Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Hedda Gabler - cover

Hedda Gabler

Henrik Ibsen

Publisher: Project Gutenberg

  • 0
  • 23
  • 0

Summary

Sorry, we have no synopsis for this book right now. Sign in to read it on 24symbols.com
Available since: 05/01/2003.

Other books that might interest you

  • The Watts Towers Project - cover

    The Watts Towers Project

    Roger Guenveur Smith

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Smith's edgy and funny The Watts Tower Project focuses on Simon Rodia, the Italian immigrant who spent 33 years building his towers - only to walk away from them, never to return.  Smith blends his own childhood, the life of Rodia, and L.A. history to create a wonderfully eclectic piece.An L.A. Theatre Works performance featuring Roger Guenveur Smith.
    (P)2007 L.A. Theater Works
    Show book
  • Traveling Salesman's Son - cover

    Traveling Salesman's Son

    William Bernhardt

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    In his latest collection, William Bernhardt again demonstrates that he is a true poet, one whose work accomplishes the difficult task of being both accessible and profound. He communicates with grace and illumination, avoiding the obscurity and obfuscation that sometimes causes readers to avoid modern poetry. He writes about the subjects that matter most: personal relationships, family, children, and the challenges of everyday life. Bernhardt is a poet who appeals even to those who think they don't like poetry and is cherished by those who do. 
    While addressing subjects of everlasting import, Bernhardt's poems are engaging, relevant, and sometimes playful, reminiscent of beloved predecessors such as Billy Collins and Robert Frost. Readers will be struck by the versatility of the poems and the wide range of form. Smart, lyrical, observant, and textured, these poems explain why Rilla Askew (Kind of Kin) called Bernhardt "a compelling new voice in American poetry" and R.C. Davis-Undiamo (World Literature Today) named him one of "the nation's literary treasures." 
    "William Bernhardt writes with warmth, wit, and a clear desire to commune with his reader. Whether he is working in free verse or in meter and rhyme, Bernhardt makes of poetry a way of connecting person to person. Like Montaigne, Bernhardt is a man consubstantial with his book, and the full range of human feeling is on display in these poems with great honesty and ardent empathy." —Benjamin Meyers, OK Poet Laureate, Crouch-Mathis Professor of Literature, OBU
    Show book
  • The Recruiting Officer - Full Text and Introduction (NHB Drama Classics) - cover

    The Recruiting Officer - Full...

    George Farquhar

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The NHB Drama Classics series presents the world's greatest plays in affordable, highly readable editions for students, actors and theatregoers. The hallmarks of the series are accessible introductions (focussing on the play's theatrical and historical background, together with an author biography, key dates and suggestions for further reading) and the complete text, uncluttered with footnotes. The translations, by leading experts in the field, are accurate and above all actable. The editions of English-language plays include a glossary of unusual words and phrases to aid understanding.
    The Recruiting Officer is a Restoration Comedy with a real heart and soul.
    Captain Plume arrives in Shrewsbury to recruit new soldiers. He falls for Sylvia - against her father's wishes. Rather than be sent away, Sylvia disguises herself as a man and so learns more about Plume than he would really like.
    Edited and introduced by Simon Trussler.
    Show book
  • The Tower - cover

    The Tower

    Paul Legault

    • 0
    • 1
    • 0
    W. B. Yeats meets Gregg Araki at a gay bar.
     
    The Tower is a "translation" of W. B. Yeats's The Tower—an homage and reinvention of the poet’s greatest work. Whereas Yeats’s book contended with his mortality as an aging spiritualist Irish Senator, this version contends with a new mortality: ours.
     
    The poems in this collection crystallize the transition from Legault’s late twenties to his early thirties, situated in North America during a time of political upheaval. It takes each of Yeats’s poems as a starting point and queers them. It translates Yeats’s modernist urge, on the other side of a long century.
     
    In her review of The Tower, Virginia Woolf says Yeats has “never written more exactly and more passionately.” One might imagine she’d conclude the same here. You can’t fault these poems for lacking passion.
     
    Yeats used to talk to ghosts. His wife would let ghosts talk through her. They would talk to Yeats, and he would write down what they say. Another way you could put it is that Yeats talked to his wife. Ghosts are much closer than you think. They like to live in books. So Legault spent some time talking to Yeats’s ghost. Or, Yeats’s ghost talked to him. This is him talking back.
     
    "Through Legault, the opening of Yeats’ words in the title poem shift and turn from absurdity to one of anxieties around ageing" —rob mclennan's Blog
     
    "If you've never cared about poetry, you will after reading these modern-day renderings..." —Maria-Claire
    Show book
  • Song of Autumn - cover

    Song of Autumn

    Adam Lindsay Gordon

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Adam Lindsay Gordon was an Australian poet, jockey and politician. - Summary by Wikipedia
    Show book
  • The Ballad of Reading Gaol - cover

    The Ballad of Reading Gaol

    Oscar Wilde

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The Ballad of Reading Gaol was written by Oscar Wilde in France where he was in exile after his release from Reading Gaol. Wilde had been imprisoned and sentenced to two years hard labour. A hanging took place while Wilde was incarcerated and the poem is the narrative of the execution.Public Domain (P)2016 Spiders' House Audio/Roy Macready
    Show book