Book Description
NOW,THE EPIC FANTASY CONTINUES WITH SHADOWPLAY!
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLING AUTHOR TAD WILLIAMS'S SHADOWMARCH WAS HAILED AS...
Customer Reviews:
Incredible epic fantasy.......2007-10-09
There isn't much out there these days to compete with this quality of writing in the genre of epic fantasy. If you are a fan of George RR Martin, Robert Jordan, or Greg Keyes, you will not be disappointed with this series.
review for tad williams shadowplay.......2007-08-31
tad williams has done it again. another late night page turner. not as action packed so far in comparison to his other series the dragonbone chair though. he will really have to step his game up in the third (maybe fourth) enstallment of the series. i expect nothing less from williams.
Tad Williams just knows how to write.......2007-08-23
It took me a while to become a true Tad Williams fan, but with this second installment of Shadowmarch, send me my fan club decoder ring because I am in!
His characters, world, and plots are intricate and detailed. But not so much that you get bored, or begin skipping pages (i'm talking to you Robert Jordan!). Instead you just get lost in a story that is well told and compelling. I recommend this series to anyone who loves the "epic fantasy".
Really enjoyed it!.......2007-07-30
I will admit that it's not as good as his best (Otherland), but it was a great read.
I'll probably read Vol. 3, but.......2007-07-18
both volumes so far are a bit of a a disappointment. I was desperate for a good diversion, but found these over long and tedious in places - pages and pages of nearly repetitive travels without anything really happening to further the plot. Characters that aren't really dimensional, and inconsistent in an unrealistic way. Characters who seem like throwaways. I had difficulty caring about even the main characters. (The raven is one redeeming exception.) But my biggest dislike is the strange phoney habit of characters, expecially the princess, to burst into tears at the slightest provocation. Anyone with life experience of tragedy and grief will recognize this constant wimpy weeping as unrealistic, even for a child. It became very annoying before the end of volume two.
Average customer rating:
- Good photographs of the Cornell's works, but...
- Volume of J. Cornell's work
- FINALLY A GOOD ILLUSTRATED CORNELL BOOK
- A must for Cornell fans
- Essential material for the serious Cornell fan
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Joseph Cornell: Shadowplay...Eterniday
Lynda Roscoe Hartigan ,
Richard Vine ,
Robert Lehrman ,
Joseph Cornell , and
Walter Hopps
Manufacturer: Thames & Hudson
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Modern | Schools, Periods & Styles | Arts & Photography | Subjects | Books
Cornell, Joseph | ( A-C ) | Artists, A-Z | Arts & Photography | Subjects | Books
General | Artists, A-Z | Arts & Photography | Subjects | Books
General | Arts & Photography | Subjects | Books
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Joseph Cornell: Master of Dreams
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The Essential Joseph Cornell
ASIN: 0500976287 |
Book Description
Published to celebrate the centennial of Joseph Cornell's birth in 1903, this book provides a fresh, multidimensional perspective on the pioneering modern artist. Lavishly illustrated with over seventy-five boxes and collages, as well as images of the fascinating source material that the artist collected to create his exquisitely crafted worlds, the book communicates to the reader the sense of surprise and delight that one experiences upon viewing the actual boxes with their toys, stuffed birds, maps, clay pipes, marbles, shells, and other paraphernalia of daily life.
The book's essays bring together the expertise of Lynda Roscoe Hartigan, chief curator at the Peabody Essex Museum and former director of the Joseph Cornell Study Center; the compelling commentary of Walter Hopps, art dealer, museum curator, and the artist's personal friend; the wide-ranging scholarship of Richard Vine, author and managing editor of Art in America; and the sensitivity of Robert Lehrman, a leading Cornell collector whose firsthand experience lends this publication its distinctive intimacy. Among the topics explored are the role of dualities in the artistic process, the dominant themes of Cornell's oeuvre, and the importance of his Christian Science faith.
Through its innovative technology, the book's companion DVD-ROM delivers an encyclopedic compendium of the artist's works and source materials, the insights of numerous scholars and critics, access to Cornell's experimental films, and interactive opportunities that promote an utterly unprecedented investigation of his art. 231 illustrations, 205 in color; DVD-ROM.
