Friday, July 30, 2010

Walt Whitman

Walt Whitman (1819-1892)

Walter "Walt" Whitman (May 31, 1819 March 26, 1892) was an American poet, essayist and journalist. A humanist, he was a part of the transition between transcendentalism and realism, incorporating both views in his works. Whitman is among the most influential poets in the American canon, often called the father of free verse. His work was very controversial in its time, particularly his poetry collection Leaves of Grass, which was described as obscene for its overt sexuality. Born on Long Island, Whitman worked as a journalist, a teacher, a government clerk, and a volunteer nurse during the American Civil War in addition to publishing his poetry. Early in his career, he also produced a temperance novel, Franklin Evans (1842). Whitman's major work, Leaves of Grass, was first published in 1855 with his own money. The work was an attempt at reaching out to the common person with an American epic. He continued expanding and revising it until his death in 1892. After a stroke towards the end of his life, he moved to Camden, New Jersey where his health further declined. He died at age 72 and his funeral became a public spectacle. Whitman's sexuality is often discussed alongside his poetry. Though biographers continue to debate his sexuality, he is usually described as either homosexual or bisexual in his feelings and attractions. However, there is disagreement among biographers as to whether Whitman had actual sexual experiences with men. Whitman was concerned with politics throughout his life. He supported the Wilmot Proviso and opposed the extension of slavery generally. His poetry presented an egalitarian view of the races, and at one point he called for the abolition of slavery, but later he saw the abolitionist movement as a threat to democracy.



[Drum Taps | The Patriotic Poems Of Walt Whitman]

Thursday, July 29, 2010

A J P Taylor

A J P Taylor (1906-1990)

Alan John Percival Taylor, FBA (25 March 1906 7 September 1990) was a British historian of the 20th century and academic.


F Taylor's Books:


[The Principles Of Scientific Management]


Tags: everhardus johannes potgieter  elizabeth robins raimond  edward tanjore  augustin calmet  frank moore  william withrow  akua lezli hope  stratton mcallister  adela rogers  

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

David Boswell

David Boswell (1953-now)

David E. Boswell (born 1953) is a comic book writer and artist, illustrator, and photographer based in Vancouver, British Columbia who has worked in the comics industry. He is the creator of the series Reid Fleming, World's Toughest Milkman. Boswell grew up in London, Ontario, Canada, and Hamilton and Dundas, Ontario. He studied film at Oakville, Ontario's Sheridan College, where he graduated in 1974. After graduation, Boswell attempted to earn a living as a cartoonist, and his first full-page comic, "Heart Break Comics", was published in The Georgia Straight from 19771978. Boswell moved to Vancouver in 1977, and in 1978, he launched Reid Fleming, World's Toughest Milkman. Another title Boswell created is Ray-Mond. Boswell's influences include film directors Josef von Sternberg and Luis Buuel, composer Hector Berlioz, comedians Buster Keaton and W.C. Fields, and humourist Robert Benchley, as well as early Hollywood and European cinema stars, and he often features references in his work. He has written a number of screenplays for movies, none of which have been made.


Boswell's Books:


[Life Of Johnson Volume 4 | Life Of Johnson Volume 5]


Tags: anna brownwell jameson  william denton  william minto  ebenezer cook  stephen marlowe  benito perez galdos  clements markham  henry northam  c kincaid  edward bagby pollard  

Monday, July 26, 2010

Augusta Jane Evans

Augusta Jane Evans (1835-1909)

Augusta Jane Evans (1835-1909)

Augusta Jane Wilson, or Augusta Evans Wilson, (May 8, 1835 May 9, 1909) was an American Southern author and one of the pillars of Southern literature. She wrote nine novels: Inez (1850), Beulah (1859), Macaria (1863), St. Elmo (1866), Vashti (1869), Infelice (1875), At the Mercy of Tiberius (1887), A Speckled Bird (1902), and Devota (1907). Given her support for the Confederate States of America from the perspective of a Southern patriot, and her literary activities during the American Civil War, she can be deemed as having contributed decisively to the literary and cultural development of the Confederacy in particular, and of the South in general, as a civilization.



