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book and covers
These narratives of coarse action and crude language appeared first in local newspapers, as a rule, and later found their way between book covers, though rarely into the planters' libraries beside the morocco-bound volumes of Horace, Mr. Addison, Mr. Pope, and Sir Walter Scott.
I did book jackets and covers for paperback reprints: naked girls huddling in corners of dingy furnished rooms while at the doorway, daring the cops to take him, is the guy in shirt sleeves clutching a revolver.
A codex ( Latin caudex for " trunk of a tree " or block of wood, book ; plural codices ) is a book made up of a number of sheets of paper, vellum, or similar, with hand-written content, usually stacked and bound by fixing one edge and with covers thicker than the sheets, but sometimes continuous and folded concertina-style.
The progression of the nickname can be seen in the book The Addicks Cartoons: An Affectionate Look into the Early History of Charlton Athletic, which covers the pre-First World War history of Charlton through a narrative based on 56 cartoons which appeared in the now defunct Kentish Independent.
The book covers the period from the time of the Yellow Emperor until the author's own time.
' The sentient ocean that covers much of the surface of Solaris in Stanislaw Lem's eponymous novel also seems, from much of the fictional research quoted and discussed in the book, to be based on some element other than carbon.
The third book covers asceticism.
In 2011, it was announced that Barrymore had been cast alongside John Krasinski in Ken Kwapis's Big Miracle ( 2012 ), a romantic drama based on the 1989 book Freeing the Whales, which covers Operation Breakthrough, the 1988 international effort to rescue gray whales from being trapped in ice near Point Barrow, Alaska.
The Theran Empire book covers the Theran Empire and its provinces ( which roughly correspond to the territories of the Roman Empire, plus colonies in America and India ).
The book Cyberia covers its use in this subculture extensively.
According to footnotes, the book covers the time period between ca 52 BC and 1 BC.
The book covers that Orton and Halliwell vandalised have since become a valued part of the Islington Local History Centre collection.
The collection of book covers can be viewed here:
According to the chapter heading, the book covers the time period between ca 420 BC and 361 BC and describes the efforts of the Nephite prophets to " keep them Nephites in the way of truth ".
Freas was commissioned to paint the Skylab I insignia design and posters promoting the space program ( used by NASA and now hanging in the Smithsonian Institution ); pinup girls on bombers while in the United States Army Air Forces ; comic book covers ; the covers of the GURPS worldbooks Lensman and Planet Krishna ; and many others, such as more than 500 saints ' portraits for the Franciscans executed simultaneously with his portraits of Alfred E. Neuman (" What?
A book is a collection of sheets of paper, parchment or other material with a piece of text written on them, bound together along one edge within covers.
* Marketing to Moviegoers: Second Edition Academic / business book covers major studios and independents, 2009.
She created book covers for her stories, bound the tablet paper pages together and added her own artwork.
The book covers the time period between ca 130 BC and 91 BC, except for when the book has a flashback into the Record of Zeniff, which starts at ca 200 BC, according to footnotes.
The book contains only one chapter although it covers more than two centuries of Nephite history ( from ca 323 BC to 130 BC, according to footnotes ).
Anybody wishing to build their own copy of PGP could buy the $ 60 book, cut off the covers, separate the pages, and scan them using an OCR program, creating a set of source code text files.
Preacher is a comic book series created by writer Garth Ennis and artist Steve Dillon, published by the American comic book label Vertigo ( an imprint of DC Comics ), with painted covers by Glenn Fabry.

book and working-class
In their book Tintin Ketje de Bruxelles ( Casterman, 2004 ISBN 2-203-01716-3 ), Daniel Justens and Alain Préaux have documented how the Syldavian language is based on Marols or Marollien, the dialect of the Marollen, a formerly working-class ( though now trendy ) quarter of Brussels.
The book Family and Kinship in East London, based on materials gathered in the 1950s, shows an improvement in working-class life.
The book is a fictionalized autobiography of Ostrovsky's life, who had a difficult working-class childhood and became a Komsomol member in July 1919 and went to the front as a volunteer.
The war poet Siegfried Sassoon, who appears as a major character in the first book, Regeneration, is relegated to a minor role in this final volume, in which the main players are the fictional working-class officer, Billy Prior, and the real-life psychoanalyst, William Rivers.
) The book soon became notorious for its story of the physical relationship between a working-class man and an upper-class woman, its explicit descriptions of sex, and its use of then-unprintable words.
He spent a number of days in the town living in the houses of the working-class miners while researching for the book.
One of the force-fed suffragettes, Lady Constance Lytton, wrote a book that suggested that working-class women were more likely to be forcibly fed in prison than upper-class women.
Bragg says it explains the popularity of book clubs and literary festivals that would historically have commanded little interest from the mass of middle-and working-class people.
Originally, travel agencies largely catered to middle and upper class customers, but the post-war boom in mass-market package holidays resulted in travel agencies on the main streets of most British towns, catering to a working-class clientele, looking for a convenient way to book overseas beach holidays.
1837 should be viewed as a work of Marxist historiography written for a working-class audience and not for academia ; since Ryerson wrote this book so it could be used as a weapon in the struggle of working people to build a qualitatively different and better world.
Ryerson ’ s rationale for writing this book, as was the rationale for all his works, can be best summarised as an exploration of Canadian history with the hopes of educating the working-class, in a sense it was an exercise in the raising of class consciousness.
In addition, Gilbert spent his spare-time studying Marx's Das Kapital book and writing New Left theoretical papers on imperialism and U. S. domestic consumption, consumerism and " the new working-class.
In the book The Cinema of Mike Leigh: A Sense of the Real, Leigh said, " I lived in this particular kind of working-class district with some relations living in slightly leafier districts up the road.
He published Orwell's The Road to Wigan Pier but insisted on prefacing its account of working-class life in the north of England with an introduction disowning its criticisms of middle-class socialists who had little understanding of working class life and later republished the book leaving out the second part of which he disapproved.
Mason's most famous books were his 1975 work Arbeiterklasse und Volksgemeinschaft ( The Working Class and the National Community ), a study of working-class life under the Nazis and his 1977 book, Sozialpolitik im Dritten Reich ( Social Policy in the Third Reich ).