Customer Reviews:
Good photographs of the Cornell's works, but..........2007-09-16
the binding is really bad. My copy is gone in pieces after
a couple of careful consultations.
Volume of J. Cornell's work.......2007-02-17
Excellent reproduction plates of Cornell's art. The advanced artist will appreciate how Cornell was able to achieve the difficult task of creating good composition within a box.
FINALLY A GOOD ILLUSTRATED CORNELL BOOK.......2005-09-10
Finally there is a good book of Cornell's work (shadow boxes) published, using detailed color photographs and remarkable notes/text. This book presents the reader with in-depth insight into the ingeniuty of Mr. Cornell, God rest his tireless, creative soul!. Features an excellent biographical introduction as well. The photo- illustrations are superb, showing both overall and macro views of his boxes. Highly recommend this book for the Cornell lover, also makes for a great coffe table book too for your average art-loving page flipper.
A must for Cornell fans.......2005-09-06
The photography and commentary of this book alone are worth the price if you are wanting to learn about a remarkable artist.
But the DVD included with the book is truly amazing for those wanting to explore Cornell's work without the benefit of a museum viewing. Truly educational and yet simply organized and easy to view.
Essential material for the serious Cornell fan.......2005-09-03
I'm immensely satisfied with this book. The photography is beautiful and does as much justice to Cornell's work as can be done in a 2D format. But the meat of the package comes in the DVD-ROM included. the sheer volume of information, images, films and resources presented is nearly overwhelming. The close-up, navagatable, hi-res images of Cornells collages, boxes and objects, the written essays, histories and intervies, and especially the elusive collage films presented in a beautiful, fun to navigate wonderland of extra stuff make the DVD alone worth the price. and you can get it for something like 20 dollars less online? and even if you buy it for full price, if you're seriously into having everyday access to this amazing artist's work, you almost can't afford not to get this. anyway, i like it. hope this helps.
Book Description
A revelatory new look at how Shakespeare secretly addressed the most profound political issues of his day, and how his plays embody a hidden history of England
In 16th century England many loyal subjects to the crown were asked to make a terrible choice: to follow their monarch or their God. The era was one of unprecedented authoritarianism: England, it seemed, had become a police state, fearful of threats from abroad and plotters at home. This age of terror was also the era of the greatest creative genius the world has ever known: William Shakespeare. How, then, could such a remarkable man born into such violently volatile times apparently make no comment about the state of England in his work? He did. But it was hidden. Revealing Shakespeare's sophisticated version of a forgotten code developed by 16th-century dissidents, Clare Asquith shows how he was both a genius for all time and utterly a creature of his own era: a writer who was supported by dissident Catholic aristocrats, who agonized about the fate of England's spiritual and political life and who used the stage to attack and expose a regime which he believed had seized illegal control of the country he loved. Shakespeare's plays offer an acute insight into the politics and personalities of his era. And Clare Asquith's decoding of them offers answers to several mysteries surrounding Shakespeare's own life, including most notably why he stopped writing while still at the height of his powers. An utterly compelling combination of literary detection and political revelation, Shadowplay is the definitive expose of how Shakespeare lived through and understood the agonies of his time, and what he had to say about them.
Customer Reviews:
Understanding Shakespeare.......2007-07-03
Ms. Asquith has obviously done an enormous amount of research and presents her material in such a way as to keep the reader's attention to the end. I could hardly put this book down. It was truly fascinating.
"Shadowplay" puts a spotlight on the overlooked fact that the Protestant Reformation was not a welcome or peaceful event in English history and unlike other European countries, the English monarchy, driven by Cecil and son, enforced this new religion with violence and persecution turning the country upside down. The average people in the pew were just trying to ride out the storm doing what they could to preserve their lives, faith and their culture until at last this strategy backfired on both the Catholics who remained silent to preserve their lives and living, and even Protestants who thought they'd be on the right side, but who also failed to agree with the Church of England on matters of doctrine.
