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The Communist manifesto (Oxford world's classics)
Par Karl Marx. 1998
Political and economic theory of social organization, first published as the platform of the Communist League. Anticapitalist work based on…
collective government ownership and democratic management of production and distribution of goodsTon kaki qui t'adore: lettres d'amour en temps de guerre
Par Denys Lessard. 2008
"Jeannine et Gérard se rencontrent en mars 1942. Elle a 19 ans, lui 21. Deux mois plus tard, ils échangent…
leur premier baiser. Mais en août, la conscription sépare nos deux amoureux. Gérard est enrôlé dans l'armée canadienne, où il restera trois ans sans jamais être envoyé au front. Ils s'écriront plus d'un millier de lettres (une par jour), entretenant une relation amoureuse passionnée qui trouvera son accomplissement à leur mariage à la fin de la Deuxième Guerre mondiale, en juillet 1945. Les quelques lettres présentées ici, tirées de cette monumentale correspondance, témoignent de la ferveur de cet amour de jeunesse, des difficultés soulevées par l'absence et l'éloignement, traçant un portrait touchant de cette génération d'amoureux contrariés par la guerre, mais animés par l'espoir, la foi et le désir. [...]" -- 4e de couvPure drivel
Par Steve Martin. 1998
Collection of humorous essays (many first published in the New Yorker) by comedian, actor, and screenwriter Martin. Topics include memory…
loss, drug side effects, and the number of movie stars who are secretly Nobel prize-worthy scientists. BestsellerOscar Wilde à Paris
Par Herbert Lottman. 2007
"Herbert Lottman retrace ici l'amitié amoureuse d'Oscar Wilde pour Paris et pour la France, depuis son premier voyage à Paris…
en 1874 jusqu'à sa mort en 1900. Ses innombrables visites menèrent Wilde de salons en cafés parisiens où il côtoya les beaux esprits (Mallarmé, Pierre Louÿs, Gide, Paul Valéry...). Il aimait aussi fréquenter les lieux malfamés, rencontrer des artistes, des poètes et des mauvais garçons. Francophone raffiné, il écrivit même une pièce en français, Salomé ; comme la censure britannique en interdit la représentation, il tempêta et menaça d'émigrer en France et d'en solliciter la nationalité. Plus tard, à sa sortie de prison, ruiné et vilipendé, c'est encore en France qu'il chercha refuge. Et il y vécut ses dernières années dans la misère et la solitude. Brisé par sa chute spectaculaire dans l'infamie pour avoir, contre toute raison, poursuivi en diffamation le père de son amant qui le traitait de "sodomite", Oscar Wilde proclamait qu'il avait mis son talent dans son oeuvre et son génie dans sa vie. Le conformisme et la discrétion n'étaient pas ses vertus préférées : homme d'esprit provocateur et dérangeant, Oscar Wilde défiait les convenances d'une société pudibonde". -- 4e de couvMaya Angelou: journey of the heart (Rainbow biography)
Par Jayne Pettit. 1998
Presents the life of Maya Angelou from her childhood through her years as a poet, author, civil-rights activist, entertainer, and…
professor. Describes how her creativity and hard work have promoted the success of African Americans through poetry, writing, and teaching. For junior and senior high readersFalling up: poems and drawings
Par Shel Silverstein. 1996
A collection of brief and humorous poems featuring silly situations and a gallery of zany characters. You will see the…
world from "a different angle" as you meet the Terrible Toy-Eating Tookle, attend the "Rotten Convention," and visit Hungry Kid Island. For grades 2-4 and older readers. BestsellerOn writing: a memoir of the craft
Par Stephen King. 2000
Prolific, bestselling horror novelist describes his writing technique and gives tips for aspiring authors. King also discusses pertinent events from…
his childhood and tells of the near-fatal accident in 1999, when he was hit by a truck while taking his daily walk. Some strong language. Bestseller. 2000Ex libris: confessions of a common reader
Par Anne Fadiman. 1998
Eighteen essays written over four years reveal the author's bibliomania and compulsive proofreading habit. In "Marrying Libraries," she admits that…
only after five years of marriage and a child were she and her husband intimate enough to mingle their book collections. In "Insert a Carrot," she describes her family's need to correct misspellings, even on menusZane Grey: romancing the West
Par Stephen May. 1997
