Legendary travel writer Tim Cahill, acclaimed author Karen Joy Fowler, and guidebook maven Pauline Frommer are just a few of the incredible
names Book Passage has assembled for faculty this year.
Not exact matches
This
passage,
named by Lewis Ford the «Triple Envisagement» addition, is one of three that Ford takes to be additions to the Lowell Lectures which comprise most of the material for the
book.
In «Proverbs,» a
passage from the biblical
book of the same
name provides the starting point for a meditation on sexual love.
... have the kids make art for the nursery - frame it in cardboard painted a nice color... if you know the
name (or wait until you do) have the religious background written out nicely for framing (my sister gave me the first bible
passage featuring my son's
name to frame, she color copied it out of a fancy illuminated manuscript type
book - i'm not even religious and it floored me)
While reading a
book, you can tap on a
name, place or
passage to get more detailed information about that item from Wikipedia and Shelfari, Amazon's own user - supported encyclopedia.
As the
name readily implies, users can choose to follow other Public Notes users and see their highlighted
passages and notes in the virtual margins for any
book that users choose to make, well, public.
(I invoked his
name continuously this weekend at the
Book Passage Mystery Conference, as well as the
name of another fellow WU contributor, James Scott Bell.)
Top 5 most quotable
books, top 5 unputdownable
books, top 5
books most listened to on Alexa,
book cover trends, most highlighted
passages from Harry Potter
books, you
name it!
Taking its
name from a
passage in Kubler's seminal
book, the exhibition A Slow Succession with Many Interruptions, organized by assistant curator Jenny Gheith, considers artworks created in the twenty - first century from this perspective, looking at how they embody time and how they have been shaped by cultural and personal events from the recent or distant past.
This complex artist's
book features 285 of these stunning, almost abstract images, sorted loosely into groups — delicate branches, horizontal logs, diagonally growing trees — and interspersed with German text from a forestry magazine, all the words of which have been shuffled by means of a random generator and then edited to remove any overly explicit
names or
passages — although the resulting absurd text can still be recognized as a commentary on forest issues.