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Second in the Bryce series. It's Ann and Stephen's special day. Family and friends gather to help them celebrate, each with a story to tell. Peter's memories of Susan; the discovery of Elliston House, derelict, holding echoes of its previous occupants. Sisters, Alice and Audrey, one having raised children apparently abandoned by the other. Peter's difficult childhood with a father figure harbouring double standards. The consequences of his sister's naivety. Trust betrayed and a disappearance lead to an underground nightmare. Can happiness be sealed for more than one generation of the Bryce family?
THE STORY: The scene is the bedroom of a house in provincial England, where a senile old woman lies on her deathbed, attended by her two middle-aged daughters. One of them, Jean, has stayed at home and has borne the brunt of her mother's illness, f
George MacDonald (1824-1905) was a Scottish author, poet, and Christian minister. He was a pioneering figure in the field of fantasy literature and the mentor of fellow writer Lewis Carroll. This edition includes: George MacDonald by Annie Matheson Fantasy Fiction: The Princess and the Goblin The Princess and Curdie Phantastes At the Back of the North Wind The Lost Princess: A Double Story The Day Boy and the Night Girl The Flight of the Shadow Lilith: A Romance Adela Cathcart The Portent and Other Stories Dealings with the Fairies Stephen Archer and Other Tales Realistic Fiction: David Elginbrod (The Tutor's First Love) Alec-Forbes of Howglen (The Maiden's Bequest) Robert Falconer (The Musi...
This volume contains three of Strindberg's most famous plays, spanning twenty years of prodigious creativity and recurrent personal crises: The Father, which displays Strindberg's suspicion of women at its most implacable, 'powerful and profound' (Guy de Maupassant); Miss Julie (1888), which he called his masterpiece, and in which he presents with startling modernity the conflict between sexual passion and social position; and The Ghost Sonata (1907), written in physical pain and spiritual torment, which is a phantasmagoric dream play, 'a direct source for the Theatre of the Absurd' (Martin Esslin)."Michael Meyer is the translator most actors turn to when seeking a definitive text" (Sunday Times)
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This anthology consists of ten plays from countries involved in the First World War. It explores the historical development of theatrical conventions and genres and the historical context of social and gender issues.