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
The Agony of Hell - cover

We are sorry! The publisher (or author) gave us the instruction to take down this book from our catalog. But please don't worry, you still have more than 500,000 other books you can enjoy!

The Agony of Hell

W. Bert Craft

Publisher: Turner

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

The author, from Smith County, Mississippi, writes of his experiences fighting in WWII.
Available since: 06/01/1994.

Other books that might interest you

  • Top 10 Short Stories The - 1920s - The top ten short stories of the 1920's - cover

    Top 10 Short Stories The - 1920s...

    Franz Kafka, Ryunosuke...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Short stories have always been a sort of instant access into an author’s brain, their soul and heart.  A few pages can lift our lives into locations, people and experiences with a sweep of landscape, narration, feelings and emotions that is difficult to achieve elsewhere. 
     
    In this series we try to offer up tried and trusted ‘Top Tens’ across many different themes and authors. But any anthology will immediately throw up the questions – Why that story? Why that author?  
     
    The theme itself will form the boundaries for our stories which range from well-known classics, newly told, to stories that modern times have overlooked but perfectly exemplify the theme.  Throughout the volume our authors whether of instant recognition or new to you are all leviathans of literature. 
     
    Some you may disagree with but they will get you thinking; about our choices and about those you would have made.  If this volume takes you on a path to discover more of these miniature masterpieces then we have all gained something. 
     
    In this one decade the post-war period brings us the Jazz Age and the beginnings of the Great Depression, two ends of a human race in turmoil as the elite are confronted with the masses in a great social surge that will being further problems that stain humanity.  Authors here begin to make a literary sense of what has happened and how their characters and narratives are dealing with questions that need answers.>  
    1 - The Top 10 - The 1920's - An Introduction 
    2 - In A Grove by Ryunosuke Akutagawa 
    3 - The Other Woman by Sherwood Anderson 
    4 - The Most Dangerous Game by Richard Connell 
    5 - Bernice Bobs Her Hair by F Scott Fitzgerald 
    6 - A Jury of Her Peers by Susan Glaspell 
    7 - A Hunger Artist by Franz Kafka 
    8 - The Rocking Horse Winner by D H Lawrence 
    9 - The Color Out of Space by H P Lovecraft 
    10 - The Garden Party by Katherine Mansfield 
    11 - The String Quartet by Virginia Woolf
    Show book
  • Unspoken - A Father's Wartime Escape A Son's Family Discovered - cover

    Unspoken - A Father's Wartime...

    Tom McGrath

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Growing up in Waterford, Tom McGrath never noticed the odd gaps in the stories of his parents' lives before he was born; it was only many years after they died that he uncovered the unspoken truths, which did so much to explain the people they had been.
    Here he tells the incredible true story of his father's conscription into the British Army, his escape from a prisoner-of-war camp in Poland, his daring journey across Europe and subsequent recapture – and the devastating news that awaited him in England. Tom's research also led him to discover that his mother also carried a heartbreaking secret.
    In writing this book Tom not only recreated his father's nail-biting escape but also embarked on a journey of his own to reconnect with previously unknown family members in order to piece together an extraordinarily rare tale that encompasses memoir, family history, and the parallel stories, which were almost lost for ever, of his parents' lives of desperate hardship.
    Show book
  • The Pleasure of Their Company - A Memoir - cover

    The Pleasure of Their Company -...

    Doris Grumbach

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A literary master looks ahead to her eighties As her eightieth birthday approaches, Doris Grumbach does not feel melancholy or saddened by the upcoming event, despite the loss of friends such as Kay Boyle and Dorothy Day—instead she takes it as an opportunity both to look backward and to grow. In this, her summer of unexpected content, Grumbach weaves the elegiac and the practical into a delightful tapestry of experience.   She looks deep into her own history, telling stories of her life in the hardscrabble New York of the 1940s, working as a copyeditor. She details her near encounter with a seventy-two-year-old Bertrand Russell, calling it the closest she has ever come to sleeping with a Nobel Laureate. Grumbach lets us into her life and introduces us to the characters that have peopled her nearly eight decades on Earth. As the fateful day of her celebration draws near, the main topic on Doris Grumbach’s mind is not herself; it’s her guests.  The Pleasure of Their Company is a meticulously planned party that any reader would be honored to attend.
    Show book
  • Reels and Deals - Angling for Business - cover

    Reels and Deals - Angling for...

    John Sellens

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    John Sellens, electronics and mechanical engineer, international businessman, and avid fisherman! 
    John’s career at Thorn EMI Electronics started in design and trials with UK Military and Defence at home and to over 100 territories globally. He became Manager of International Sales & Marketing Asia and Pacific region, later managing Thorn EMI Electronics’ corporate activities in Riyadh, residing in Saudi Arabia for several years. After senior positions in the defence industry, John’s career moved into fire and security systems becoming managing director of UTC Fire Safety Middle East based in Dubai, responsible for group business in the Middle East, Central Europe, North Africa, Central Asia, Russia and the CIS. He led a successful and motivated international team – some dedicated fishermen amongst them.
    Show book
  • The Fixed Stars - cover

    The Fixed Stars

    Molly Wizenberg

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    At age thirty-six, while serving on a jury, author Molly Wizenberg found herself drawn to a female attorney she hardly knew. Married to a man for nearly a decade and mother to a toddler, Wizenberg tried to return to her life as she knew it, but something inside her had changed irredeemably. Instead, she would discover that the trajectory of our lives is rarely as smooth or as logical as we’d like to believe. Like many of us, Wizenberg had long understood sexual orientation as a stable part of ourselves: we’re “born this way.” Suddenly, she realized that her story was more complicated. Who was she, she wondered, if something at her very core could change so radically? The Fixed Stars is a taut, electrifying memoir exploring timely and timeless questions about desire, identity, and the limits and possibilities of family. In honest and searing prose, Wizenberg forges a new path: through the murk of separation and divorce, coming out to family and friends, learning to co-parent a young child, and realizing a new vision of love. The result is a frank and moving story about letting go of rigid definitions and ideals that no longer fit and learning instead of who we really are.
    Show book
  • Appreciations and Criticisms of the Works of Charles Dickens - cover

    Appreciations and Criticisms of...

    G.K Chesterton

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    “These papers were originally published as prefaces to the separate books of Dickens in one of the most extensive of those cheap libraries of the classics which are one of the real improvements of recent times. Thus they were harmless, being diluted by, or rather drowned in Dickens. My scrap of theory was a mere dry biscuit to be taken with the grand tawny port of great English comedy; and by most people it was not taken at all--like the biscuit. 
    Nevertheless the essays were not in intention so aimless as they appear in fact. I had a general notion of what needed saying about Dickens to the new generation, though probably I did not say it. I will make another attempt to do so in this prologue, and, possibly fail again." (Summary by G. K. Chesterton)
    Show book