The Longest Journey Anna BoucherThe Longest Journey (1907) is a novel by English author E. M. Forster. Despite its critical success, the novel was a commercial failure for Forster, but has since grown in reputation and readership to help cement his reception as one of twentieth century Englands most talented writers. Rickie Elliot enters Cambridge as a young man, exploring his interests in poetry and art and joining a circle of intellectuals centered around a philosopher named
This expanded second edition includes eight new chapters
He encourages productivity and the need for a positive home life
and bureaucratic contexts that shape reconstruction efforts
The first book-length history of the classic French children’s author
Strickling contends that dreams about the divine occur in the context of existential issues
social and personal relationships
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Facundo argues that readers can enjoy the text through a variety of rhythms between two (eroticized) positions: the paranoid imperative and queer reparative
in the light of new source material and extensive primary interviews
he envisioned Zionism as a movement of return and all-encompassing Jewish renaissance
this book offers a complex reading of hip-hop as a postmodern practice
It succeeds in both documenting the prison experience and humanizing it