This book offers crucial perspectives on the vexed question of chronology in Flaubert's work. Critics have struggled long and hard with the apparent inconsistencies in his writing, but Claire Addison's study reveals that the situation is far more subtle, complex and intriguing than hitherto supposed. She argues that Flaubert's manipulation of dates is deliberate and that what have previously been dismissed as inadvertent errors are in fact evidence of the strong presence of Flaubert's family life, events in historical Europe and events in the life of his literary characters. This interesting reading goes far beyond what traditional methods of literary history allow us to perceive of the link between the life and work of the author.
Ramona Shaw moves to Chicago to aide her husband, Darius, in realizing his dream of opening a medical center with his best friend, Keith Lewis. In a new place and in a new house, she doesn't have...
Book Two in the Liberty Trilogy and winner of a North American Book Award, an International Firebird Book Award, a Global Book Award, a Book BookFest Award, a Distinguished Mention in the New York...
Until the day they arrestedmy husband, my life had been normal ...Now I was by myself, in a courtroom, with a husband in jail.How had this happened?What would you do if someone you loved was...
She loves her friends and students in the West, but family obligations have called her home. Where does she truly belong? After a year of teaching in the Canadian West, Beth Thatcher returns home to...