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posthumously-published and with
In the posthumously-published Leonardo's Judas, da Vinci's quest for an appropriate face to give the betrayer in his Last Supper is interwoven with the squabble between an usurer and the merchant to whom he owes money.

posthumously-published and about
Visions of Order ( 1964 ) is a posthumously-published work by conservative scholar Richard M. Weaver which argues that Western culture is in decline because many of its intellectuals refuse to believe in an underlying order of things — in the way things are, irrespective of beliefs about them.

posthumously-published and family
A contemporary image of the playwright is the engraving in the posthumously-published First Folio of 1623, which was created by Martin Droeshout and was probably commissioned by Shakespeare's friends and family.

posthumously-published and life
In 1983, he edited The Old Navy: The Glorious Heritage of the U. S. Navy, Recounted through the Journals of an American Patriot by Rear Admiral Daniel P. Mannix, 3rd, his father's posthumously-published autobiographical account of his life and naval career from the Spanish-American War of 1898 until his retirement in 1928.

posthumously-published and up
Gray's posthumously-published Watergate book disputes the claim that Mark Felt is Deep Throat, citing Woodward's own notes and other evidence as proof that Deep Throat was a fictional composite made up of several Woodward sources, only one of whom was Felt.

posthumously-published and for
He is best known for his pioneering studies French Rural History and Feudal Society and his posthumously-published unfinished meditation on the writing of history, The Historian's Craft.
His mother, who died in 1955, is still well known in Geraldton for her posthumously-published historical reminiscences of the town.

posthumously-published and .
The posthumously-published Journals of Ayn Rand contain several highly hostile references to Gertrude Stein.
The album was cited by Kurt Cobain of Nirvana as his sixteenth favourite album ever in his posthumously-published Journals.
Robert A. Heinlein described a Social Credit economy in his posthumously-published first novel, For Us, The Living: A Comedy of Customs, and his Beyond This Horizon describes a similar system in less detail.
There are also many examples of alliterative verse in Tolkien's posthumously-published works in The History of Middle-earth series.
A version of the story included in the posthumously-published The Salmon of Doubt makes this explicit.
Kennedy expressed remorse over his role in her death, in his posthumously-published memoir, True Compass.
" The foreword was reprinted in Adams's posthumously-published collection of writings, The Salmon of Doubt.
The front cover motif of Albert R. Parson's posthumously-published memoirs featured the slogan of the French Revolution: " Liberty, Equality, Fraternity.
Vignola's second treatise, the posthumously-published Due regole della prospettiva pratica rules of practical perspective " ( Bologna 1583 ), favours one-point perspective rather than two point methods such as the bifocal construction.
Eliot's posthumously-published " The Love Song of St. Sebastian " has the protagonist approaching his lover ' in a shirt of hair.
The epigraph to Auden's posthumously-published play The Chase ( written in 1935 ) was a poem by a Downs pupil, John Bowes, that had been mocked by the other pupils in one of Auden's classes ; Auden rebuked them by saying that the poem was not only satisfactory but that he would use it in his next book.
Stephen Hero is a posthumously-published autobiographical novel by Irish author James Joyce.
From 1905 Størmer was an editor of the journal Acta Mathematica, and he was also an editor of the posthumously-published mathematical works of Niels Henrik Abel and Sophus Lie.
( Bryant paid tribute to Chesterton in his introduction to Chesterton's posthumously-published essay collection The Glass Walking-Stick.
His posthumously-published collection Ar en deulin established his reputation as a war poet.

autobiography and youth
Spock himself, in his autobiography, pointed out that he had never advocated permissiveness ; also, that the attacks and claims that he had ruined American youth only arose after his public opposition to the Vietnam war.
In her own autobiography, Lanchester acknowledged having had two abortions in her youth ( one of the pregnancies purportedly by Laughton ) although she didn't mention whether this had indeed left her incapable of becoming pregnant again.
Lanchester admitted in her autobiography that she had had two abortions in her youth ( one of whom was sired by Laughton ), but it is not clear if these left her incapable of becoming pregnant again.
Douglas, in his autobiography, See You at the Movies ( 1987 ), writes that he was unaware of his Jewish background until later in his youth: " I did not learn about the non-Christian part of my heritage until my early teens ," as his parents preferred to hide his Jewish heritage.
In a parallel plot, an underprivileged youth from Brooklyn, Lesra Martin ( Vicellous Reon Shannon ), becomes interested in Carter's life and destiny after reading Carter's autobiography, and convinces his Canadian foster family to commit themselves to his case.
Old Men Forget is a 1953 autobiography by Duff Cooper, Viscount Norwich, detailing his Victorian childhood, Edwardian youth, and work in literature and politics.
Coppée published his first prose work in 1875 and went on to publish short stories, an autobiography of his youth, a series of short articles on miscellaneous subjects, and La Bonne Souffrance, a popular account of his reconversion to the Roman Catholic Church.
" Arnold Bennett, dear friend and mentor of my youth died on 27 March 1931 " – wrote Cohen in her autobiography.
While on the campaign trail in 2011, Rajoy published an autobiography, En confianza ( In Confidence ), in which he recalled his studious and quiet youth, following a father who was climbing the ranks of Francisco Franco's judiciary.
Bok's autobiography, Escape from Slavery: The True Story of My Ten Years in Captivity and My Journey to Freedom in America, published by St. Martin's Press, chronicles his life, from his early youth, his years in captivity, to his work in the United States as an abolitionist.
the early 15th century BC, has given a unique autobiography of Idrimi's youth, his rise to power, and his military and other successes ( now in the British Museum ).
In 2008, Andy Taylor published an autobiography, Wild Boy: My Life in Duran Duran, in which he tells his life's story from youth in an extended family to his life with wife Tracey.
In 1932 Mizner published The Many Mizners, an autobiography covering his youth, years in Alaska, and time in New York until the death of his mother.
The Vampire Lestat ( the second book in The Vampire Chronicles series ) is presented as Lestat's autobiography and it follows his exploits from his youth in Paris, France and cities surrounding to his early years as a vampire fledgling.
Sorensen in his autobiography attributed the loss of Senate support for his nomination for CIA director to his conscientious objector status as a youth, his two failed marriages, and his writing an affidavit in defense of releasing the Pentagon Papers.
* In the autobiography Gang of One, Fan Shen provides first hand accounts of his youth as a Red Guard.
Carossa's last book before the Nazi Regime began was Führung und Geleit ( 1932 ), an inner survey rather than a true autobiography of his life from early youth to the 1920.
In his 1938 autobiography, Smith describes how in his youth he came to be a friend of Walt Whitman in the poet's latter years.
In his autobiography, Speak, Memory, the writer and lepidopterist Vladimir Nabokov describes a gynandromorph butterfly, male on one side, female on the other, that he caught as a youth on his family's Russian estate.
** Introduction to the Pains of Opium, which delivers a second installment of autobiography, taking De Quincey from youth to maturity ; and
His autobiography mostly deals with his youth and the history of how he became a well-known humanist scholar.
It is a dictated, narrative autobiography recounting the author's youth, his years as an agitator and journalist, his experiences in World War I, the formation and revolutionary struggles of the Fascist Party, the March on Rome, and his early years in power.
His campaign was partially based on his autobiography Američki san dečka s Trešnjevke ( American dream of a kid from Trešnjevka ) that he had published in 1994-creating image of a simple Zagreb youth, who fulfilled so called American Dream.
In his autobiography, Destined to Witness, Massaquoi describes his childhood and youth in Hamburg during the Nazi rise to power.

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