book and childhood
After he had finished the first two volumes of his Lincoln, Sandburg went to work assembling a book of songs out of hobo and childhood days and from the memory of songs others had taught him.
Sir Julian Huxley in his book Uniqueness Of Man makes the novel point that just as man is unique in being the only animal which requires a long period of infancy and childhood under family protection, so is he the only animal who has a long period after the decline of his procreativity.
In his later years as a writer and scientist, Sagan would often draw on his childhood memories to illustrate scientific points, as he did in his book, Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors.
Kosiński himself responded that he had never maintained that the book was autobiographical, even though years earlier he confided to Houghton Mifflin editor Santillana that his manuscript " draws upon a childhood spent, by the casual chances of war, in the remotest villages of Eastern Europe.
In the companion book, The Journals of Eleanor Druse, Eleanor had a transorbital lobotomy in her childhood.
A fan of the book since childhood, film director Tim Burton states, " I responded to Charlie and the Chocolate Factory because it respected the fact that children can be adults.
Interweaving childhood vignettes with accounts of serving in Congress, both from California, this refreshing book evades many of the tropes of the typical political memoir — perhaps because these two women are not typical politicians.
The title is somewhat misleading, as the book is mainly concerned with a series of landmark events in Sherson / Sassoon's childhood and youth, and his encounters with various comic characters.
Based on a true account taken from For Life, a book of interviews edited by Klaus Antes and Christiane Erhardt, it was also Fassbinder's personal reflection on his childhood and adolescent longing for love.
At least one line in the C. S. Lewis book The Last Battle implies that Lewis learned of Narnia's events-and thus wrote the Narnia books-after the Railway Accident in 1949, when Susan told him the stories in the belief that she was relating mere childhood make-believe.
Essayist and journalist Russell Baker grew up in Morrisonville, Virginia and his book Growing Up highlights his childhood in rural Virginia.
O ' Connor later wrote a book titled Lazy B: Growing up on a Cattle Ranch in the American Southwest about her childhood experiences on the ranch with her brother H. Alan Day.
Stamps was the childhood home of author Maya Angelou, and was depicted in her book, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings.
Its biggest claims to fame is that it was the childhood home of Tippi Hedren, the star of Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds In Hedron's book Cats of Shambala, she wrote that she was born in New Ulm, as Lafayette didn't have a hospital.
The book contains stories of his Dad, Van Tompkins ; his Mom, Sadie Tompkins ; his siblings the house they lived in, family friends, work on the farm, going to school, peaches, and other childhood memories.
She also wrote a book about her childhood, titled " A Life Unveiled " written under the name " A Child of the Drumlins ".
He later gave an account of his childhood in the book Father and Son which has been described as the first psychological biography.
Her book, Period Piece, is a memoir of a childhood messing about on the river.
* In the best selling semi-autobiographical novel The River Why ( 1983 ) by David James Duncan, The Compleat Angler serves as the most revered book in the irreverent fly fisherman Gus Orviston's childhood home, his parents quoting and misquoting the treatise to obsessively argue their respective sides of the artificial fly versus natural bait controversy.
Brown begins his book by telling the reader about his early childhood.
This theme was then taken up by Cunningham in his book the Invention of Childhood ( 2006 ) which looks at the historical aspects of childhood from the Middle Ages to what he refers to as the Post War Period of the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s.
In 2008 Chorion, who now own the rights to Blyton's books and characters, published through Hodder's Children's Books the Famous Five's Survival Guide, a book that combines survival tips and facts with a story in which the grown-up characters revisit a case they failed to solve in their childhood.
He collaborated with childhood friend Richard Avedon on the book Nothing Personal, which is available for public viewing at the Schomburg Center in Harlem.

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