Virginia Books
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A revealing look at Huxley's life and work in HollywoodReview Date: 2004-11-07

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My DadReview Date: 2007-01-09

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Danger, intrigue and sizzle! -- Very highly recommendedReview Date: 2003-01-19
Aleksy underestimates Faye's resilience, viewing her as a cream puff. Cute like Faye is not his type, although she can make him understand its appeal. What he really needs is a cover, and Faye can provide it. Unfortunately, Faye has to get involved with anything that involves risk. Too bad her own actions have already put her in danger.
A faced paced, heart pounding read, ALL A MAN CAN ASK provides unexpected twists that makes author Virginia Kantra's novels a must read. Unexpected courage and surprising compassion bring these characters vividly alive, even as drug addicted teens, stretchy bras, and romantic entanglement also intriguing elements that prove these character's all too human flaws. Indeed, the fast paced plot and the strong characterizations are nicely balanced, resulting in a tale that is at once deadly yet richly balanced by powerful emotions and physical attraction. ALL A MAN CAN ASK comes very highly recommended.

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Metropolitan provocationsReview Date: 2008-04-06
So why does this one work so well?
For several reasons. First, London as a site stands for the idea of metropolis--the place where relationships between an individual self, however constituted, and the human collective are forged, fought over, savored, and resented. Spaar has brought together a diverse range of voices and points of view about this process, sparing no tender feelings. Here is Stein's "Threadneedle Street" (on which stands the Bank of England):" I am going to conquer. I am going to be flourishing. I am going to be industrious. Please forgive me everything." Linton Kwesi Johnson's "New Crass Massakah" about the racially motivated New Cross fire resonates with the "Fire-coal sky hanging over that biblical city" from Martin Sorrell's translation of Verlaine's "Limping Sonnet." Such cross-cultural and -temporal resonances make the book both stimulating and provocative.
Another reason for the book's success is that many of its poems take London as a motif or incidental setting rather than subject. So the anthology's "theme" also works as a kind of formal constraint, like an acrostic. Thus we see Ted Berrigan and Patience Agbabi making poems out of snapshots of life-in-progress, Adrian Mitchell apostrophizing the statues in Poets' Corner, Westminster Abbey, and the cavalier poet Herrick celebrating in Ovidian style "His Returne to London" from his "exile" in Devon. This idea of London as motif or formal device is strengthened by Spaar's division of the book into four sections named for the elements--earth, air, fire, and water--an arbitrary structure that allows her to juxtapose poems by characteristics other than narrative content or their place in an "emotional arc."
And it's those juxtapositions, along with the selections included, that give the anthology its third strength: it's full of surprises--unfamiliar poems by familiar poets; exciting newer writers rubbing elbows with the great dead, and a satisfying variety of tone. There's humor, sadness, Masterpiece Theater propriety, and raucous outrageousness. Whether you know London personally or only as a literary idea, this collection, like all good anthologies, will send you looking for more work by the poets collected here.
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fun from a to z!Review Date: 2004-07-06

A Must For ResearchersReview Date: 2007-05-18
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Beautiful book!Review Date: 2008-05-15

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college textReview Date: 2008-05-17

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An outstanding tributeReview Date: 2003-03-04
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A Fine Representation of American Marine PaintingsReview Date: 2001-04-16
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Set in a biographical/cultural context, ALDOUS HUXLEY AND FILM explores the symbiotic relationship between film and literature in Huxley's career. In addition to examining Huxley's four major screenplays in depth, the book investigates Huxley's attitudes and experiences regarding film throughout his entire working life. It also probes the influence of his involvement with the movies--along with his confrontation with the unique culture of California--on his other writings. Among those works, Huxley's "Hollywood novel," AFTER MANY A SUMMER DIES THE SWAN (1939; inspired by William Randolph Hearst and San Simeon) and his "lost screenplay," APE AND ESSENCE (1948; a kind of sequel to BRAVE NEW WORLD, set in the ruins of Los Angeles in the year 2108), are analyzed in detail.
ALDOUS HUXLEY AND FILM (Number 16 in the Scarecrow Filmmakers Series) presents new and important areas of study for both film scholars and literary critics. The book is well illustrated with photographs of Huxley and his associates, and with stills from his four major films.
The author, Virginia M. Clark (Ph.D., University of Maryland), has taught English and film at the University of Maryland and at Frostburg State University, and has been on the staff of the Library of Congress, and of the American Film Institute in her native Los Angeles. She has edited several AFI FACTFILES and contributed to the AFI CATALOG OF FEATURE FILMS, 1911-1920 and 1931-1940. Among her publications are articles appearing in FILMS AND FILMMAKERS, MAGILL'S SURVEY OF CINEMA, THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS PERFORMING ARTS ANNUAL, INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY OF FILMS AND FILMMAKERS, and THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF FILM. She co-edited with Ann Martin WHAT WOMEN WROTE: SCENARIOS, 1912-1929. She also writes screenplays.
[This review was written by the author, so you would know what the book is about, and who the author is. Thank you for reading it.]