Knihobot

John Seelye

    Everyman's Library: The Complete Stories
    Ryzáček
    Stories of the Old West
    • Stories of the Old West

      • 475 stránek
      • 17 hodin čtení

      The literature of the "Old" West is very old indeed, but stories from the region began to appear only after the Civil War, as the short story emerged as a major literary form and the West emerged as a seperate, distinctly American culture. This collection brings together fifty of the best stories of the Old West by some of America's finest writers. From comic tales about California charlatans and prostitutes with hearts of gold to portrayals of tough, taciturn, and honorable cowboys and heroic cavalrymen; from razor-sharp stories of settlers struggling to survive in a savage land to the rare, sympathetic vision of American Indian culture, this is an indispensable collection of stories from an Old West always partly geographical, partly imagined.

      Stories of the Old West
      3,6
    • Dojemný příběh o přátelství chlapce a jeho poníka. Malý Jody velice toužil mít svého vlastního koně. Otec mu ho přislíbil za podmínky, že syn bude co nejvíc pomáhat v domácnosti i na polích. Od té chvíle se Jody snažil, co mu síly stačily. Odměnou mu byl ne kůň, ale poník. Nadšený Jody ho pojmenoval Gabilan, nemohl se ho nabažit, věnoval mu každou volnou chvilku, pokaždé pospíchal do stáje, aby se o poníka postaral, hřebelcoval ho a podstrojoval mu čerstvé seno. Každá idyla však také může jednou nenadále skončit...

      Ryzáček
      4,1
    • Everyman's Library: The Complete Stories

      Introduction by John Seelye

      • 955 stránek
      • 34 hodin čtení

      Edgar Allan Poe’s gift for the macabre–his genius in finding the strangeness lurking at the heart of things–was so extraordinary that he exerted a major influence on Baudelaire and French symbolism, on Freudian analysis, and also on the detective novel and the Hollywood movie. His psychologically profound stories of encounters with the marvelous, the uncanny, and the dreadful represent–in contrast to the optimism of writers like Emerson and Whitman–the other, darker side of the nineteenth-century American sensibility. (Jacket Status: Jacketed)

      Everyman's Library: The Complete Stories