#Maurice E. Beckett
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Poem: "Old Abraham" (1996)
Old Abraham: Historic Sycamore Tree in #Barboursville #WV #Appalachia #poets #poetry #writing #history #wvhistory #CivilWar
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#Appalachia#Barboursville#Bill Herndon#Cabell County#civil war#Huntington#Main Street#Maurice E. Beckett#Morris Harvey College#Old Abraham#poems#poet#poetry#Tanyard Branch#Union Cavalry#West Virginia#writers
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What I've read in 2022
(id/list under the cut) not pictured because currently not at my place, but certainly in my head: tausend zeilen lüge (juan moreno), entschuldigen sie meine störung (jan-uwe fitz), versteckt (simon beckett), tender is the flesh (agustina bazterrica)
oh my god, what a year. ive read a magnificent 23 books in total, which - although short of my goal of 26 books - is 8 books more than i read last year!
my list is filled with new stories, books i had lying around in my bookshelf for quite some time already and also very old favourites that i took the time to revisit. i read 5 of the 9 books on my suggested reading pile of 2022 and 3 books from my list of books to reread in 2022.
although i did not love every single book ive read i certainly enjoyed the time i spent with all these old and new characters. if you'd like to know more about which books i liked the most, check out my reading recap 2022 tag where i will post some reflections during the next few days! :)
id: a tower of books stacked on a wooden bed table. top to bottom the english titles are: ninth house (leigh bardugo), arsene lupin - gentleman burglar (maurice leblanc), letters to a young poet (rainer maria rilke), the alchemist (paulo coelho), the dark side of the moon (martin suter), the reader (bernhard schlink), convenience store woman (sayaka murata), moby dick (abridged, herman melville), ordinary thunderstorms (william boyd), the war of the worlds (h g wells), maurice (e m forster), in my dreams i hold a knife (ashley winstead), shame (annie ernaux), aristotle and dante (1 and 2, benjamin alire saenz), the vampire diaries (1 - 4, lisa j smith) and house of leaves (mark z danielewski). end id.
#2022 reading recap#own post#booklr#literature#reading#books#contemporary literature#litblr#book rec#reading list#young adult literature#litblog
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Consigli dei libri per crearsi una cultura letteraria?
Questa è una domanda che viene posta parecchie volte, e mi fa sempre piacere ci siano ancora persone interessate alla letteratura, ma il motore dovrebbe appunto essere il piacere di leggere, l’interesse autentico, non con la finalità di crearsi una cultura letteraria, perché ognuno ha la sua e una non vale meno di un’altra. Ma certamente rispondo alla tua domanda, perché esistono dei libri che ritengo imprescindibili, ci metto dentro pure un po’ di teatro e poesia.
I fratelli Karamazov, Dostoevskij
L’Idiota, Dostoevskij
Delitto e Castigo, Dostoevskij
Il giocatore, Dostoevskij
I demoni, Dostoevskij
Anna Karenina, Tolstoj
Resurrezione, Tolstoj
Padri e figli, Turgenev
La caduta, Camus
La peste, Camus
Saramago, tutto
Il mito di Sisifo, Camus (questo è un saggio, ma lo aggiungo, già che ci siamo)
Dissipatio H.G, Guido Morselli
Le onde, Virginia Woolf
Mrs Dalloway, Virginia Woolf
Gita al Faro, Virginia Woolf
Orlando, Virginia Woolf
I racconti di Virginia Woolf.
Il mondo nuovo, Huxley
Narciso e Boccadoro, Hesse
Siddhartha, Hesse
Il lupo della steppa, Hesse
Maurice, Foster
I dolori del giovane Werther, Goethe
Il ritratto ovale, Edgar Allan Poe
Il libro dell’inquietudine di Bernardo Soares, Pessoa
La scopa del sistema, Wallace
I racconti di Wallace
Purity, Franzen
Camere separate, Tondelli
Altri libertini, Tondelli
Jane Eyre, Charlotte Brontë
La nausea, Sartre
Il ritratto di Dorian Gray, Wilde
Illusioni perdute, Balzac
(E tanti altri…)
Teatro:
Tutto Molière
Tutto Brecht
Tutto Beckett
Tutto Pinter
Tutto Camus
Poesia:
Pessoa (tutta)
Pasolini (tutta)
Emily Dickinson (tutta)
Radnóti, scritto verso la morte
Rimbaud (tutto)
Baudelaire (tutto)
Corazzini (tutto)
Montale (tutto)
E tanto altro che ora non mi viene in mente. Spero di averti dato qualche spunto :)
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I saw pictures of philosophical texts & i was wondering for someone who's interested in reading philosophy where should i start?