[Inez | Beulah | St Elmo]


Tags: william martin  william henry rhodes  william walker atkinson  christian fuerchtegott gellert  almeida garrett  alfred ainger  s van dine  alexander kuprin  general comte de segur  

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Francis Parkman

Francis Parkman

Francis Parkman title=

Francis Parkman (September 16, 1823 - November 8, 1893) was an American historian, best known as author of The Oregon Trail: Sketches of Prairie and Rocky-Mountain Life and his monumental seven-volume France and England in North America. These works are still valued as history and especially as literature, although the biases of his work have met with criticism. He was also a leading horticulturist, briefly a Professor of Horticulture at Harvard University and the first leader of the Arnold Arboretum, and author of several books on the topic.



[A Half Century Of Conflict Volume I | A Half Century Of Conflict | Count Frontenac And New France Under Louis Xiv | France And England In North America A Series Of Historical Narratives Part Third | Montcalm And Wolfe | The Jesuits In North America In The Seventeenth Century | The Oregon Trail]

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Alice Randall

Alice Randall (1959-now)

Alice Randall is an American author and songwriter. Randall grew up in Washington, D.C.. She attended Harvard University, where she earned an honors degree in English and American literature, before moving to Nashville in 1983 to become a country songwriter. She currently lives in Nashville, Tennessee and is married to attorney David Ewing. She is a writer-in-residence at Vanderbilt University and teaches courses including a seminar on the country music lyric in American literature.



[Handbook To The Severn Valley Railway]


Tags: george bethune english  alexander irvine  alfred henry lewis  maureen mchugh  ernest raymond  felicia skene  charles dack  anton stuxberg  catherine warfield  thornton deky  

Peter Watts

Peter Watts (1958-now)

Peter Watts (born 1958) is a Canadian science fiction author and marine-mammal biologist.



[Behemoth | Blindsight | Maelstrom | Starfish]

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Michael Roe

Michael Roe

Michael Roe is an Australian historian and academic, focusing on Australian history. Educated at Caulfield Grammar School, Roe attended the University of Melbourne and began studying a combined BA/LL.B. degree. He discontinued law after his first year, and after graduating from his arts degree he studied history Peterhouse at the University of Cambridge. He then undertook doctoral studies in history at the Australian National University on a scholarship.


E Roe's Books:


[A Brave Little Quakeress A Tradition Of The Revolution | A Christmas Eve Suit | A Day Of Fate | A Knight Of The Nineteenth Century | An Original Belle | An Unexpected Result | Barriers Burned Away | Caught On The Ebb Tide | Christmas Eve In War Times | Found Yet Lost | From Jest To Earnest | His Sombre Rivals | Jeff Treasure | Miss Lou | Nature Serial Story | Queen Of Spades | Success With Small Fruits | Susie Rolliffe Christmas | Taken Alive | The Earth Trembled | Three Thanksgiving Kisses | Without A Home | Fun And Frolic]


Tags: friedrich gerstacker  alice hayes  philip dick  gordon randall garrett  wilhelm hauff  ethel may dell  arthur de marsy  charlotte perkins gilman  wilkie collins  john wood campbell  

