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Keywords Essays OR Essay
| Number of results: 3,363 |
| 51. |
Essay on the freedom of the will
Arthur Schopenhauer
Em perfeito estado
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| 52. |
Curiosities of Civilization; Reprinted from the "Quarterly" & "Edinburgh" Reviews
Wynter, Andrew; Shepard, Leslie (intro.)
9.5" (24 cm) Tall Ex-Library Facsimile reprint edition of 1860 volume. Exlibrary marks, slightly cocked, tight binding & hinges, bright pages. Cloth over boards has general shelfwear. Rear library pocket. 535 pp. Essays (1855-1860) from the Quarterly Review and the Edinburgh Review by noted British physician of the mid-19th century: Advertisements; Food and Its Adulterations; The Zoological Gardens; Rats; Lunatic Asylums; The London Commissariat; Woolwich Arsenal; Shipwrecks; Lodging, Food and Dress of Soldiers; Electric Telegraph; Fires and Fire Insurance; Police and Thieves; Mortality in Trades and Professions. http://www.catscradlebks.com/book_images/1200025.jpg
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| 53. |
Contemporary calf, G. 3 volumes, 310+[ii]pp, 310+[ii]pp, 294+[ii]pp, engraved title to each volume, grand total of 13 engraved plates, leather rather rubbed & worn along the edges & to the spines, leterering pieces missing, all hinges cracked but holding firm, internally sporadically foxed especially the plates & the pages around the plates, a good set. Engraved attractive bookplate & old ink signature of William Raphael Egington ~ 1st thus ~ The complete Rambler which originally appeared ever Tuesday & Saturday from 1750 - 1752 & ran to 208 issues. It was more 'highbrow' than the Spectator, the earlier forerunner which was rather more popular with the readin public than Johnson's own attemps at a weekly essay on all things artistic & moral. William Raphael Egington [ 1778 - 1834 ] master glass painter from Birmingham who caried out several commissions for the Cities Churches.
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| 54. |
Man in the Water:, The: And Other Essays
Roger Rosenblatt
light edge wear to dust jacket. Rosenblatt, a contributing editor to the New Republic and Vanity Fair and a regular essayist for the MacNeil/Lehrer Newshour , skillfully draws out his interviewees, whether the person is a homeless woman in New York City who was once a nightclub dancer, a prisoner in Attica smoldering with anger, or a fiercely anti-communist Latvian jazz saxophonist in Leningrad. This wholly engaging collection of essays, articles, reviews and autobiographical sketches includes an extended meditation on Hiroshima, a piece on the ""disappeared"" victims of Argentina's military dictatorship and the eloquent title essay about a 1982 plane crash into the Potomac, in which an anonymous man rescued fellow passengers before he succumbed to the icy waters. There are disarming profiles of Ronald Reagan, Candice Bergen, New York governor Mario Cuomo; appreciations of African American autobiographies and Langston Hughes's ""Simple"" stories; and an alarming report on war-torn Sudan where some 100,000 boys, whose parents had been slaughtered, walked barefoot for hundreds of miles in search of safety. -- Publisher's Weekly http://www.scrybepress.com/images/kb003347.jpg
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| 55. |
Principles of Evolution: A Philosophic Essay
Eldridge, Fernald M.
12mo over 6.75 - 7.75'' tall Presented by Author to nurses of Chelsea Home Hospital. Rambling collection of essays dealing with Evolution, History of Science, and random facts. Author committed suicide using 5 methods. Undated. Tight copy ! Red cloth binding, white paper covered boards. Previous owner ink stamp. 1916 newspaper article pasted on front endpaper: MAINE MAN MAKES HIS SUICIDE QUINTUPLY SURE Pins Picture of Estranged Wife to Coat Before Deed.Fernald M. Eldridge, 35, of Hallowell, committed suicide at the home of his wife's parents in Casco this afternoon...he took sulphuric acid, paris green, severed his jugular vein, slashed his wrists with a razor, and then shot himself in the head with a rifle...Eldridge gained entrance by means of the skylight. The family was absent...He left several notes, most of which he wrote to his wife, from whom he was estranged. She is supposed to live in Massachusetts with her 3-months-old child...he said he was innocent of setting fire to his parents' home, causing their death...A Philosophic Essay on Anthropology, Biology, Embryology, Geology, Astronomy, Mythology, (Chemistry and Physics) Topics Discussed: Anthropoid Ape and Nebular Hypothesis Our Ancient Ancestors; Apes and Monkeys; Instinct and Reason; Invertebrate, Vertebrate and cell life; Critical Points of Evolution; Difference in Species and Intellect; Education and Religion; World and Space; Monistic Philosophy; Was Christ A Supernatural Being; List of Famous Scientific Men; Hypothesis of Cancer; Leprosy; List of Nobel Prize Winners; List of books the author has read and liked. 70 pages. 8871
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Great Topics of the World: Essays
Goldbarth, Albert
Near-new condition. Appears unread. Stated First Edition. NO remainder marks or price clippings. Tight spine - Bright pages. 195 pages. NO writing, marks or tears inside book. - Albert Goldbarth's "essays" (for want of a better term) stitch together elements of the memoir, the short story, the stand-up comedy shtick, the scholarly thesis, and the richly textured prose poem, into what critic Robert Atwan calls "a whole new breed" of personal essay. Goldbarth, says Atwan, "has spliced together strands of the old genre with a powerful new gene - and the results are miraculous." Great Topics of the World investigates everyday traumas and triumphs - the despairs, delights, and complexities of our lives - and places them in an historic, cosmologic context, in which Vermeer, Leeuwenhock, Amy Lowell, astronauts Kepler and Tycho Brahe, Krazy Kat creator George Herriman, and the Golem-conjuring Rabbi of Prague reenact their legendary dramas. And recurring throughout is the more intimate leitmotif of Goldbarth's own life and that of his family: the parents who inadvertently fed their boy's fascination with the flotsam and jetsam of American pop culture; the grandparents whose emigration from the old country was like "landing on Mars"; and the author himself, standing midway between the lore of Middle Europe and the lure of the New World, with its adventure comics, golden-haired enchantresses, and promises of a star-kissed future. At its core, Great Topics of the world is about one of the great topics of our century: the cultural and personal collisions brought about by a world in migration.
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