Enter Shakespeare, whose father's statement of faith was found inside one of the walls of his home and who was raised a Catholic as was everyone else in England before Henry wanted to get rid of his first wife in favor of a younger second (third, fourth, fifth, etc) who might be able to give him the son he demanded. His world was a world of censorship and coersion, but he had a talent that helped him cleverly send messages not only to his fellow Catholics but even to the Queen herself and later King James and sons as well. His words encouraged his fellow Catholics to hold fast to the Faith and provided dramatic reasons for Queen Elizabeth to return to the "fair" Catholic religion or at least to allow all "fair" and "dark" Protestant people to worship freely as their conscience led them. Of especial interest is Sonnet 152 which when read through a political and religious lense means more than just a man railing against his unfaithful lover.
To see Shakespeare's plays through the lense of history is a fascinating journey, and one that would help people to grasp the urgency of the serious, life-or-death messages sent out into a confusing and dark time in European history. It is certainly not your average, boring, politically correct view of Shakespeare. It's better!
In the last days, much is revealed indeed........2007-07-03
In a time when, having recently become Catholic myself, many of my former heroes now seem like dangerous morons and traitors, it is good to know that someone of the stature of Shakespeare was as great as his productions ( Melville and, surprisingly, Edgar Allan Poe also make the cut ).
The evidence is overwhelming that Shakespeare was a closet Catholic, but the good news is that this book robs him of none of his mystery or his humanity. These plays can hardly be reduced to dutiful transcriptions from an orthodox Catholic playbook and reach at a cosmic knowledge that blends Catholic morality and expectation with humanist learning, psychological insight, and also -- most importantly -- a knowledge of the Other Side, the occult, paganism, the devil, witchcraft, incomprehensibly evil natures like those of Shylock and Iago. What seems most Catholic about Shakespeare is his emphasis on the ultimate unreality of these dark forces, their imminent dissipation under the law of Jesus, which results in those troublesome fifth acts like the one in Merchant of Venice where people often complain that things work out too neatly, too perfectly -- well yeah, that's kinda what happens in heaven.
An even more fascinating book could be written on our own Shakespeare, Martin Scorsese, whose fabled career, if you are aware of who runs Hollywood ( hint hint ) is even more miraculous, not only surviving but even wresting an Oscar from the jaws of an atheist and increasingly Satanic propaganda machine that makes Elizabeth's Anglican reign seem comparatively innocent. Most people that still think we live in a free society probably never really comprehended that that Oscar win -- for a movie, The Departed, which is a coded message about the upcoming extermination of Christians -- was perhaps the last gasp of the Catholic faith and a quiet triumph for us to ride out on. For some reason when reading the name "Shakespeare" in this book I couldn't help mistaking it for "Scorsese," so similar are the lives and the talent of these two great men. Maybe that's why he puts that line in the beginning of The Departed, "F--k James Joyce, don't you know any Shakespeare?!"
The Jesuit Mafia invades Greenland.......2007-01-24
Claire Asquith went absent from my GOGGLE search but managed to give me her e-mail adress and some other info i did not need. Already GREENLAND of modern times has begun to draw the ire of the military complex anxiuos to go after Daniel Ortega and the south of the border crowd once more.
Happily the Salam Hayek "boobie bunch" has taken over the Oscar nominations with "Babel".I think we can draw whatever conclusions we want from Shakespeare quotes whose name may be just as made up as Claire's. Shaking his spear is indeed not passive resistance but an obvious retaliation against the crown. Shakespear'es influence once discovered made him a definite candidate for the drawn and quartered contingent which was already a threat to his catholic daughter. The Jesuits have survived many scuffles and have created many martyrs outside the church. Henry Walpole or John Nobody from Asquith's discoveries could indeed be the underground movement of the 1960's of deep throat and the SDS (students for a democratic society,)which is now resurfacing on college campuses..
Mary Ward is yet another google hit which receives a cautious note on its sound byte, surviving also into the 21st century as the Jesuits have.
I was wondering where the tales of Shakespeare in ITALY went. Was he exiled to the "booted" country?
The Passion of The Bard.......2006-12-23
This premise of this book is convincing 1) because of the absolute consistancy of the "code", once recognized, from play to play; 2) the chronological tenor of Shakespeare's themes is shown to accord with the changing contemporary political climate; 3) Shakespeare's poetry is now demonstrated to be a logical "commentary" on his career as playwright.
