Bookbot

Margaret Drabble

    5 de junio de 1939

    Margaret Drabble es una autora cuyas obras profundizan en las complejidades de la experiencia humana con un intelecto agudo y un estilo distintivo. Sus novelas exploran frecuentemente temas como la memoria, la identidad y las intrincadas relaciones, examinando cómo el pasado moldea el presente de un individuo. Drabble crea magistralmente personajes con profundidad psicológica, y su prosa es reconocida por su precisión y riqueza intelectual. Su contribución literaria reside en su persistente investigación de las complejidades de la vida moderna y la psique humana.

    Margaret Drabble
    The Concise Oxford Companion to English literature
    Wuthering Heights and Selected Poems
    The Realms of Gold
    The Oxford Companion to English Literature - New Edition
    Angus Wilson. A biography.
    The Middle Ground
    • The Middle Ground

      A Novel

      • 248 páginas
      • 9 horas de lectura

      The classic bigraphy of Queen Victoria, reissued in advance of the centenary of her death. Lady Longford regards her with undisguised affection and respect - respect for the iron sense of duty which impelled the secluded widow to emerge at last and rule her empire as a mother, her family as a Queen.

      The Middle Ground
      4,4
    • The colorful, controversial life story of Angus Wilson--one of the most brilliant writers to emerge after World War II--is captured by acclaimed novelist Margaret Drabble. A master chronicler of the foibles of English life, Wilson emerges as an artist of enormous courage, one of the very few who, even in the 1940s, lived as an open homosexual.

      Angus Wilson. A biography.
      5,0
    • The Sixth Edition of this renowned literary reference book has been thoroughly updated and expanded by editor Margaret Drabble and a team of 140 distinguished contributors, including notable authors like Salman Rushdie and Penelope Fitzgerald. This edition features over 660 new entries, with more than a third authored by Drabble herself, encompassing hundreds of new biographies from Kathy Acker to Stefan Zweig, along with fresh entries on genres, literary terms, and critical schools. In total, it offers over 7,000 alphabetically arranged entries, providing extensive coverage of classical English literature and influential European works. The articles encompass authors, fictional characters, plot summaries, composers, artists, literary movements, historians, philosophers, critics, as well as aspects of publishing history, literary societies, and critical theory. Additionally, it includes sixteen new feature essays on topics ranging from gay and lesbian literature to modernism and science fiction, along with a comprehensive chronology that contextualizes key literary works over a thousand years. Complete lists of poet laureates and literary prize winners further enhance its value. With its engaging style, this edition serves as an essential resource for students, teachers, and anyone passionate about English literature.

      The Oxford Companion to English Literature - New Edition
      4,2
    • The Realms of Gold

      • 349 páginas
      • 13 horas de lectura

      English archaeologist Frances Wingate, divorced mother of four, and distinguished scholar Karel Schmidt, selfless and marriage-imprisoned, stay-at-home, come inexorably together once more after years of on-again, off-again romance.

      The Realms of Gold
      3,8
    • "Wuthering Heights", Emily Bronte's only novel, is one of the pinnacles of 19th-century English literature. It's the story of Heathcliff, an orphan who falls in love with a girl above his class, loses her, and devotes the rest of his life to wreaking revenge on her family.

      Wuthering Heights and Selected Poems
      4,1
    • Based on the bestselling Oxford Companion to English Literature, this is an indispensable, compact guide to all aspects of English literature. For this revised edition, existing entries have been fully updated and 60 new entries have been added on contemporary writers, such as Peter Ackroyd, Martin Amis, Toni Morrison, and Jeanette Winterson. New appendices include a chronology of English literature, and a listing of major literary prize-winners.

      The Concise Oxford Companion to English literature
      3,9
    • The middle years of Kate Armstrong are caught between parents and children and are free of neither. Relentlessly good-natured, surprisingly successful, lapped by the affection of her children and friends and intidily folded into the clutter of her overflowing house, Kate is now suddenly in her forties. Margaret Drable takes Kate's predicament - when Kate is forced to make a reconnaissance of the middle ground of her life - and turns it into a wise, witty and ebullient novel.

      The Middle Ground
      3,8
    • Thoughts of Sorts

      • 216 páginas
      • 8 horas de lectura

      Perec was a leading exponent of French literary surrealism who found humour - and pathos - in the human need for classification. Thoughts of Sorts is itself unclassifiable, a unique collection of philosophical riffs on his obsession with lists, puzzles, catalogues, and taxonomies. Introduced by Margaret Drabble.

      Thoughts of Sorts
      4,0
    • Collects three lesser-known works by one of the nineteenth century's greatest authors: Lady Susan, The Watsons and Sanditon. This book examines the works in the context of her major novels and her life, and discusses the social background of her fiction.

      Lady Susan, the Watsons and Sanditon
      3,8
    • Winner of the James Tait Black Memorial Prize, an intimate novel about human desire against the backdrop of the sexual liberation movement of the Sixties

      Jerusalem The Golden
      3,8