One morning, Southern California gardener Mitchell Rafferty gets a call on his cellphone from a stranger saying that Mitch's beloved wife, Holly, has been kidnapped and that he has less than three days to come up with $2 million in cash. Of course, he's warned not to involve the police. While Mitch is still on the phone, the kidnapper proves his seriousness by directing Mitch's attention to a man walking a dog across the street. A moment later the man is shot dead. Mitch must walk a fine line—cooperating with the police inquiry into this murder without revealing Holly's plight.
John Milton's Paradise Lost reveals much
about the relationship between God, the world, and the human race. For
Milton, the human condition consists of a tension between demonic and
sacred vices. Thus, the human race stands divided against itself and is
forever expelled from Eden. The
title, John Milton’s Paradise Lost, part of Chelsea House Publishers’
Modern Critical Interpretations series, presents the most important
20th-century criticism on John Milton’s Paradise Lost through extracts
of critical essays by well-known literary critics. This collection of
criticism also features a short biography on John Milton, a chronology
of the author’s life, and an introductory essay written by Harold
Bloom, Sterling Professor of the Humanities, Yale University.
An inspiring and exceptional saga of loss, life, and the strength of the human spirit. When Andy Dufresne is falsely imprisoned for the murder of his wife, so begins his journey towards truth and freedom.