Monday, July 19, 2010

Ann Maria Hall

Ann Maria Hall

Anna Maria Hall (6 January 1800 - 30 January 1881) was an Irish novelist who often published as "Mrs. S.C. Hall". She was born Anna Maria Fielding in Dublin, but left Ireland at the age of 15. Nevertheless, her home country was the theme for several of her most successful books, such as Sketches of Irish Character (1829), Lights and Shadows of Irish Character (1838), Marian (1839), and The Whiteboy (1845). She wrote numerous stories for children, like Grandmamma's Pockets (1849) and Midsummer Eve: a fairy tale of love (1870), and from 1828 to 1837 she was editor of the Juvenile Forget Me Not, an annual published in London. Other works are The Buccaneer, and many sketches in the Art Journal, of which her husband, Samuel Carter Hall (1800 - 1889), was editor. With him she also collaborated on a work entitled Ireland, its Scenery, Character, etc. Mrs. Hall was a prolific writer; her descriptive talents were considerable, as also was her power of depicting character. She wrote some 50 titles, but few are still remembered. Her emphasis on moral 'lessons' may limit her appeal. Her husband was a writer on art (ballads, sculpture, etc. ) who wrote Retrospect of a Long Life, from 1815 to 1883 (London, 1883) in which he describes her very well.



[Le Femme Noir]


Tags: bertram stevens  d armando palacio valdes  goldwin smith  daniel webster  william claxton  damon runyon  george manville fenn  harold sherman  frdric houssay  beatrix potter  

Francis Amasa Walker

Francis Amasa Walker (1840-1897)

Francis Amasa Walker (1840-1897)

Francis Amasa Walker (July 2, 1840 - January 5, 1897) was an American economist, statistician, journalist, educator, academic administrator, and military officer in the Union Army. Walker was born into a prominent Boston family, the son of the economist and politician Amasa Walker, and he graduated from Amherst College at the age of 20. He received a commission to join the 15th Massachusetts Regiment of Volunteers and quickly rose through the ranks as an assistant adjutant general. Walker fought in the Peninsula Campaign and was injured at the Battle of Chancellorsville but subsequently participated in the Bristoe, Overland, and Richmond-Petersburg Campaigns before being captured by Confederate forces and held at the infamous Libby Prison. After his release, he was promoted to the rank of brevet brigadier general at the age of 24. Following the war, Walker served on the editorial staff of the Springfield Republican before using his family and military connections to gain appointment as the Chief of the Bureau of Statistics from 1869 to 1870 and Superintendent of the 1870 census where he published an award-winning Statistical Atlas visualizing the data for the first time. He joined Yale University's Sheffield Scientific School as a professor of political economy in 1872 and rose to international prominence serving as a chief member of the 1876 Philadelphia Exposition, American representative to the 1878 International Monetary Conference, President of the American Statistical Association in 1882, and inaugural President of the American Economic Association in 1886, and vice president of the National Academy of Sciences in 1890. Walker also led the 1880 census which resulted in a twenty-two volume census, cementing Walker's reputation as the nation's preeminent statistician. As an economist, Walker debunked the wage-fund doctrine and engaged in a prominent scholarly debate with Henry George on land, rent, and taxes. Although Walker argued that obligations existed between the employer and the employed, he was an opponent of the nascent socialist movement and argued in support of bimetallism. He published his International Bimetallism at the height of the 1896 presidential election campaign in which economic issues were prominent. Walker was a prolific writer, authoring ten books on political economy and military history. In recognition of his contributions to economic theory, beginning in 1947, the American Economic Association recognized the lifetime achievement of an individual economist with a "Francis A. Walker Medal". Walker accepted the presidency of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1881, a position he held for fifteen years until his death. During his tenure, he placed the institution on more stable financial footing by aggressively fund-raising and securing grants from the Massachusetts government and implemented many curricular reforms, oversaw the launch of new academic programs, and expanded the size of the Boston campus, faculty, and student enrollments. MIT's Walker Memorial Hall, a former students' clubhouse and one of the original buildings on the Charles River campus, was dedicated to him in 1916.



[The Indian Question]


Tags: duncan campbell scott  augusta jane evans wilson  alfredo descragnolle taunay  william mcombie  j smeaton chase  fletcher pratt  alexandre herculano  eugene field  ek jarvis  

Florence Augusta Merriam Bailey

Florence Augusta Merriam Bailey (1863-1948)

Florence Augusta Merriam Bailey (1863-1948) title=

Florence Augusta Merriam Bailey (August 8, 1863 - September 22, 1948) was an American ornithologist and nature writer. She was born in Locust Grove, New York. The third child in her family, she was the younger sister of Clinton Hart Merriam.



