing, and very smart."

The London Stage 1940-1949

The London Stage 1940-1949
Author: J. P. Wearing
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 721
Release: 2014-08-22
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 0810893061

Theatre in London has celebrated a rich and influential history, and in 1976 the first volume of J. P. Wearing’s reference series provided researchers with an indispensable resource of these productions. In the decades since the original calendars were produced, several research aids have become available, notably various reference works and the digitization of important newspapers and relevant periodicals. The second edition of The London Stage 1940–1949: A Calendar of Productions, Performers, and Personnel provides a chronological calendar of London shows from January 1940 through December 1949. The volume chronicles more than 2,400 productions at 53 major central London theatres during this period. For each production the following information is provided: Title Author Theatre Performers Personnel Opening and Closing Dates Number of Performances Other details include genre of the production, number of acts, and a list of reviews. A comment section includes other interesting information, such as plot description, first-night reception by the audience, noteworthy performances, staging elements, and details of performances in New York either prior to or after the London production. Among the plays staged in London during this decade were The Light of Heart, Mr. Bolfry, Perchance to Dream, Pacific 1860, Bless the Bride, The Lady’s Not for Burning, The Late Edwina Black, Outrageous Fortune, Seagulls over Sorrento, and Buoyant Billions, as well as numerous musical comedies (British and American), foreign works, operas, ballets, and revivals of English classics. A definitive resource, this edition revises, corrects, and expands the original calendar. In addition, approximately 20 percent of the material—in particular, information of adaptations and translations, plot sources, and comment information—is new. Arranged chronologically, the shows are fully indexed by title, genre, and theatre. A general index includes numerous subject entries on such topics as acting, audiences, censorship, costumes, managers, performers, prompters, staging, and ticket prices. The London Stage 1940-1949 will be of value to scholars, theatrical personnel, librarians, writers, journalists, and historians.

Psych Murders

Psych Murders
Author: Stephanie Heit
Publisher: Wayne State University Press
Total Pages: 151
Release: 2022-09-06
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0814349889

Experimental writing that takes you inside psychiatric wards and shock treatments toward new futures of care. Next Generation Indie Book Award Finalist; Bronze Medal winner from the Independent Publisher Book Awards; Midwest Book Award Gold Medal Winner! Stephanie Heit's hybrid memoir poem blasts the page electric and documents her experience of shock treatment. Using a powerful mélange of experimental forms, she traces her queer mad bodymind through breathlessness, damage, refusal, and memory loss as it shifts in and out of locked psychiatric wards and extreme bipolar states. Heit survives to give readers access to this somatic, visceral rendering of a bipolar life complete with sardonic humor, while showing us the dire need for new paradigms of mental health care outside closets, attics, prisons, and wards. Psych Murders adds a vital layer of lived experience of electroshocks and suicidal ideation to the growing body of literature of madness and mental health difference.

A Mirror for England

A Mirror for England
Author: Raymond Durgnat
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 512
Release: 2019-07-25
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 1838714235

Raymond Durgnat's classic study of British films from the 1940s to the 1960s, first published in 1970, remains one of the most important books ever written on British cinema. In his introduction, Kevin Gough-Yates writes: 'Even now, it astounds by its courage and its audacity; if you think you have an 'original' approach to a filmor a director's work and check it against A Mirror for England, you generally discover that Raymond Durgnat had said it already.' Durgnat himself said about the book that 'the main point was arranging a kind of rendezvous between thinking about movies and thinking, not so much about sociology, as about the experiences that people are having all the time.' Durgnat used Mirror to assert the validity of British cinema against its dismissal by the critics of Cahiers du cinéma and Sight and Sound. His analysis takes in classics such as In Which We Serve (1942), A Matter of Life and Death (1946) and The Blue Lamp (1949), alongside 'B' films and popular genres such as Hammer horror. Durgnat makes a cogent and compelling case for the success of British films in reflecting British predicaments, moods and myths, at the same time as providing some disturbing new insights into a national character by whose enigmas and contradictions we continue to be perplexed and fascinated.

Fenians

Fenians
Author: K.M. Rice
Publisher: Wildling Spirit
Total Pages: 531
Release: 2021-11-23
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 194794410X

I am Ophelia, who can remember her past lives. I am Ophelia, who accidentally killed the man I loved. I am Ophelia, the woman whose soul entered the Afterworld, the place between death and rebirth, after she died yet managed to stay awake. I was given the opportunity to fix my mistake. My soul traveled through time to guide that of the man I love through the Great War and beyond to try to change our future. The eve of the Irish Revolution in 1919 finds Ophelia and Johnny struggling to cross the no man’s land that lies between their broken hearts. Her wild past as a priestess of Artemis in ancient Greece teaches her that real power is being true to oneself, even if that means loving another man. Caught up in the fight for freedom, Ophelia must determine where her heart lies. Their love survived the Great War, but can it survive another? Fenians is the penultimate novel in the Afterworld series and continues the journey begun in the first and second books, Ophelia and Priestess.

Japanese and Hong Kong Film Industries

Japanese and Hong Kong Film Industries
Author: Yau Shuk-ting, Kinnia
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 405
Release: 2009-09-11
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 113521946X

Drawing on first-hand materials collected from the Chinese and Japanese literature as well as interviews with more than twenty filmmakers and scholars Kinnia Shuk-ting Yau provides a solid historical account of the complex interactions between Japanese and Hong Kong film industries from the 1930s to 1970s. The author describes in detail how Japan’s efforts during the 1930s and 1940s to produce a "Greater East Asian cinema" led to many different kinds of collaborations between the filmmakers from China, Hong Kong and Japan, and how such development had laid the foundation for more exchanges between the cinemas in the post-war period. The period covered by the book is the least understood period of the East Asian film history. Filling the gaps surrounding one of the most important but least understood periods of Asian film history this books discusses facts and resources once obscured by controversial issues related to wartime affairs with new insights and perspectives. This book is an invaluable source of information for understanding how the current East Asian film networks came into existence by looking beyond conventional single-case studies and adopting a transnational perspective in tracing the connections between different film industries.