D. H Lawrence
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Lady Chatterleys Lover, by D. H. Lawrence, is part of the Barnes & Noble Classics series, which offers quality editions at affordable prices to the student and the general reader, including new scholarship, thoughtful design, and pages of carefully crafted extras. Here are some of the remarkable features of Barnes & Noble Classics:
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This edition includes a modern introduction and a list of suggested further reading. The Lost Girl is the story of Alvina Houghton, the daughter of an English draper with more imagination than sense, who falls in love with an Italian player in an itinerant variety act. Despite herself, she is attracted by his animal sexuality, and she abandons the mediocrity of a town and people that never understood her father's dream, to marry her lover and move...
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This edition includes a modern introduction and a list of suggested further reading. Sea and Sardinia (1921) is one of the most entertaining and witty travel narratives one can read. It includes rugged movement by boat, bus, and train and is filled with colorful descriptions of the vital people and beautiful places of Italy. Steeped in the turbulent and impulsive personality of one of the most important modern writers, it captures the mood after...
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Mornings in Mexico is a collection of travel essays by D. H. Lawrence about Mexico, where he travelled several times and was fascinated, by what he observed there, of the exotic people and their way of life. It displays Lawrence's gifts as a travel writer, catching the "spirit of place” in his own vivid manner.
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An invaluable resource for students of D. H. Lawrence and the early history of psychoanalysis, this essay presents the Lawrence's counterproposal to Freudian theory, and articulates his views on education, marriage, and social and political action, along with his insights into the polarity that exists between emotional and intellectual identities.
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This poetic, idiosyncratic work of nonfiction was intended partly as a response to critics of his novel Sons and Lovers. Lawrence challenges mainstream positivist science, as well as the more recent hypotheses of psychoanalysis, to expound an alternative vision of life, sex, marriage, education, human motivation, and the conflict between reason and emotion.
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Published in 1914, this collection contains some of Lawrence's best-known short fiction, including "The Prussian Officer," "The Thorn in the Flesh," "Daughters of the Vicar," and "Odour of Chrysanthemums," a moving and tragic character study of a young woman married to an abusive coalminer.
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Jack Grant arrives in Western Australia in 1882, having been expelled from his public school and then sent down from an agricultural college. He experiences hunting, farming, gold mining, fights and his first love of women. His character is forged by the Australian landscape and its hard, no-nonsense people. From the young boy emerges a tough Lawrentian hero. (Goodreads)
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MALE FANTASY.
In Aaron's Rod, a satirical, ultra-masculine narrative with unconsciously homosexual undertones by controversial literary legend D.H. Lawrence, protagonist Aaron Sisson has grown tired of his dulling marriage and monotonous daily life working a desk job for a coal mine business in the Midlands of England. He abandons his wife and children to chase dreams of fame and fortune as a professional flutist, and embarks on an impulsive trip...
10) Aaron's Rod
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Published in 1922, this novel tells the story of Aaron Sisson, a union official in the coal mines of the English Midlands, who leaves his wife to visit Italy and pursue his dream of success as a professional flautist. There he meets a Lawrentian novelist, Rawdon Lilly, who takes him under his wing.
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"How Lawrence Found His Lost Girl in Cornwall", is the title of the Introduction to this edition of Lawrence's sixth major novel. In it Sandra Jobson shows how Lawrence based part of his character Alvina Houghton on Katherine Mansfield, the New Zealand short-story writer.
'The Lost Girl' was in fact Lawrence's third novel, but was not published until 1920. It is his only novel to have won a literary prize. Originally called 'The Insurrection of Miss...
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Esta novela, situada en el puritanismo victoriano, y prohibida en Inglaterra por su contenido erótico, habla sobre la relación de una dama de la alta sociedad con un trabajador de su esposo. Pero más allá de entablar una novela sobre los deseos carnales, D.H. Lawrence habla sobre la relación interpersonal de un hombre y una mujer, el significado de la conciencia, los impulsos afectivos y, sobretodo, la ternura que existe entre los seres humanos....
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In his first novel, written at age twenty-five, D. H. Lawrence's gifts as a storyteller are on full display. The White Peacock explores the impact of industrialism on Lawrence's beloved countryside from the viewpoint of the educated and cultured Cyril Beardsall, as well as themes of failure-bound marriages and the limbo between the city and the country.
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Published in 1916, this small book of travel essays recounts Lawrence's experiences on his first extended trip outside England. But don't expect reviews of famous historical sports, for, as Anais Nin noted, Twilight in Italy "cannot be read as an ordinary travel book, for his voyage is philosophic, as well as a symbolic and sensuous one."
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Samson and Delilah' is set against a Cornish backdrop. Lawrence and his wife tried to settle in Cornwall during the First World War but were hounded by the authorities and forced to leave. Lawrence pointedly describes the local people as' mindless' in this story. It is almost a Homeric story of a husband returning home after a long absence, having to fight to regain his wife. But in this story it is the wife who is the obstacle. But she succumbs to...
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The Woman Who Rode Away' is a dark, troubling story set in the wilderness of South America. What makes this story compelling is that the woman is at the end of her personal tether and the Indians are at the end of their cultural one, they seek one another out for terrible but perhaps predictable uses. Each of them looks to the other for "salvation" in a way that expresses the desperation and futility of their situation.
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Lessford's Rabbits was written by D H Lawrence in 1908. It was the second of his sixty-seven short stories, all of which will be published individually in audio format by the Blackthorn Press. The story is set in a local school and gives an insight into the poverty and spirit of working-class children as well as a glimpse of Lawrence's time as a teacher.
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The hero of this story returns to England to undertake a 'respectable' marriage but is drawn to see the passionate love of his life once more. Their mutual passion attracts and repels the couple in equal measure but the young man pulls away in a literal fire of passion. He escapes from the witch of his desires to the respectability he craves but we wonder if he can be truly happy without the sensual side of his life being satisfied.