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  1. Há 22 horas · There is a reeling auteurship at play here. It is as if Mrs Mean is a projected matriarch from the Gass household and Gass is playing it out on the page. There are no homely tropes of muffin-making and licking the spoon. No parlour games and sing-song Happy Birthdays. This is a story about Gass’s lost childhood. I realise it now.

  2. Há 4 dias · And a well-fed imagination, it follows, is good for all. Full of verve, wit, and no shortage of voluble passion, Becca Rothfeld’s debut collection of essays, All Things Are Too Small (Metropolitan Books; $27.99), investigates today’s conditions of love and desire and suggests what it might take to achieve more egalitarian ones.

  3. Há 1 dia · Gaddis's work, though largely ignored for years, anticipated and influenced the development of such ambitious "postmodern" fiction writers as Thomas Pynchon, David Foster Wallace, Joseph McElroy, William H. Gass, and Don DeLillo.

  4. Há 1 dia · O podrías leerla como ficción, con William H. Gass 7: Ningún novelista ha creado un héroe más audaz que el apuesto Absoluto, ni concebido extricaciones más dramáticas – como la escapada del alma del cuerpo, por ejemplo, o la del querer de la causa. Pero estarías perdiendo el punto.

  5. Há 4 dias · Philosophers born in the 20th century (and others important in the history of philosophy) listed alphabetically: Note: This list has a minimal criterion for inclusion and the relevance to philosophy of some individuals on the list is disputed. Contents.

  6. Há 5 dias · This is a list of novelists from the United States, listed with titles of a major work for each. This is not intended to be a list of every American (born U.S. citizen, naturalized citizen, or long-time resident alien) who has published a novel. (For the purposes of this article, novel is defined as an extended work of fiction.

  7. Há 4 dias · William H. Gass – Text, Vanishing America. Michael Eastman, Dice Girls, Las Vegas. Giving Impressions and Memories a Permanent Presence. Organically, bricks, glass, wood, and the many materials that built America’s main streets decay with time, falling into disuse, often cleared away in the name of renewal or progress.