The one thing I do not want to be true (somewhat akin to hoping against hope that Anastasia "survived") is the pitiful snapshot of Shakespear's last years, "the dark night of the soul" of clinical depression easily diagnosed in the haunting allegorical portrait of his beloved mentor as observed by Ben Jonson in "Sad Shepherd". Alas. Shakespeare may have died after a drinking bout with friend Ben; but the true cause of death seems to have been a broken heart: the despairing Bard regarding the idealistic purpose of his career as playwright as frustrated and utterly futile. He seems now a Catholic martyr, no less than those hanged on Tyburn Tree.
An unxpected bonus of reading this book is 1) a new light on Ben Jonson's work and career 2) the realization that WRT the jingoistic play "Henry VIII" the answer to the ironic question "who wrote Shakespeare? --is the slimey master of pastiche, John Fletcher.
If you liked "Shadowplay" and are interested in the robust flavour of small-town sociology and anthropology of the generation before and the generation after the English Reformation, you will greatly enjoy reading "The Stripping of the Altars: Traditional Religion in England, 1400-1580" by Cambridge scholar Eamon Duffy, which is vastly more fascinating than its dry title would suggest. It is a masterly example of painstaking revisionist history at its best, and like "Shadowplay" brought tears to my eyes by the last page.
If you love Shakespeare and you are passionate about history. .......2006-06-09
This book is an incredible accomplishment. Clare Asquith has revealed a history of the Protestant reformation in late 16th century England that must have some of the persecuted dead rejoicing from their graves. This is less a book than a revelation. It hardly seems possible that Shakespeares' plays could be even more brilliant and more penetrating then they are already reveared ro be. But that is exactly the case. Mrs. Asquith shows us that with allegory and uncanny symbolism Shakespeare chronicles the history of his country's persecution of Catholics. Written from the vantage point of his own family's persecuted Catholic roots, his plays were a guarded appeal to the Queen herself and the nobility of the day to heal the deep wound suffered when England's faithful became divided.
Book Description
This special collection presents the fantastic art of Ashley Wood and Ben Templesmith under one cover. In "Demon Father John's Pinwheel Blues," Amber Benson (Buffy the Vampire Slayer's Tara) and Ben craft a tale of a syndicate of vampire street children that is turned upside down by new recruit Pinwheel. In "Shunt," Christina Z and Ash present the tale of the perfect woman, who gives up the perfect life to uncover a heinous human slavery ring run by an elite group of vampires. Vampires who transform their beautiful female victims into the most sensually marketable product. Within the torture and depravity lies a twisted tale of obsessive passion and furious loyalty.
Customer Reviews:
A dark, edgy duet.......2006-10-05
Like one of the old Ace doubles, this is actually two short books back to back. Read one, flip the book over, and you're on the first page of a new story. Unlike the Ace doubles, the two match closely in themes and especially in artistic style.
The first side I saw holds a story by Christina Z, with Ashley Wood's art. Have you ever looked at the front page news and asked yourself, "People just can't be that hateful and vicious - can they?" Their answer is: No, the worst comes from others, immortals who delight in human carnage on a planetary scale. The second side in my reading order (Amber Benson and Ben Templesmith) also describes vampires recruiting human innocents into their circle. The moral of this little story is that if you are recruiting for evil, you should think hard about just how evil you really are - wouldn't if be the pits if the new recruit were more evil than you?
The stories are strikingly similar in their narration and artwork. Both scripts are brief, and suggest more than they state. Also, both have nasty turns that I normally don't associate with female writers. The Z/Wood piece will raise the hackles of anyone sensitive to misogynistic images; the other tends more towards blood'n'guts. Both use jagged, atmospheric visuals well suited to their nightmare landscapes. Both use vivid imagery to carry the reader forward - a good thing, because the characterizations and events could use the help.
This one isn't for the kiddies, or for some adults as long as we're on the topic. If it were a movie, it would be struggling to hold onto its R rating. I like it because I like the image-heavy style, and I find myself properly revolted when revulsion is the writers' goal. It may not be vor every reader, though.
//wiredweird
Customer Reviews:
Interesting, But Uneven...........2002-09-24
Considering that Brought To Light was published in 1988, and the book seems to imply that the lid would be blown off of these scandals, it's ironic to read it now and see that not only did nothing come of the expose, but no one even seems to remember (or care) about La Penca.