[A Birding On A Bronco]

Paul Heyse

Paul Heyse (1830-1914)

Paul Heyse (1830-1914)

Paul Johann Ludwig von Heyse (15 March 1830 - 2 April 1914) was a distinguished German writer and translator. A member of two important literary societies, the Tunnel ber der Spree in Berlin and Die Krokodile in Munich, he wrote novels, poetry, 177 short stories, and about sixty dramas. The sum of Heyse's many and varied productions made him a dominant figure among German men of letters. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1910 "as a tribute to the consummate artistry, permeated with idealism, which he has demonstrated during his long productive career as a lyric poet, dramatist, novelist and writer of world-renowned short stories. " Wirsen, one of the Nobel judges, said that "Germany has not had a greater literary genius since Goethe. " Heyse is the third oldest laureate in literature, after Doris Lessing and Theodor Mommsen.



[Larrabbiata Le Garde Vignes Resurrection]


Tags: horace smith  anton chekhov  rafael sabatini  william cotton  daniel hack tuke  oscar wilde  gabriel franchere  war military  

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Wilhelm Max Mller

Wilhelm Max Mller

Wilhelm Max Mller, Ph.D. (1862 1919) was an American Oriental scholar, born at Gleisenberg, Germany. He was the son of Friedrich Max Mller and the grandson of German romantic poet Wilhelm Mller. He was educated at Erlangen, Berlin, Munich, and Leipzig, where he received his Ph. D. Dr. Mller emigrated to the United States after 1888. He occupied a chair at the Reformed Episcopal Seminary in Philadelphia after 1890.



[The Upanishads Vol 2 | The Upanishads Vol I]


Tags: ernest bramah smith  christian johann heinrich heine  abel jones  christopher marlowe  charles mair  kate chopin  david weinberger  eduardo de souza  gerhart hauptmann  

Saturday, July 17, 2010

John Herbert Quick

John Herbert Quick

John Herbert Quick (1861-1925) was an American author. Born on Oct 23, 1861, near Steamboat Rock, Grundy County, Iowa to Martin and Margaret Coleman Quick, he was afflicted with polio as a small child. He married Ella Corey in 1890. His works include "Vandemark's Folly" (1922), "The Hawkeye" (1923), "The Invisible Woman" (1924), and an autobiography, "One Man's Life" (1925). He died on May 10, 1925, in Columbia, Missouri.



[Double Trouble]


Tags: bernhard severin ingemann  henry melvill  cabeza vaca  francisco amorim  rosel brown  frank luther mott  henry savage landor  charles bean  bill jordan  elliot donnell  chas newkey  

Harry Harrison

Harry Harrison (1925-now)

Harry Harrison (1925-now) title=

Harry Harrison (born March 12, 1925) is an American science fiction author best known for his character the Stainless Steel Rat and the novel Make Room! Make Room! (1966), the basis for the film Soylent Green (1973). He is also co-president of the Birmingham Science Fiction Group.



[Arm Of The Law | Deathworld | Navy Day | Planet Of The Damned | The Ethical Engineer | The K Factor | The Misplaced Battleship | The Repairman | The Velvet Glove | Toy Shop]

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Henry B Wheatley

Henry B Wheatley

Henry Benjamin Wheatley FSA (1838-1917) was a British author, editor, and indexer. Assistant Secretary, Royal Society of Arts, 1879-1909. President of the Samuel Pepys Club, 1903-1910. Vice-President of the Bibliographical Society, 1908-1910, and President 1911-1913.



[Literary Blunders | The History Of Sir Richard Whittington]

Monday, July 12, 2010

Conrad Aiken

Conrad Aiken (1889-1973)

Conrad Potter Aiken (5 August 1889 - 17 August 1973) was an American novelist and poet, whose work includes poetry, short stories, novels, and an autobiography.