Biography of the popular author discusses how he spent his youth fishing and hunting near Zanesville, Ohio, a town named…
after his pioneer ancestor. Grey became a dentist at his father's insistence, but later returned to his love of writing. Tells how Riders of the Purple Sage (RC 17362) became his first bestseller in 1912The history of Henry IV, part 1
Par William Shakespeare. 1994
First published in 1598. Depicts the early years of the reign of England's Henry IV. The Earl of Northumberland's son,…
Hotspur, becomes Henry's opponent. Eventually Henry's son, Prince Hal, leaves the merrymaker Falstaff to join the battle at Shrewsbury against Hotspur. Annotated version with historical background and essay on literary perspectiveThe kingdom of Shivas Irons
Par Michael Murphy. 1997
In this sequel to Golf in the Kingdom (BR 11383), Murphy returns to Scotland in search of guru golfer Shivas…
Irons. Hoping to discover the secrets of transcendent golf and the "life to come," Murphy encounters a series of people who enlighten him in the ways of the game as well as spiritually. BestsellerThe night lives on
Par Walter Lord. 1986
In a companion volume to A Night to Remember (RC 9698, BR 11461), Lord revisits the tragedy of April 14,…
1912, and offers an update of what happened to the Titanic and its passengers. The discovery of the hull in 1985 brought with it a renewed interest, and Lord responds to some of the questions that arose by separating facts from myths. BestsellerPoèmes et chansons d'amour et d'autre chose (Littérature)
Par Georges Dor. 1991
Crabcakes
Par James McPherson. 1998
The Pulitzer prize-winning African American author records autobiographical episodes and meditates on their meaning. The taste of Maryland crabcakes became…
firmly imprinted on his consciousness during his stay in Baltimore and remained with him even when he moved to Iowa and Japan. Some strong languageJoe DiMaggio: the hero's life
Par Richard Cramer. 2000
Muckraking biography of sports legend Joe DiMaggio, who rose from his Sicilian working-class background in San Francisco to become an…
American icon. Explores his pivotal games and business decisions, his obsession--and fights--with Marilyn Monroe, his dubious mob acquaintances, his life after baseball, and his lonely death in Florida. Some strong language. Bestseller. 2000The professor and the madman: a tale of murder, insanity, and the making of the Oxford English dictionary
Par Simon Winchester. 1998
An account of the unusual circumstances leading to the friendship between the Oxford English Dictionary's editor, Dr. James Murray, and…
one of its most prolific contributors, Dr. W.C. Minor, an American criminal. Relates the details of Dr. Minor's crime and its aftermath and how he first began his correspondence with Dr. Murray. BestsellerWalden, or, Life in the woods
Par Henry Thoreau. 1992
Philosophical observations recorded during an experiment in simple living at a small pond near Concord, Massachusetts. Thoreau's essays include his…
detailed observations of nature and his comments on the world's problems. He says that "the mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation."Birthday letters
Par Ted Hughes. 1998
Thirty-five years after Sylvia Plath's suicide, her husband, Ted Hughes, responds with eighty-eight poems. Arranged chronologically, the poems depict their…
courtship, marriage, and an imagined sixtieth birthday reunion in her honor. BestsellerGreene on Capri: a memoir
Par Shirley Hazzard. 2000
Novelist Shirley Hazzard creates a portrait of the British author Graham Greene, based on her personal recollections. Describes how she…
and her husband, Francis Steegmuller, became lifelong friends with Greene in the late 1960s on the historic Mediterranean isle of Capri--a haven for writers. 2000La mémoire est une corde de bois d'allumage
Par Benoit Pinette. 2021
Avec bonté et résilience, Benoit Pinette retourne à son enfance - un pays en soi, une trajectoire - et pose…
le doigt sur ses instants douloureux, étudie l'équilibre des époques. Il construit de là sa compréhension des glissements du passé et sa volonté à faire mieux, à offrir le meilleur aux siens. Ce texte lance l'allumette dans le foin sec ; il carbonise des histoires anciennes, des angoisses, des corps pourris. La mémoire est une corde de bois d'allumage représente un chantier d'inquiétudes et de certitudes éphémères, mais parions que l'amour l'emportera sur la tâche à accomplir.