Brought To Light is designed as a flipbook, with each side having a complete story, and it's own cover. The stories can be read in any order, as they only really converge at the end.
I read Flashpoint: The La Penca Bombing first, and it's the best of the two. Joyce Brabner and Tom Yeates tell the story of a couple of American journalists trying to expose American involvement with the attempted assassination of a Guerilla leader in Central America. It's a gripping story, but with almost 15 years elapsing since it's original publication, I can't help but wonder what the REAL story is, and if anyone was ever brought to justice. Another reviewer here states that the whole story was later recanted....
Shadowplay: The Secret Team, is a whole other ball of wax. Both stories are based on a lawsuit filed against the Federal Government by The Christic Institute, in which they hoped to expose 30 years of illegal and unconstitutional U.S. covert activities. Where Flashpoint tells a straightforward docudrama tale, Shadowplay is like Oliver Stone on a bad acid trip. Alan Moore and Bill Sienkiewicz' hallucinatory tale is a conspiracy-nut's wet dream, but the art is almost as hard to follow as the twisting logic of the narrative, and the lettering is so hard to read, I was sorely tempted to just stop reading the book entirely, something I NEVER do....Usually I LOVE Alan Moore, but this story was just too much.
Overall, Brought To Light is an interesting read. If you already distrust "The Man", it won't tell you anything you didn't already suspect. And if you buy everything Uncle Sam tells you, you won't buy what the writers are selling.
It's an interesting look back at a time when it seems America was more naive and trusting in the Government, but that's about it.
Great Book, but May Not Contain All The Facts.......2002-06-04
Read Susie Morgan's book "In Search of The Assassin" in conjunction with this book. Susie was a survivor of La Penca and has doubts about the conclusions that this book comes to. Nobody wanted to talk about the bombing, and it is known that people lied to interviewers to cover up the facts.
Read with a pinch a salt.
A Latin American Specialist.......2001-05-15
Important background! In late 1993, Martha Honey & Tony Avirgan recanted their previous claims that the CIA tried to [end] Pastora after determining that Sandinista intelligence was behind the assasination attempt. Doug Vaughan published an expose on this in the San Francisco Chronicle/Miami Herald on August 1st, 1993.
Compulsive and eye-opening.......1998-06-25
This book will really blow you away if you are unaware of American intelligence involvement in the various dirty wars of the past fifty years. If X-files-style paranoia appeals to you, this is really something to get your teeth into. While "The X-Files" suggests that US intelligence agencies have spent much of their time trying to cover up the existence of aliens, this book can produce evidence of much more frightening activities.
This is two books in one: Alan Moore's half provides the history of US imperialism in an incredibly readable and yet deeply unsettling graphic story. The other half of the book is a documentary-style account of yet another US-sponsored assassination, and yet another suppressed investigation.
I urge all Americans to read this book and reflect on whether you are comfortable with your tax money being spent on the murderous activities described.
Book Description
Photographer Christabel is drawn to psychic phenomena and dark liaisons. When she is persuaded by her husband to take a holiday at a mysterious mansion house in the country, unexpected events begin to unravel. Her husband has enlisted the help of his young male PA to ensure that ChristabelÂ’s holiday is eventful and erotic. Within the web of an unusual and kinky threesome, Christabel learns some lessons the jaded city could never teach...
Customer Reviews:
Starts out well, all down hill from there.......2003-09-04
The blurb on the back of the book is totally misleading. There is hardly any supernatural aspect, or any menage a trois with the PA, and theending is like something straight out of a really bad Harlequin/Mills and Boon romance. the interesting characters are tidied out of the way and the dominant Nicholas does nothing but have her hobble around with her kickers around her knees. Even worse is the fact that the author breaks the basic rules of show, not tell, by having the heroine Christabel recall the events after they have already happened rather than lead up to them and then follow through...I say she should have run away with Gussie, or her brother, and dumped Nicholas with his PA Jamie.
Totally lacks heat and spice. I hope Black Lace titles pick up soon, as I am going through a drought of good books to read!