[The House Of Dust | An Old Man Sees Himself]


Tags: andrew murray campaigner  scott withers  william john  savage landor  william henry hudson  vctor hugo jordn  amiel gladstone  adam mller guttenbrunn  

Robert Moore Williams

Robert Moore Williams

Robert Moore Williams (19071977), born in Farmington, Missouri, was an American writer, primarily of science fiction. Pseudonyms included John S Browning, H. H. Hermon, Russell Storm and E. K. Jarvis (a house name). His first published story was Zero as a Limit, which appeared in Astounding Science Fiction in 1937, under the pseudonym of "Robert Moore". He was a prolific author throughout his career, with his last novel appearing in 1972. His "Jongor" series was originally published in Fantastic Adventures in the 1940s and 1950s, but only appeared in book form in 1970. By the 1960s he had published over 150 stories.



[Be It Ever Thus | Planet Of The Gods | The Lost Warship | The Next Time We Die | Thompsons Cat]


Tags: daniel young  jaroslav hasek  ernest thompson seton  geoffrey chaucer  andrew murray  fletcher pratt  alexander whyte d  edith van dyne  frederik van eeden  

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Rudy Rucker

Rudy Rucker (1946-now)

Rudy Rucker (1946-now)

Rudolf von Bitter Rucker (born March 22, 1946 in Louisville, Kentucky) is an American mathematician, computer scientist, science fiction author, and philosopher, and is one of the founders of the cyberpunk literary movement. The author of both fiction and non-fiction, he is best known for the novels in the Ware Tetralogy, the first two of which both won Philip K. Dick Awards. At present he edits the science fiction webzine Flurb.



[Postsingular | The Men In The Back Room At The Country Club | The Ware Tetralogy]


Tags: alexander kielland  henry festing jones  ferdinando fontana  frederick browne  cao xueqin  harriet beecher stowe  william hope hodgson  harold leland goodwin  e hornung  alice moore dunbar nelson  

Mao Dun

Mao Dun (1896-1981)

Mao Dun (July 4, 1896-March 27, 1981) was the pen name of Shen Dehong (Shen Yanbing), a 20th century Chinese novelist, cultural critic, and journalist. He was also the Minister of Culture of China from 1949 to 1965. He is currently renowned as one of the best realist novelists in the history of modern China. His most famous works are Midnight, a grand novel depicting life in cosmopolitan Shanghai, and Spring Silkworms. He also wrote many short stories. He adopted 'Mao Dun' (), meaning "contradiction", as his pen name to express the tension in the conflicting revolutionary ideology in China in the unstable 1920s. His friend Ye Shengtao changed the first character from to , which literally means "thatch", to protect him from political persecution.


Gua Shen's Books:


[Meng Xi Bi Tan]

Cody Willard

Cody Willard (1972-now)

Cody Willard (1972-now)

Cody Willard (born August 31, 1972 in Ruidoso, New Mexico) is an anchor on the Fox Business Network, where he was the co-host of Fox Business Happy Hour along with Rebecca Diamond and Eric Bolling. Willard was the principal of an investment management company named CL Willard Capital. He wrote a monthly investment column for The Financial Times as well as columns for TheStreet. com for many years. He was a regular guest on CNBC's Kudlow & Company from 2004 to 2006.



[A Farmer Wife | The Man Who Did Not Die]

