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Dear Mark Twain
2013
A voracious pack-rat, Mark Twain hoarded his readers' letters as did few of his contemporaries. Dear Mark Twain collects 200 of these letters written by a diverse cross-section of correspondents from around the world—children, farmers, schoolteachers, businessmen, preachers, railroad clerks, inmates of mental institutions, con artists, and even a former president. It is a unique and groundbreaking book—the first published collection of reader letters to any writer of Mark Twain's time. Its contents afford a rare and exhilarating glimpse into the sensibilities of nineteenth-century people while revealing the impact Samuel L. Clemens had on his readers. Clemens's own and often startling comments and replies are also included. R. Kent Rasmussen's extensive research provides fascinating profiles of the correspondents, whose personal stories are often as interesting as their letters. Ranging from gushing fan appreciations and requests for help and advice to suggestions for writing projects and stinging criticisms, the letters are filled with perceptive insights, pathos, and unintentional but often riotous humor. Many are deeply moving, more than a few are hilarious, some may be shocking, but none are dull.
The Horse Who Drank the Sky
2008
What is most important about cinema is that we are alive with it. For all its dramatic, literary, political, sociological, and philosophical weight, film is ultimately an art that provokes, touches, and riddles the viewer through an image that transcends narrative and theory. InThe Horse Who Drank the Sky, Murray Pomerance brings attention to the visceral dimension of movies and presents a new and unanticipated way of thinking about what happens when we watch them.
By looking at point of view, the gaze, the voice from nowhere, diegesis and its discontents, ideology, the system of the apparatus, invisible editing, and the technique of overlapping sound, he argues that it is often the minuscule or transitional moments in motion pictures that penetrate most deeply into viewers' experiences. In films that includeRebel Without a Cause,Dead Man,Chinatown,The Graduate,North by Northwest,Dinner at Eight,Jaws,M,Stage Fright,Saturday Night Fever,The Band Wagon,The Bourne Identity, and dozens more, Pomerance invokes complexities that many of the best of critics have rarely tackled and opens a revealing view of some of the most astonishing moments in cinema.
When Mothers Kill
2008
Winner of the 2008 Outstanding Book Award by the Academy
of Criminal Justice Sciences Michelle Oberman and Cheryl
L. Meyer don't write for news magazines or prime-time investigative
television shows, but the stories they tell hold the same
fascination. When Mothers Kill is compelling. In a
clear, direct fashion the authors recount what they have learned
from interviewing women imprisoned for killing their children.
Readers will be shocked and outraged-as much by the violence the
women have endured in their own lives as by the violence they
engaged in-but they will also be informed and even enlightened.
Oberman and Meyer are leading authorities on their subject. Their
2001 book, Mothers Who Kill Their Children, drew from hundreds of
newspaper articles as well as from medical and social science
journals to propose a comprehensive typology of maternal filicide.
In that same year, driven by a desire to test their typology-and to
better understand child-killing women not just as types but as
individuals-Oberman and Meyer began interviewing women who had been
incarcerated for the crime. After conducting lengthy, face-to-face
interviews with forty prison inmates, they returned and selected
eight women to speak with at even greater length. This new book
begins with these stories, recounted in the matter-of-fact words of
the inmates themselves. There are collective themes that emerge
from these individual accounts, including histories of relentless
interpersonal violence, troubled relationships with parents
(particularly with mothers), twisted notions of romantic love, and
deep conflicts about motherhood. These themes structure the books
overall narrative, which also includes an insightful examination of
the social and institutional systems that have failed these women.
Neither the mothers nor the authors offer these stories as excuses
for these crimes.