You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
A volume on the readership and reception of Amadis de Gaula, an influential Spanish chivalric novel dating from the fourteenth century, from Tudor England to the twentieth century.
Published on the occasion of two exhibitions, held in 2011 at the Bodleian Library and the Folger Shakespeare Library respectively, celebrating the 400th centenary of the publication of the King James Bible.
Ecopoetry is new poetry for a new age of awareness and Helen Moore is a leading light in this probing, ground breaking genre.
Exploring dispossession in a range of forms - from colonial legacies in Scotland and Australia to impacts of industrial civilisation on human health, planetary systems, and our children's future - The Mother Country is a journey through sorrow, a quest for poetic justice, and a movement towards forgiveness and ecological restoration.
Details 8 branches of Peaches in the United States with a focus on veterans and genealogists in the family.
"My debut ecopoetry collection"--Author's website.
Reprint of the original, first published in 1889.
Along with bar rooms and bordellos, there has hardly been a more male-focused institution in Texas history than the Texas Legislature. Yet the eighty-six women who have served there have made a mark on the institution through the legislation they have passed, much of which addresses their concerns as citizens who have been inadequately represented by male lawmakers. This first complete record of the women of the Texas Legislature places such well-known figures as Kay Bailey Hutchison, Sissy Farenthold, Barbara Jordan, Irma Rangel, Eddie Bernice Johnson, Susan Combs, and Judith Zaffirini in the context of their times and among the women and men with whom they served. Drawing on years of prima...