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Charles G D Roberts

Charles G D Roberts

Charles G D Roberts

Sir Charles George Douglas Roberts, KCMG, FRSC (January 10, 1860 - November 26, 1943) was a Canadian poet and prose writer. Besides his own body of work, Roberts is known as the "Father of Canadian Poetry" because he served as an inspiration for other writers of his time. Roberts, his cousin Bliss Carman, Archibald Lampman and Duncan Campbell Scott were known as the "Confederation poets". His brother Theodore Goodridge Roberts also became an author, as did his sister, Jane Elizabeth Gostwycke Roberts. Roberts was born in Douglas, New Brunswick in 1860, the eldest child of Emma Wetmore Bliss and George Goodridge Roberts, and between the ages of 8 months and 14 years, was raised near the Tantramar Marshes at Sackville. In 1879, he earned a BA from the University of New Brunswick and, in the following year, published his first book of poems, Orion and Other Poems, and married Mary Fenety on December 29. From 1879 to 1895, Roberts worked as a teacher in Chatham and Fredericton, New Brunswick, as editor of the literary magazine the Week, and as a professor at the University of King's College, located in Windsor, Nova Scotia. It was during this period that Roberts wrote his two best collections of verse, In Divers Tones (1887) and Songs of the Common Day and Ave! An Ode for the Shelley Centenary (1893). Much of his best poetry in this period was inspired by nature. In this latter work, Roberts recreated Maritime life with vivid sensitivity. In 1893, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. In 1897, he separated from his wife and family and moved to New York City, where he turned to fiction, especially stories about animals. He also wrote descriptive text for guide books, such as Picturesque Canada and The Land of Evangeline and Gateways Thither for Nova Scotia's Dominion Atlantic Railway. Roberts famously became involved in a literary debate known as the nature fakers controversy after John Burroughs denounced his work, and that of other writers, in a 1903 article for Atlantic Monthly. The controversy lasted for nearly six years and included important American environmental and political figures of the day, including President Theodore Roosevelt. In 1907, he moved to Paris, later moving to London. Roberts served with the British Army during World War I, then later joined the Canadian War Records Office in London. Charles G. D Roberts was elected to the United States National Institute of Arts and Letters in 1898. In 1925, Roberts returned to Canada, moving to Toronto and began writing poetry again. For his contributions to literature, he was awarded the Royal Society of Canada's first Lorne Pierce Medal in 1926 and was knighted in 1935. He got remarried, to Joan Montgomery, on October 28, 1943 at the age of 83 but became ill and died shortly after in Toronto.



[Aarniometsaen Sydaen | Barbara Ladd | Earth Enigmas | In Divers Tones | In The Morning Of Time | Kings In Exile | The Backwoodsmen | The Forge In The Forest | The Haunters Of The Silences | The House In The Water | The Secret Trails | Children Of The Wild | Jim The Story Of A Backwoods Police Dog | The Raid From Beausejour And How The Carter Boys Lifted The Mortgage | The Terror Of The Sea Caves]


Tags: alexander smith  daniel collins  charles whibley  oscar wilde  charles lee  charles sheldon  w clark russell  hanns heinz ewers  thomas hardy  

Tobias S Buckell

Tobias S Buckell (1979-now)

Tobias S Buckell (1979-now) title=

Tobias S. Buckell (born 1979) is a New York Times Best-Seller science fiction author who was born in Grenada in the Caribbean. He currently lives in Bluffton, Ohio.



[Aerophilia | Four Eyes | Necahual | Toy Planes]


Tags: vctor arvalo jordn  harry bates  edmondo amicis  vctor arvalo  vctor arvalo jordn  christoph von schmid  hugo jordn  virgil banescu  hugo arvalo  gerald drayson adams  

Friday, July 9, 2010

David Rains Wallace

David Rains Wallace

David Rains Wallace is an author of geography and geology related books.



[History Of The Confederate Powder Works]


Tags: eino leino  gumundur kamban  armando palacio valdes  garrett putnam serviss  frank adams  daniel wise  george henry  charles foster kent  w leathem  

Albert Goodwin

Albert Goodwin (1906-1995)

Albert Goodwin (2 August 1906 22 September 1995) was a Fellow of Jesus College, Oxford (where he had previously been a student) and later Professor of Modern History in the University of Manchester. He outlined his liberal ideas on the reasons behind the French Revolution in his book of the same name.