Supremely Horrible.......2003-01-06
Portia Da Costa is renowned as one of the best authors that publishes under the Black Lace label; however I have yet to figure out why either she or her editor did not stop this story from being published. I have owned this novel for a while now and have yet to finish it. Shadowplay starts off with a enticing introduction to the intriguing and extremely erotic Christabel. Unfortunatly, after the first few pages, the characters, including Christabel become extremely flat, one sided, and appear to be controlled by some unseen director offstage, as though they were all characters in a bad play. Seriously ladies, don't waste your time, or money on this novel. The Black Lace label is poorly represented with this publication. Find a novel by Emma Holly, or pick up one of the Wicked Words Short Story collections to see a much more erotic presentation that is truely what Black Lace is all about.
Our heroine certainly does have trouble keeping her clothes.......2002-09-07
on for any extended period of time .....
Christabel, a young 'art' photographer is taken to a secluded country villa in the UK backwoods (if we go by most erotic literature, sure seems to be some strange goings on in all those backwoods mansions in England) by her husband so that he can, supposedly, teach her to control herself. Well, control certainly is not one of her strong points as her husband, Nicholas, has no problems in having his wife strip continuously, and, mostly at the dinner table.
Nicholas does'nt touch his wife since he has Jamie, faithful, young and virile manservant to do most of his bidding and diddling ....
Our young heroine with nothing but idle time on her hands soon ties up, in more ways than one, with the locals, Daniel, a split personality and his delicious sister Gussie.
The book has an interesting story and is easy to read but I had some trouble trying to get into the characters mood and I really thought that the husband, Nicholas was a complete turn off dork.....
Although I am a fan of the authors writing I guess I should be guilty in comparing this book to 'Gothic Blue' and 'Continuum' which I rated much higher ......
Shadowplay.......2000-04-02
Portia Da Costa has written a book that hints at eroticsm with a light b&d theme. Some parts are very erotic and others leave much to be desired. Her husband wants his wife to be faithful, but he is not. This is a double standard that I never thought would be readily explored in the Black Lace Series. The husbands personality was something that really threw me and left me wanting. But it is a O.K. book if this is not a major concern for you.
Customer Reviews:
Superb character development and captivating story line.......2000-04-06
This is a must read for all Shadowrun fans. With superbly written characters who are extremely likeable. And a cool plot one can't go wrong! The characters are well written, which is somewhat of an understatment. Their reactions are not so "heroic" as realistic. This allows the reader to identify more with the characters. Both the portagonists, Falcon and Sly share the spotlight throughout the story. The two characters are masterfully tied together through circumstance and become more than just comrades-in-arms but friends (a rare and valuable thing in a dangerous world). While Falcon is seeking his calling of shamanism, Sly must overcome her greatest fears in order to survive. There is no other way to put it, this was a great book!
great story.......1999-10-27
It has been a while since i read this book, it was the first one i ever read. i think it was a good starting book because it went into detail about 3 of shadowrun's key elements. i've read a few shadowrun books since this one and have liked them all. any suggestions on must reads for shadowrun fans?
Global implications, human characters.......1999-06-11
A covert operation has gone bad, and the battle to recover the stolen data could lead to global catastrophe. Caught in the middle of this are Sly, a hacker who has been given an encrypted data-packet and is trying to live long enough to find out what she has, and Falcon, a young gang-member trying to fulfil a promise to a comrade. Not easy, considering that every government and corporation on the planet is quite willing to kill to get that data for themselves exclusively...
Nigel Findley always wrote superb Shadowrun fiction, and Shadowplay is no exception. Despite the fact that the plot has literally global implications, he manages to keep Sly and Falcon thinking and (re)acting like real people. There are several good fight sequences, some well-described Matrix scenes, and an 'astral journey' that will give you a good take on how a shaman views themself, their totem, and their magic.
Those who don't understand the setting may get a little disoriented, but if you play Shadowrun, this book is a must-have.
Average customer rating:
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The Javanese shadowplay
Suwito Santoso
Manufacturer: Museum Radyapustaka ; [distributed by Gunung Agung, Yogyakarta]
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Unknown Binding
General | Foreign Languages | Reference | Subjects | Books
ASIN: B0007AGDBS |
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