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41. Powderham Castle: Historic Family
 
42. Making a Splash
43. Vice Magazine's 2nd Annual Fiction
 
$9.95
44. The Audiobook Shelf.(Audiobook
 
45. 22 days around the coast of Britain:
46. Looney Tunes #116, Sept. 2004
 
47. 22 Days Around the Coast of Britain
 
$19.99
48. People From Cobham: Bob Willis,
$19.99
49. British Music Journalists: John
$9.71
50. The Libertine
 
51.
52. The White Tar Baby
 
53.

41. Powderham Castle: Historic Family Home of the Earls of Devon
by Bryan Cleary
Paperback: 48 Pages (2006-04-10)

Isbn: 0851014232
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42. Making a Splash
by Helen Bellamy, Claire Earl, Gary Bott, Andy Levett, Nick Lear, Baptist Union of Great Britain's Mission Department
 Paperback: 40 Pages (2007-02)

Isbn: 0901472492
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43. Vice Magazine's 2nd Annual Fiction Issue Volume 14, Number 12
by Richard Price, Yoko Ogawa, William T. Vollmann, Gus Visco, Earl Wang, Mary Gaitskill, Robert Coover, Laurie Weeks, Jim Shepard, Jesse Armstrong
Paperback: 194 Pages (2007)

Asin: B002RH21D8
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Vice Magazine's Second Annual Fiction issue, with short stories by Richard Price, Yolo Ogawa, William T Vollmann, Gus Visco, Earl Wang, Mary Gaitskill, Robert Coover, Laurie Weeks, Jim Shepard, Jesse Armstrong, evan S Connell, Ludmila Petrushevskaya, E. C. Osondu, Tao Lin, Nick Tosches, Ottessa Moshfegh and John Haskell.Interviews with Dennis Cooper, Poppy Z Brite, gary Fisketjon, Asssscat.Plus photos and illustrations and brief biographies. ... Read more


44. The Audiobook Shelf.(Audiobook review): An article from: Internet Bookwatch
by Unavailable
 Digital: 6 Pages (2010-05-01)
list price: US$9.95 -- used & new: US$9.95
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B003QN3Y7Y
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Editorial Review

Product Description
This digital document is an article from Internet Bookwatch, published by Midwest Book Review on May 1, 2010. The length of the article is 1582 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: The Audiobook Shelf.(Audiobook review)
Author: Unavailable
Publication: Internet Bookwatch (Newsletter)
Date: May 1, 2010
Publisher: Midwest Book Review
Page: NA

Article Type: Audiobook review

Distributed by Gale, a part of Cengage Learning ... Read more


45. 22 days around the coast of Britain: (or the Earl Grey Tea Coast)
by Nick Sanders
 Unknown Binding: 93 Pages (1984)

Asin: B0007B2RQM
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46. Looney Tunes #116, Sept. 2004
by Earl Kress
Single Issue Magazine: Pages (2004)

Asin: B00470F15I
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47. 22 Days Around the Coast of Britain or the Earl Grey Tea Coast
by Nick Sanders
 Hardcover: Pages (1984-01-01)

Asin: B001UNPY0C
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48. People From Cobham: Bob Willis, John Ligonier, 1st Earl Ligonier, Guy Gaunt, Lord Henry Percy, Nick Jones, Charles Buxton, Christopher Causton
 Paperback: 66 Pages (2010-05-05)
list price: US$19.99 -- used & new: US$19.99
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1155574397
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Bob Willis, John Ligonier, 1st Earl Ligonier, Guy Gaunt, Lord Henry Percy, Nick Jones, Charles Buxton, Christopher Causton, Malcolm Arbuthnot, John Boyes, Elizabeth Cockayne, Tom Rushby. Excerpt:Robert George Dylan Willis MBE , born Robert George Willis and known as Bob Willis (30 May 1949 ) is a former English cricketer who played for Surrey , Warwickshire , Northern Transvaal and England . A right-handed and aggressive fast bowler with a notably long run-up, Willis spearheaded several England bowling attacks between 1971 and 1984, across 90 Test matches in which he took 325 wickets at 25.20 runs per wicket , at the time second only to Dennis Lillee . He is currently behind only Ian Botham as England's leading wicket taker. He took 899 first-class wickets overall, although from 1975 onwards he bowled with constant pain, having had surgery on both knees. He nevertheless continued to find success, taking a career best eight wickets for 43 runs in the 1981 Ashes series against Australia , one of the all-time best Test bowling performances, in the famous 1981 Ashes series against Australia. He was Wisden Cricketer of the Year for 1978. In addition to the Test arena, Willis played 64 One Day International matches for his country, taking 80 wickets, and was a prolific List-A (one day) cricketer with 421 wickets overall at 20.18. With the bat, Willis made little impression as a tail-ender with a best Test score of 28 not-out (*); however, he managed two half-centuries at first-class level and for a time held a record number of Test not-outs. Willis captained the England team in 18 Tests and 28 ODI matches between June 1982 and March 1984. Under Willis' captaincy England won seven, lost five and drew six Tests, and won 16 of the ODIs. Botham recalled Willis as "a tremendous trier.. a... ... Read more


