This is the 2014 Catalog for Anaphora Literary Press's current and forthcoming titles. Anaphora has published over 100 creative and non-fiction books. Professors have taught from Anaphora books. Many Anaphora writers have scheduled readings at major local book stores. Anaphora books have also had several articles published about them in regional newspapers.
This is the 2014 Catalog for Anaphora Literary Press's current and forthcoming titles. Anaphora has published over 100 creative and non-fiction books....
David R. Slavitt Dr Anna Faktorovich Dr Anna Faktorovich
"Fabrications" is a spritely love story that in its odd way recapitulates Henry James's The Wings of the Dove. A young man and a young woman are in love but don't have the financial resources they know they will need not just to be comfortable but to avoid the resentment either one would feel about having made a great sacrifice for their lives together. In James's story, Merton Densher married a wealthy young woman at death's door so he can inherit the money he needs in order to marry Kate Croy. Here, it is Nadine, the starlet, who marries the elderly producer with heart troubles, so that she...
"Fabrications" is a spritely love story that in its odd way recapitulates Henry James's The Wings of the Dove. A young man and a young woman are in lo...
"Gender Bias in Mystery and Romance Novel Publishing": examines gender bias from the perspective of readers, writers and publishers, with a focus on the top two best-selling genres in modern fiction. It is a linguistic, literary stylistic, and structurally formalist analysis of the male and female "sentences" in the genres that have the greatest gender divide: romances and mysteries. The analysis will search for the historical roots that solidified what many think of today as a "natural" division. Virginia Woolf called it the fabricated "feminine sentence," and other linguists have also...
"Gender Bias in Mystery and Romance Novel Publishing": examines gender bias from the perspective of readers, writers and publishers, with a focus on t...
Anaphora Literary Press was founded in 2009, and to-date it has released over 170 creative and non-fiction books. John Paul Jaramillo's collection of short stories received an honorable mention for the Latino Literacy Now's Mariposa Award Best First Fiction Book Award. Anaphora books have been featured in national newspapers and on major network broadcasts. The Pennsylvania Literary Journal has published interviews with best-selling and award-winning writers like Geraldine Brooks and Larry Niven. Dr. R. Joseph Rodriguez received the 2015 CCCC Lavender Rhetorics Award for Excellence in Queer...
Anaphora Literary Press was founded in 2009, and to-date it has released over 170 creative and non-fiction books. John Paul Jaramillo's collection of ...
This first issue of Cinematic Codes Review includes three film studies essays. Richmond B. Adams writes about an alternative perspective on Canon Doyle's Sherlock Holmes. Trevor Seigler's essay focuses on Paris as Antoine Doinel saw it. Finally, Michael T. Smith discusses subversive sexuality in Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove. The Editor, Anna Faktorovich, contributes a series of reviews of pop, art, documentary, series and other films she has been watching on Netflix with screenshots to illustrate her points. There is also a review of Livide, a vampire horror film, by Jane M. Kubiesa. The...
This first issue of Cinematic Codes Review includes three film studies essays. Richmond B. Adams writes about an alternative perspective on Canon Doyl...
This second issue of the Cinematic Codes Review includes innovative scholarship and critical pieces. The essays include cinematic theory studies such as Felicia Cosey's examination of paternal authority in post-apocalyptic films. Carolin Kirchner examines aesthetics in Rainer Werner Fassbinder's work. Robert McParland studies value in Apocalypse Now. Keith Moser's new contribution to Anaphora's journals looks at the crisis of simulation in Black Mirror. Antonio Sanna looks at grandeur in the Star Wars series. And Barbara Gambini considers the cinematic effects in Pascoli's industrial...
This second issue of the Cinematic Codes Review includes innovative scholarship and critical pieces. The essays include cinematic theory studies such ...
This third issue of the Cinematic Codes Review includes an interview with Barbi Leifert, who has managed to build three fantastic careers in dance, painting and reporting. She has exhibited across the country including at The Museum of Contemporary Art in London, and she is the Art Chairperson for the Tacoma Dome District. In the essays section, Richard Baker, Professor of English at Adams State University, compares Casablanca (1942) and Jean-Paul Sartre's resistance play The Flies (1943). Christopher Boon, researcher at the University of Queensland, discusses the reception of the latest 2016...
This third issue of the Cinematic Codes Review includes an interview with Barbi Leifert, who has managed to build three fantastic careers in dance, pa...