[The Wedge Of Gold]

Willem Bilderdijk

Willem Bilderdijk

Willem Bilderdijk

Willem Bilderdijk (Amsterdam, September 7, 1756 - Haarlem, December 31, 1831), Dutch poet, the son of an Amsterdam physician. When he was six years old an accident to his foot incapacitated him for ten years, and he developed habits of continuous and concentrated study. His parents were ardent partisans of the House of Orange-Nassau, and Bilderdijk grew up with strong monarchical and Calvinistic convictions.



[De Ondergang Der Eerste Wareld]


Tags: emerson hough  young allison  alexandre dumas  carl richard jacobi  friedrich spielhagen  georg buchner  duncan campbell scott  f marion crawford  

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Bjrnstjerne Bjrnson

Bjrnstjerne Bjrnson (1832-1910)

Bjrnstjerne Martinius Bjrnson (8 December 1832 26 April 1910) was a Norwegian writer and the 1903 Nobel Prize in Literature laureate. Bjrnson is considered as one of The Four Greats (De Fire Store) Norwegian writers; the others being Henrik Ibsen, Jonas Lie, and Alexander Kielland. Bjrnson is celebrated for his lyrics to the Norwegian National Anthem, "Ja, vi elsker dette landet".



[Auf Gottes Wegen | Synnove Paivakumpu | The Father | A Gauntlet | Leonarda | The Newly Married Couple]


Tags: louisa may alcott  avram davidson  edgar lee masters  arlo bates  frances sheridan  archibald lampman  baron holbach  edmund michael  arthur stangland  

Charles Kingsley

Charles Kingsley (1819-1875)

Charles Kingsley (1819-1875)

Charles Kingsley (12 June 1819 - 23 January 1875) was an English clergyman, university professor, historian and novelist, particularly associated with the West Country and northeast Hampshire.



[The Water Babies | Alexandria And Her Schools | Daily Thoughts | David | Discipline And Other Sermons | Froude History Of England | Glaucus | Historical Lectures And Essays | Lectures Delivered In America In 1874 | Madam How And Lady Why | Out Of The Deep | Phaethon | Plays And Puritans | Prose Idylls | Sanitary And Social Lectures And Essays | The Ancien Regime | The Good News Of God | The Heroes | The Saint Tragedy | All Saints Day And Other Sermons | Andromeda And Other Poems | At Last | Glaucus Or The Wonders Of The Shore | Health And Education | Hereward The Last Of The English | Hypatia | Literary And General Lectures And Essays | Scientific Essays And Lectures | Sermons For The Times | Sir Walter Raleigh And His Times | The Gospel Of The Pentateuch | The Roman And The Teuton | The Water Of Life And Other Sermons | True Words For Brave Men | Twenty Five Village Sermons | Two Years Ago Volume Ii | Westward Ho | Women And Politics | Yeast A Problem]


Tags: guillaume apollinaire  sterling lanier  william lyon  philip francis nowlan  frederick philip grove  william nowlin  elizabeth lea  flora cooke  george alfred henty  g parker  

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Howard Dudley

Howard Dudley (1820-now)

Howard Dudley (18201864) wrote the first illustrated history of Horsham, West Sussex, in 1836. The book was entitled The History and Antiquities of Horsham and its Vicinities. He also produced the lithographs and woodcuts that were used as the illustrations, and then went on to print the book himself. Dudley was only 15 at the time. This was Dudleys second book; the first being a wider ranging history of Sussex entitled Juvenile Researches of which he produced two editions in 1835 and 1836.



[The History And Antiquities Of Horsham]

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Ernest Thayer

Ernest Thayer (1863-1940)

Ernest Thayer (1863-1940)

Ernest Lawrence Thayer (August 14, 1863 - August 21, 1940) was an American writer and poet who wrote "Casey at the Bat".



[Casey At The Bat]


Tags: e hoffmann price  claude phillips  richard smith  hermann hagedorn  emilia pardo bazan  william gilder  eliza paul kirkbride gurney  arvi jannes  annie allnut brassie  frederick william thomas