49. British Music Journalists: John Earls, David Drew, Mick Wall, Charlie Gillett, Paul Lester, Rigsy, Nick Kent, Dave Peabody, Chris Welch
Paperback: 78 Pages (2010-09-15)
list price: US$19.99 -- used & new: US$19.99
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1156943639
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Chapters: John Earls, David Drew, Mick Wall, Charlie Gillett, Paul Lester, Rigsy, Nick Kent, Dave Peabody, Chris Welch, Mike Leadbitter, Anthony Thornton, Jonh Ingham, Ben Watson, Vie Marshall, Allan Jones, Tracey Macleod, Will Hodgkinson, Mick Mercer, Caitlin Moran, David Cairns, Christopher Dawes, Charles Osborne, Peter Robinson, Mike Diver, Nicola Slade, Peter Shapiro, Chris Heath, Steve Beebee. Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 76. Not illustrated. Free updates online. Purchase includes a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Excerpt: John Earls is an influential British music journalist, broadcaster, and columnist, best known for his work as chief writer and editor of Planet Sound on ITV's and Channel 4's Teletext on analogue television and online. He has contributed widely in UK media by writing for the News of the World, When Saturday Comes, and the Sunday People amongst other publications. Born on 25 August 1972, Earls grew up in Milton Keynes. He wrote reader reviews for Blue Suede Views on ORACLE and for Doctor Who Magazine in 1987 at the age of 14. He started writing professionally as a freelance in 1990 for football magazines 90 Minutes and, after completing a month's work experience there, When Saturday Comes. After completing a year's journalism course at Harlow College in 1992, Earls became a showbiz interviewer for The Sunday People, a post he left in 1999. Two months later, he became a teen entertainment interviewer for Teletext, the successor to ORACLE. Earls became a writer for Teletext's music section, Planet Sound, 18 months after joining the company. He was named chief editor of the publication in 2001 and was at the post until its end in January 2010. He wrote the whole of the magazine, including news, single and album reviews, and features. Earls became synonymous with Planet Sound and his work was often cited by other publicat...More: http://booksllc.net/?id=23997648 ... Read more


50. The Libertine
by Stephen Jeffreys
Paperback: 96 Pages (1995-09-01)
list price: US$18.95 -- used & new: US$9.71
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 1854592777
Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars
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Editorial Review

Product Description

A sexually charged comedy by the award-winning playwright
... Read more

Customer Reviews (4)

5-0 out of 5 stars The Libertine
Cast: 8m., 5w. (Doubling or extras possible.) "You will not like me. No, I say you will not," taunts the Earl of Rochester at the opening of this riotously funny and intriguing comedy of sexual manners...based on the life of John Wilmot, second Earl of Rochester (1647-80), poet and satirist. "The Libertine presents Rochester as the ultimate, sensation-seeking product of a decadent era. 'You see I must always exceed, or I don't feel I'm alive,' says the Earl. And when confronted with a comedy based on his life, George Etherege's Man of Mode, he heatedly remarks,'I am the age.'" (NY Times)
--- from book's back cover

4-0 out of 5 stars Stephen Jeffreys The Libertine
Fantastic read - this one reads really quick and is quite a page turner. Made me want to go and watch the recent film adaptation. I love each character for their wit and honesty; they are truly ones to remember. Well done, Mr. Jeffreys.

5-0 out of 5 stars Excellent treatment of Rochester's paradoxes
Jeffreys' portrait of Rochester seems designed to titillate Rochester scholars for the play is packed full of references to Rochester's poetry (both the popular lampoons & satires and the more arcane meditations on "nothing" etc...).Though Jeffreys admits that he takes some liberties with the material he deals with the most infamous incidents in the life of Rochester (hatred of poet laureate Dryden, disgust at excesses of Charles II, breaking of the Kings sundial, abandoning his friend Downs to die at the hands of a night watchman during one of the merry gangs many riotous jests, the impersonation of Italian mountebank Dr. Alexander Bendo, the alleged training of and affair with the actress Elizabeth Barry, portrait with monkey). Any Restoration or Rochester scholar will be impressed and delighted with the amount of historical and literary research and detail Jeffreys packs in to this play. But the play is not just a reiteration of already known facts and incidents that are already part and parcel of Rochester scholarship/lore; this play also attempts to offer an original take on the world's most famous libertine.

