Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 56
pro vyhledávání: '"Alexander Pettit"'
Autor:
Tobias Smollett, Alexander Pettit, D. H. Stefanson, George S. Rousseau, Hank Keathley, John P. Zomchick, O M Brack Jr, W. H. Keithley
This picaresque tale, first published in 1751, was Tobias Smollett's second novel. Following the fortunes and misfortunes of the egotistical dandy Peregrine Pickle, the novel is written as a series of brief adventures with every chapter typically des
Autor:
Samuel Richardson, Alexander Pettit
This is the first edition to assemble all of the earliest known works by Samuel Richardson (1689–1761), one of the most influential authors in the English tradition. Richardson's exercises in conduct-writing, religious controversialism, anti-theatr
Autor:
Tobias Smollett, Alexander Pettit, James G. Basker, Nicole A. Seary, O M Brack Jr, Paul-Gabriel Boucé
This is the definitive scholarly edition of Tobias Smollett's first novel, widely regarded as one of his two masterpieces, the other being The Expedition of Humphry Clinker. Roderick Random was also, in its time, the chief rival to Henry Fielding's c
Tobias Smollett, in the preface to his first novel, The Adventures of Roderick Random (1748), acknowledges the influence of Alain René Le Sage's L'Histoire de Gil Blas de Santillane (1715–35 in four volumes) on his work. By far the most successful
Publikováno v:
The Eugene O'Neill Review. 43:126-152
Autor:
Alexander Pettit
Publikováno v:
The Eugene O'Neill Review. 43:227-231
Autor:
Alexander Pettit
Publikováno v:
The Eugene O'Neill Review. 44:v-vii
Autor:
Alexander Pettit
Publikováno v:
The Eugene O'Neill Review. 42:v-viii
Autor:
Tobias Smollett, Alexander Pettit, Barbara Laning Fitzpatrick, O M Brack Jr, Robert Folkenflik
This new edition brings to life Tobias Smollett's fourth novel, The Life and Adventures of Sir Launcelot Greaves. No annotated edition of the work existed before the second half of the twentieth century, and this comprehensive edition by Robert Folke
Autor:
Alexander Pettit, James H. Cox
Publikováno v:
Modern Drama. 64:259-282
In The Emperor Jones, a rebellion orchestrated by the “Native Chief,” Lem, dramatizes Eugene O’Neill’s Indigenocentric reimagining of the US occupation of Haiti. O’Neill honoured his primary source, James Weldon Johnson’s Self-Determining