An insider's guide to 200+ Munich bars, clubs, cafes, and restaurants. Each location is rated, after several visits, for history, atmosphere, clientele and how to enjoy the place. The guide is geographically organized, with detailed area maps, full public transportation map, color photos and colorful anecdotes.
An insider's guide to 200+ Munich bars, clubs, cafes, and restaurants. Each location is rated, after several visits, for history, atmosphere, clientel...
The author presents comprehensive articles about the top three anchors--Tom Brokaw, Peter Jennings, and Dan Rather--and offers anaysis and commentary about critical issues in television journalism.
The author presents comprehensive articles about the top three anchors--Tom Brokaw, Peter Jennings, and Dan Rather--and offers anaysis and commentary ...
If you love Lewis Carroll, or if you remember the hippie days -- the flower power generation -- of the 1960s, you'll love Alice in Acidland. Was Alice's Adventures in Wonderland really a drug trip? Men who cleaned top hats in the days of Charles Dodgson's England used solutions of mercury, which caused brain damage: thus "mad as a hatter." Could the caterpillar really have been smoking something hallucinogenic in his waterpipe? Charles Dodgson may have passed Thomas DeQuincey on the streets of London -- after all -- this was generally the same era that DeQuincey wrote Confessions of an...
If you love Lewis Carroll, or if you remember the hippie days -- the flower power generation -- of the 1960s, you'll love Alice in Acidland. Was Alice...
Readers who love Lewis Carroll or the flower power generation of the 1960s will love this book. Originally published in 1970, "Alice in Acidland" suggests that Alice's experiences echo the LSD trips of the hippie 1960s--and could easily have been visualized by Thomas DeQuincey and the mad hatters of Lewis Carroll's time.
Readers who love Lewis Carroll or the flower power generation of the 1960s will love this book. Originally published in 1970, "Alice in Acidland" sugg...
Steinbeck and Covici" is a major contribution to the literature about John Steinbeck. "Steinbeck Quarterly" magazine wrote "Fensch offers the first comprehensive account of one of Steinbeck's most enduring, intimate, and important relationships: his association with his editor, Covici. The results are revealing, and broaden the dimension of Steinbeck studies."
Steinbeck and Covici" is a major contribution to the literature about John Steinbeck. "Steinbeck Quarterly" magazine wrote "Fensch offers the first co...
First published in 1976 to wide acclaim by the "New York Times" and a winner of the Book of the Year Award in Biography by the Ohioana Library Association, this reissue offers a comprehensive account of the important relationship between John Steinbeck and his editor Pascal Covici.
First published in 1976 to wide acclaim by the "New York Times" and a winner of the Book of the Year Award in Biography by the Ohioana Library Associa...
J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI denied that they had ever investigated novelist John Steinbeck, yet for decades the FBI maintained a file on Steinbeck, which included the recommendation by the U.S. Army Counter-Intelligence Branch (G-2) that Steinbeck was unfit to be commissioned as an officer in the Armed Forces during World War Two. (Despite the evaluations by the California G-2 agent-in-charge that Steinbeck did have the honesty, loyalty and integrity to be an officer in the Armed Forces....) The FBi files on Steinbeck include vague references to communist tendencies, the fact that the...
J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI denied that they had ever investigated novelist John Steinbeck, yet for decades the FBI maintained a file on Steinbeck, wh...
J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI denied that they had ever investigated novelist John Steinbeck, yet for decades the FBI maintained a file on Steinbeck, which included the recommendation by the U.S. Army Counter-Intelligence Branch (G-2) that Steinbeck was unfit to be commissioned as an officer in the Armed Forces during World War Two. (Despite the evaluations by the California G-2 agent-in-charge that Steinbeck did have the honesty, loyalty and integrity to be an officer in the Armed Forces....) The FBi files on Steinbeck include vague references to communist tendencies, the fact that the...
J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI denied that they had ever investigated novelist John Steinbeck, yet for decades the FBI maintained a file on Steinbeck, wh...
John Updike says: Any act of description is, to some extent, an act of praise, so that even when the event is unpleasant or horrifying or spiritually stunning, the very attempt to describe it is, in some way, part of that Old Testament injunction to give praise. Even though my books strike many people as immoral or morally useless, to me they are really moral investigations of how we live, and harsh, perhaps, because the standards are otherworldly. There was a tradition among my peers for frank and open talk, and I'd always been a rather shy, priggish, unexperienced adolescent. So maybe my...
John Updike says: Any act of description is, to some extent, an act of praise, so that even when the event is unpleasant or horrifying or spiritually ...
In the 1930s, John Steinbeck published "In Dubious Battle." a novel based on union organizing and anti-union sentiment in the rich central valleys of California. He followed that with a series of articles in The San Francisco News about poverty and starvation among the migrants in California. In 1939, he published "The Grapes of Wrath," which became an instant American classic and the premier moral vision of the 1930s. The themes were: homelessness; joblessness; poverty; starvation and the greed of the banks. Now, 73 years later, it is all back. Lost jobs, and lost homes by the hundreds of...
In the 1930s, John Steinbeck published "In Dubious Battle." a novel based on union organizing and anti-union sentiment in the rich central valleys of ...