Its interesting to note that Jeffreys' THE LIBERTINE was originally written to be performed as a companion piece with the most famous libertine play of the Restoration, Etherege's MAN OF MODE. Most scholars agree that the lead character of Etherege's play, Dorimant, was based on a kind of idealised version of his friend Rochester. Some critics would say that Etherege crafted a portrait of his notorious friend but a portrait that Restoration audiences could admire for Dorimant like Rochester is a cool patrician libertine but unlike Rochester Etherege's Dorimant never makes a move designed to upset or lampoon the social world that he inhabits but is always an affable charmer/companion with friends and ladies (his treatment of Mrs. Loveit excepted), and his winning ways make him the toast of the town and the most sought after lover and socialite in all of London.You could say that Jeffreys' portrait of Rochester in THE LIBERTINE is designed to counter Etherege's too flattering portrait with a more gritty and more realistic portrait of his own. This is especially interesting as Rochester himself was always interested in offering a more realistic or more natural version of life than any of his literary companions and competitors were offering. Etherege's portrait is complex though and it does show Dorimant/Rochester as a consummate social performer who is capable of always knowing just what to say to each social player (and this can be viewed as a criticism not a compliment). Jeffreys wants us to see the other side of Rochester, the side that is only implied in Etherege's portrait. Taking his cues from Rochester's own poetrry Jeffreys fashions a much more complex and paradoxical creature. Jeffreys' "Rochester" talks as if he did not really want to be liked or admired. He talks as if he preferred "reality" to "art" and yet his actions seem to contradict what he says as he always seems to want to escape "reality" and seek refuge in "art".For instance Jeffreys' "Rochester" is disgusted at the artificiality of Restoration social norms and forms and yet he seems only to be interested in life as it is enhanced by or refracted through the theatre and through poetry.Rochester, according to Jeffreys, is a self-professed cynic who claims that he has ceased to believe in life and who wants from the theatre a convincing illusion that can provide him with the emotions that life alone can no longer provide. And yet his Rochester also seems to genuinely fall in love with the actress that he is training to provide him with those artificially contrived emotions (arguably what he falls in love with is the genuine being who like himself feels the need to express herself through artificial forms). Jeffreys seems to be offering us a portrait of a man who either does not know himself as well as he thinks; or a man who knows himself very well and knows that he needs a very complex cocktail of life/art to satisfy his very sophisticated urges/desires/appetites for a very sophisticated kind of life/art.

The one theme that seems to be consistent throughout the plays about Rochester and the various versions of the life is that Rochester sought release through excess. (Jeffrey's at one point has Rochester say "I only know that I am alive when I have gone too far"). As Graham Greene noted in his famous biography of Rochester, LORD ROCHESTER'S MONKEY, "excess" for Rochester (whether excessive love or hate) was a way of escaping the forms and norms of society. And yet, paradoxically, in the London of the 1670's "excess" as well as "cynicism" was in fashion (and for that matter so too the lampoon and the satire were fashionable as was the "malice" required to practice such literary modes) . Thus Rochester even in despising the age in which he lived still seems to be its most representative member.

Many Rochester scholars like James William Johnson (whose A PROFANE WIT is perhaps the most comprehensive Rochester bio available) claim that what Rochester was trying to escape from was himself (many scholars offer some version of the claim that Rochester did not believe man had anything like a transcendent identity and that, like the monkey, he was really nothing but an actor capable only of offering a series of social performances to please one audience or another). Jeffreys, as many scholars before him have done, interprets Rochester's religious conversion as just one more social performance that is no more "real" than any of the ones that preceded it. This is what some of Rochester's own friends thought when they heard of the deathbed conversion. Some scholars claim that Rochester's poetry was always full of religious imagery and that the apparent unbelief of the satirist is just a negative route toward belief and affirmation. One of the most interesting scholars claims that Rochester's conversion was indeed an act but an act that quieted his will and allowed him to actually occupy the present moment or the "now" that he had previous to the conversion only theorized about. In any event the Rochester that continues to capture the public imagination is the iconoclastic doubter and the contrarian who seems to be both attracted to and repulsed by his own libertine ways and the world that he not only belongs to but exemplifies.

