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  1. Dark Laughter. New York: Boni & Liveright, 1925. First Trade Edition. Octavo (19.5cm.); original cloth in black pictorial dust jacket; 319pp.; pictorial endpapers in yellow and black. Jacket extremities a bit rubbed, chip at spine crown reinforced with tape to verso, spine a hint cocked, else Near Fine in a Very Good, still-vibrant dust jacket.

  2. Introduction. "Laughter in the Dark" is a captivating novel written by the renowned Russian-American author Vladimir Nabokov. First published in 1932, this compelling narrative delves into the complexities of human desires, the destructive nature of obsession, and the consequences of one's actions.

  3. The Atlantic covers news, politics, culture, technology, health, and more, through its articles, podcasts, videos, and flagship magazine.

  4. Laughter in the Dark (título original russo: Камера обскура, Camera obscura), é um romance escrito por Vladimir Nabokov e serializado em Sovremennye Zapiski em 1932. [ 1 ] A primeira tradução em inglês, Camera Obscura , foi feita por Winifred Roy e publicada em Londres em 1936 por Johnathan Long, o impressor paperback da Hutchinson Publishing , com o autor creditado como ...

  5. 27 de mai. de 2017 · Dark Laughter. Sherwood Anderson. Benediction Classics, May 27, 2017 - Fiction - 264 pages. It is through Bruce Dudley, a man of poetic temperament, that Sherwood Anderson makes his plea for more spontaneous, joyful living, more direct straight-forward action than conventionalized society will permit today-a plea for a primitive simplicity in ...

  6. 16 de abr. de 2018 · Dark Laughter retells the story of Anderson’s escape from the paint factory by inventing an improbable hero who gives up his career as a journalist and goes back to the town in which he grew up. There he becomes the gardener and then the lover of the factory owner’s wife, an experience meant to suggest the interrelation of physical and spiritual love.

  7. His long-running series Dark Laughter (later known as Bootsie), cast a satirical, yet affectionate, gaze on Black America through the adventures of an observant African-American “everyman.”