Charles Bukowski (1920 - 1994) had a gift for creating evocative titles, including the title for his 1972 collection of poetry, "Mockingbird Wish Me Luck". The title is apt. It derives from a beautiful poem, one of Bukowski's finest, "Mockingbird".
Charles Bukowski had a rare gift. He could make desperation beautiful. He could make hate and pain beautiful. Bukowski had a magic way of twisting emotions into poems of unimaginable shapes. Each poetic flash serving as a portal into one man's interpretation of life.
Discusses the role of death and dying in works such as "Beloved", "Heart of Darkness", "King Lear", "A Separate Peace", and many others. Featuring approximately 20 essays, this title provides insights on this recurring theme in literature.
Edited by: IrinaM - 31 July 2009
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A course book for learners of upper junior school at lower intermediate level (B1). ALL EXERCISES ARE IN ENGLISH. The book covers such issues as: describing people, natural disasters, health and lifestyle, travels, sport and hobby, modern technology, jobs, crime, buildings.
A course book at A2 level (elementary) for students of upper primary schools. Consists of 10 theme units (each contains 7 subsections - lessons). At the end of the book you will find grammar reference, word list (with translation and phonetic transcription), key to "Self Check Section," and exam skills exercises. Technical information - following pages were skipped: 1 (title), 146 (blank), 147 (title). Page 168 (irregular verb list) was put at the beginning for better availability. Archive contains recovery data.
Discusses the role of the labyrinth in "The Garden of Forking Paths", "Great Expectations", "A Midsummer Night's Dream", "Paradise Lost", and other works of literature. This title unravels this theme for literature students through 20 essays and critical analyses.