Rochester's paradoxes and dichotomies are fascinating and will, I think, be of interest not only to scholars but to amateur literary men and women as well. Jeffreys' play does an excellent job at sorting through and arranging some of the paradoxes that scholars have struggled with for centuries and making them accessible to a popular audience. I would not say Jeffreys' version of the life is the definitive one but only because with a life like Rochester's there is no defintive account. The paradoxes and unresolvedness are what make the life and the work so interesting.

Highly recommended.

By the way the film version of THE LIBERTINE is only a loose adaptation of Jeffreys' play. The play is a kind of scholarly entertainment geared toward audiences with an advanced interest in & knowledge of Rochester and Restoration literature (though the play can be enjoyed on some level by those who are not yet Rochester/Restoration experts I would not suggest starting here if you are new to Rochester; I would start with a biography and then come back to this play). The film, on the other hand, is designed for those who might not yet be acquainted with either Rochester or the Restoration and thus it drops far fewer insider references resulting in a far less intricately nuanced portrait. The film is nonetheless an excellent and entertaining introduction and will lead the literary minded toward the biographies and other Rochester literature.

I really recommend both play and film (and biographies). I also recommend a PBS miniseries called THE LAST KING which is an excellent way of learning about the Restoration. Rochester only makes a couple of brief appearances in the miniseries but THE LAST KING is an excellent way of familiarizing yourself with restoration era politics and society.One of Rochester's complaints in Jeffreys' LIBERTINE is that the aristocrats had no real function in Restoration England and that their lives were useless and that what they all suffered was the realization of their own irrelevance and absurdity. The miniseries offers another take on just how Charles II's politics (the crisis of authority) effected the social reality and artistic production of the time.

4-0 out of 5 stars Inspiring a Movie
This is a pretty good book about John Wilmot (aka the Earl of Rochester), who is not well known, but surely will be soon - due to a movie starring Johnny Depp coming out. As a poet, Wilmot is entertaining and virile. He is obscene and satirical. "The Libertine" does a good job of expressing this, sharing his life, exploring his reasoning for his satire of King Charles, his heroism, the balance between reason and humor that seems to be the dichotomy of Wilmot. We'll see how well the movie does. But, it would be great if people starting actually reading his poetry.
Another book I recently enjoyed that is like a modern-equivalent of Wilmot is "The Loony," a story about a guy also sort of exiled, who is also a libertine, also afflicted with a penchant for perversity, and also destined for a bad end. It was interesting to read one after the other, as they shared so many interesting attributes. I look forward to the movie, and hope it bring Wilmot more readers. ... Read more


51.
 

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52. The White Tar Baby
by Patrick King
Kindle Edition: Pages (2009-12-25)
list price: US$2.99
Asin: B00322P07Q
Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars
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Product Description
It appeared to be a traffic accident. But when erstwhile Samaritan, Kurt Brackett, pulled open that car door, attempting to save a life, he discovered a suitcase packed with white powder. In that instant a scheme was hatched, out of desperation and greed. That scheme would jettison Kurt Brackett into a life he never planned: Into the arms of a teenage lover, accepted by a social set to which he'd never belonged, growing accustomed to wealth he'd never dreamed of. And, best of all, authorities had no proof of any crime, not even evidence. But the people who were waiting for that powder didn't need evidence when a logical conclusion told them only Kurt Brackett could have their goods. And maybe they'd kill his faimly... And maybe they'd kill him... But then again... maybe not! ... Read more

Customer Reviews (1)

5-0 out of 5 stars Br'er Rabbit in the Brier Patch
This is a very interesting short novel in the style of Tom Wolfe's 'Bonfires of the Vanities'. As in Wolfe's novel I found myself arguing with the main character's decisions and watching helplessly at each wrong turn.

The title is extremely apt as, just like Joel Harris' character Br'er Rabbit, the harder King's protagonist Kurt Brackett tries to extricate himself the more deeply enmeshed he becomes.

Coming originaly from New England myself it was a pleasure to see the familiar places in my minds-eye.

The author appears to understand how the need for money could cause a normal person to make a rash decision which changes his life and the lives of those closest to him, and not necessarily for the better.

King's plot is solid and absorbing and the length of the story is perfect. I chose it to lighten a train journey over the holidays and was far from disappointed. It kept me intrigued to the end of both the novel and the trip.
I will look for more from this writer. ... Read more


53.
 

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