Bartlett's Book of Anecdotes

Bartlett's Book of Anecdotes

Author: Andre Bernard

Publisher: Little, Brown

Published: 2000-09-21

Total Pages: 808

ISBN-13: 0446931268

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

From Hank Aaron to King Zog, Mao Tse-Tung to Madonna, Bartlett's Book of Anecdotes features more than 2,000 people from around the world, past and present, in all fields. These short anecdotes provide remarkable insight into the human character. Ranging from the humorous to the tearful, they span classical history, recent politics, modern science and the arts. Bartlett's Book of Anecdotes is a gold mine for anyone who gives speeches, is doing research, or simply likes to browse. As an informal tour of history and human nature at its most entertaining & instructive, this is sure to be a perennial favorite for years to come.


Anecdotal Theory

Anecdotal Theory

Author: Jane Gallop

Publisher: Duke University Press

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 196

ISBN-13: 9780822330387

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Essays weaving theory, story, and personal narrative into a method of critical writing.


Book Row

Book Row

Author: Marvin Mondlin

Publisher: Carroll & Graf Publishers

Published: 2005-01-01

Total Pages: 416

ISBN-13: 9780786716524

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The city has eight million stories, and this one unfolds just south of 14th Street in Manhattan, mostly on the seven blocks of Fourth Avenue bracketed by Union Square and Astor Place. There, for nearly eight decades, from the 1890s to the 1960s, thrived a bibliophiles' paradise. They called it the New York Booksellers' Row, or, more commonly, Book Row. It's an American story, the story that this richly anecdotal historical memoir amiably tells: as American as the rags-to-riches tale of the Strand, which began its life as book stall on Eighth Street and today houses 2.5 million volumes in twelve miles of space. It's a story cast with colorful characters: like the horse-betting, poker-playing go-getter and book dealer George D. Smith; the irascible Russian-born book hunter Peter Stammer, the visionary Theodore C. Schulte; Lou Cohen, founder of the still-surviving Argosy Book Store; gentleman bookseller George Rubinowitz and his legendary shrewd wife Jenny. Rising rents, street crime, urban redevelopment, television-the reasons are many for the demise of Book Row, but in this volume, based on interviews with dozens upon dozens of the book people who bought, sold, and collected there, it lives again.


The New Oxford Book of Literary Anecdotes

The New Oxford Book of Literary Anecdotes

Author: John Gross

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2008

Total Pages: 400

ISBN-13: 0199543410

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

In The New Oxford Book of Literary Anecdotes, master anthologist John Gross brings together a delectable smorgasbord of literary tales, offering striking new insight into some of the most important writers in history. Many of the anecdotes here are funny, others are touching, outrageous, sinister, inspiring, or downright weird. They show writers from Chaucer to Bob Dylan acting both unpredictably and deeply in character. The range is wide--this is a book which finds room for Milton and Shakespeare, Mark Twain and Walt Whitman, Kurt Vonnegut and P. G. Wodehouse, Chinua Achebe and Salman Rushdie, James Baldwin and Tom Wolfe. It is also a book in which you can find out which great historian's face was once mistaken for a baby's bottom, which film star experienced a haunting encounter with Virginia Woolf not long before her death, and what Agatha Christie really thought of her popular character Hercule Poirot. It is in short an unrivalled collection of literary gossip offering intimate glimpses into the lives of authors ranging from Shakespeare to Philip Roth--a book not just for lovers of literature, but for anyone with a taste for the curiosities of human nature.


Anecdotal Modernity

Anecdotal Modernity

Author: James Dorson

Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG

Published: 2020-12-16

Total Pages: 318

ISBN-13: 3110668491

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Modernity is made and unmade by the anecdotal. Conceived as a literary genre, a narrative element of criticism, and, most crucially, a mode of historiography, the anecdote illuminates the convergences as well as the fault lines cutting across modern practices of knowledge production. The volume explores uses of the anecdotal in exemplary case studies from the threshold of the early modern to the present.


Anecdotal Modernity

Anecdotal Modernity

Author: James Dorson

Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG

Published: 2020-12-16

Total Pages: 506

ISBN-13: 3110665735

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Modernity is made and unmade by the anecdotal. Conceived as a literary genre, a narrative element of criticism, and, most crucially, a mode of historiography, the anecdote illuminates the convergences as well as the fault lines cutting across modern practices of knowledge production. The volume explores uses of the anecdotal in exemplary case studies from the threshold of the early modern to the present.


The Little, Brown Book of Anecdotes

The Little, Brown Book of Anecdotes

Author: Clifton Fadiman

Publisher: Hachette+ORM

Published: 2009-10-31

Total Pages: 1322

ISBN-13: 0316084727

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

A book compiled of anecdotes from other collections, arranged under the name of the person they're about.


The New York Times Bridge Book

The New York Times Bridge Book

Author: Alan Truscott

Publisher: Macmillan

Published: 2004-08

Total Pages: 278

ISBN-13: 9780312331078

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

A guide to the popular card game includes anecdotes about great players, major tournaments, scandals, and strategies that make bridge so legendary.


The Oxford Book of Theatrical Anecdotes

The Oxford Book of Theatrical Anecdotes

Author: Gyles Brandreth

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2020-10-08

Total Pages: 511

ISBN-13: 0191066524

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This is the ultimate anthology of theatrical anecdotes, edited by lifelong theatre-lover Gyles Brandreth in the Oxford tradition, and covering every kind of theatrical story and experience from the age of Shakespeare and Marlowe to the age of Stoppard and Mamet, from Richard Burbage to Richard Briers, from Nell Gwynn to Daniel Day-Lewis, from Sarah Bernhardt to Judi Dench. Players, playwrights, prompters, producers—they all feature. The Oxford Book of Theatrical Anecdotes provides a comprehensive, revealing, and hugely entertaining portrait of the world of theatre across four hundred years. Many of the anecdotes are humorous: all have something pertinent and illuminating to say about an aspect of theatrical life—whether it is the art of playwriting, the craft of covering up missed cues, the drama of the First Night, the nightmare of touring, or the secret ingredients of star quality. Edmund Kean, Henry Irving, John Gielgud, Laurence Olivier, Ellen Terry, Edith Evans, Maggie Smith, Helen Mirren—the great 'names' are all here, of course, but there are tales of the unexpected, too—and the unknown. This is a book—presented in five acts, with a suitably anecdotal and personal prologue from Gyles Brandreth—where, once in a while, the understudy takes centre-stage and Gyles Brandreth treats triumph and disaster just the same, including stories from the tattiest touring companies as well as from Broadway, the West End and theatres, large and small, in Australia, India, and across Europe.