Ivan's War: Life and Death in the Red Army, 1939-1945
Added by: gothicca | Karma: 0 | Black Hole | 24 June 2010
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Ivan's War: Life and Death in the Red Army, 1939-1945
Thirty million men and women served in the Red Army during WWII. Over eight million of them died. Living or dead, they have remained anonymous. This is partly due to the Soviet Union's policy of stressing the collective nature of its sacrifice and victory. It also reflects the continuing reluctance of most Soviet
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A novel that really is more curious than any other I know. As you can see, the reader is disoriented right from the start. The uneasy fascination brought on by this opening sentence never lets up. It’s akin to music in the chromatic scale—say Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring—discordant, not exactly pleasant, but dynamic and compelling its own way.
Added by: raziel_401 | Karma: 18.04 | Black Hole | 22 June 2010
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Sword Song
The year is 885, and England is at peace, divided between the Danish kingdom to the north and the Saxon kingdom of Wessex in the south. Uhtred, the dispossessed son of a Northumbrian lord—warrior by instinct, Viking by nature—has finally settled down. He has land, a wife, and two children, and a duty given to him by King Alfred to hold the frontier on the Thames. But then trouble stirs: a dead man has risen, and new Vikings have arrived to occupy the decayed Roman city of London. Their dream is to conquer Wessex, and to do it they need Uhtred's help. But Alfred has other ideas...
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The writers studied in this supplement are mostly contemporary, although a few have roots in the early twentieth century. David Budbill, W. S. Di Piero, Mark Halliday, Ted Kooser, Molly Peacock, and Bruce Weigl are mainly poets by trade, though most of them have also worked in other areas. While each of the writers discussed in this supplement has already found an audience—a large one in the case of Robert B. Parker—few of them have yet to receive the kind of sustained attention they deserve, although each has been reviewed at length in periodicals.