Sunday, August 28, 2022

Shakespeare, Love's Labour's Lost (1990)

William Shakespeare.
Love's Labour's Lost.
Edited by G. R. Hibbard.
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008.
This edition first published in 1990.

Book Information: Publisher; Google Books; Amazon.com.

Book Series: The Oxford Shakespeare; Oxford World's Classics.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Editor:
  • G. R. (George Richard) Hibbard (born 1915) was Professor of English at the University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
  • Hibbard Prize for Shakespeare Studies, English undergraduate awards, Department of English Language and Literature, University of Waterloo.
  • Mirror up to Shakespeare: Essays in Honour of G.R. Hibbard. Edited by J.C. Gray. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1984.
    [Google Books; Amazon.com.]
    The preface to this book, viewable on Google Books, tells a little bit about Professor Hibbard.
  • Hibbard, G. R. (George Richard) 1915-, OCLC WorldCat Identities.
  • G. R. Hibbard. Thomas Nashe: A Critical Introduction. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1962.
    [Google Books; Amazon.com.]
  • G. R. Hibbard. The Making of Shakespeare's Dramatic Poetry. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1981.
    [Google Books; Amazon.com.]
  • William Shakespeare. Hamlet. Edited by G. R. Hibbard. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987, 2008.
    [Publisher; Google Books; Amazon.com.]
  • Prof. Hibbard also edited these other plays for the Penguin Shakespeare: Coriolanus; Timon of Athens; The Merry Wives of Windsor; The Taming of the Shrew.
    Hibbard also edited an edition of Ben Johnson's Bartholomew Fair.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Wikipedia Articles:

Shakespeare: English Renaissance Drama: England during Shakespeare's Time:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Thursday, August 25, 2022

Negri, ed., Great French Short Stories (2004)

Great French Short Stories.
Edited by Paul Negri.
Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, 2004.

Book Information: Publisher; Google Books; Amazon.com.

Book Series: Dover Thrift Editions.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Wikipedia Articles :
Contents of Great French Short Stories :
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Sunday, August 14, 2022

Negri, ed., Great Russian Short Stories (2003)

Great Russian Short Stories.
Edited by Paul Negri.
Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, 2003.

Book Information: Publisher; Google Books; Amazon.com.

Book Series: Dover Thrift Editions.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Wikipedia Articles :
Contents of Great Russian Short Stories :
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Wednesday, August 10, 2022

Negri, ed., Great English Short Stories (2005)

Great English Short Stories.
Edited by Paul Negri.
Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, 2005.

Book Information: Publisher; Google Books; Amazon.com.

Book Series: Dover Thrift Editions.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Wikipedia Articles :
Contents of Great English Short Stories :
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Saturday, August 06, 2022

Negri, ed., Great American Short Stories (2002)

Great American Short Stories.
Edited by Paul Negri.
Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, 2002.

Book Information: Publisher; Google Books; Amazon.com.

Book Series: Dover Thrift Editions.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Wikipedia Articles :
Contents of Great American Short Stories :
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I previously read only four or five of these nineteen stories (those by Hawthorne, Poe, Harte, Bierce?, Hemingway?), very long ago during school days, so they all came to me as new.

Why are so many of these stories about people in despair?

Several characters discover or imagine layers of reality that are new to them and which they find difficult reconciling with their previous experience and understanding.

Some characters discover or imagine that a close associate conspires against them.

  • A married man spends the night in the woods. Was he intending of his own volition to pledge his soul to the devil? In the woods he discovers that nearly everyone of his acquaintance already worships the devil despite their ordinary appearance of faithfulness, goodness, sociability, and good neighborliness. Or perhaps this was all just a dream. In the morning he returns home and spends the rest of his life distrustful and bitter.
  • A young man kills an old man because he fears the look of the old man's eye.
  • A peculiar young man starves to death because ... he would "prefer not to" ... live?
  • An infant is born in a mining camp, his mother dying in childbirth. With no women in the camp the miners undertake raising the infant. The infant and his immediate caretakers die in a flood.
  • The sheriff of a village on the Texas border with Mexico comes home with his new wife and faces off with the local bully.
  • A group of young men impulsively form a company of soldiers at the beginning of the Civil War. After wandering around ineffectively in their county and a neighboring one the narrator quits after getting a hint of the dangers of war.
  • A young girl refuses to reveal the location of a white heron's nest despite being offered a significant sum of money by a hunter.
  • A man and his wife listen to an ex-slave's story about a vineyard / plantation from before the Civil War.
  • A woman decides not to marry.
  • A woman, feeling trapped in her marriage, has psychotic hallucinations.
  • A commercial illustrator describes an elegant couple who formerly lived among the upper class but have now become penniless and seek employment as artist's models.
  • A poor woman burdened by the responsibility of raising several children suddenly has some cash which she spends on having a good time for herself.
  • A man new to the Yukon Territory sets out to walk from a village to a distant camp on an unusually cold day and freezes to death.
    Technical objection: The story never mentions show shoes which would have been used in this context, but then there would be no story.
  • A man is hanged.
  • An old man looks for his dead wife and in his quest eventually falls off a cliff to his death.
  • A young man whose imagination is only stimulated by music and the backstage whirl of the theater (people constructing a world different from the "real" world) finds the ordinary world of studying, learning, working, making a living, and raising a family beneath his dignity. He steals money from his employer, lives high for a week in the big city, and commits suicide.
  • A young woman seeks popularity at the country-club dance. Her jealous cousin tricks her into getting her hair cut.
  • A man recalls his childhood blighted by the feeble business endeavors of his desperate parents.
  • Two men threaten to kill an ex-prizefighter.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~