Philosophy is an ample spectrum of diverse subjects, perspectives, and unanswered questions. I’m by no means an expert, but below are several works that can serve as an introduction. I have also included second-hand reference/guide books, as well as databases, courses, and podcasts that can help for general orientation. Feel free to explore as you wish (don’t feel too compelled to follow linearity — rather your own instinct and interest). Keep in mind that philosophy is not just about studying ideas and notions, but also about your judgment and reaction towards these according to your own experience or speculation. It’s also about questioning your own beliefs in different areas and discovering your own standpoint. It’s preferable to have a historical notion of influence, context, and consequence, but it should be a stimulating endeavor for you. Discovery shouldn’t feel like a chore but a challenge. You will eventually find yourself drawn to particular conceptions and thinkers that will create more questions and compel you to explore certain areas more than others. [Other kinds of literature are complementary to philosophy, so I have also included texts that might aid and encourage further inquiry].
Philosophical Works
The Upanishads
Tao Te Ching, Laozi
Meno | Theaetetus | Phaedo, Plato
Nichomachean Ethics, Aristotle
Letter to Menoeceus | Principal Doctrines, Epicurus
Enchiridion, Epictetus
Meditations, Marcus Aurelius
Letters from a Stoic, Seneca
Of Idleness | That It Is Folly… | Of Experience, Michel de Montaigne
Discourse of the Method | Meditations on First Philosophy, René Descartes
An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, David Hume
On the Improvement of Understanding, Baruch Spinoza
Political Writings, Voltaire
Groundwork for the Metaphysic of Morals | Prolegomena, Immanuel Kant
Aesthetic and Philosophical Essays, Friedrich Schiller
A Vindication of the Rights of Women, Mary Wollenstonecraft
Essays and Aphorisms, Arthur Schopenhauer
Fear and Trembling | The Sickness Unto Death, Soren Kierkegaard
The Gay Science | On the Genealogy of Morality | The Birth of Tragedy, Friedrich Nietzsche
All Things Are Possible, Lev Shestov
The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction, Walter Benjamin
In Praise of Shadows, Junichiro Tanizaki
The Myth of Sysiphus | The Rebel, Albert Camus
The Ethics of Ambiguity, Simone de Beauvoir
The Human Condition | Eichmann in Jerusalem, Hannah Arendt
The World of Perception, Maurice Merleau-Ponty
Discourse on Colonialism, Aimé Cesaire
Mythologies, Roland Barthes
On Beauty, Umberto Eco
Philosophical Literature
[Aeschylus (The Oresteia), Euripides (The Bacchae), Horace (Satires), Attar of Nishapur (The Conference of the Birds), Rumi (Masnavi), Petrarch (Secretum), Lawrence Sterne (The Life and Opinions of Tristam Shandy, Gentleman), Voltaire (Candide | Micromégas), Denis Diderot (Rameau’s Nephew), Mary Shelley (Frankenstein), Fyodor Dostoyevsky (Crime and Punishment | Notes from Underground), Ivan Turgenev (Fathers and Sons), Chekhov (Ward No. 6 | The Black Monk), J. W. von Goethe (Elective Affinities), Edgar Allan Poe (The Imp of the Perverse), Honoré de Balzac (The Magic Skin), Oscar Wilde (The Portrait of Dorian Gray), Franza Kafka (In the Penal Colony | Before the Law | A Country Doctor), Thomas Mann (Death in Venice | Disillusionment), Stefan Zweig (The Royal Game), Albert Camus (The Stranger | The Fall | The Plague), Dino Buzatti (The Tartar Steppe), Natsume Soseki (Kusamakura), Christa Wolf (No Place on Earth), Maurice Blanchot (The Madness of Day), Jorge Luis Borges (The Library of Babel), Samuel Beckett (Molloy), Ernesto Sábato (On Heroes and Tombs), James Baldwin (Just Above My Head), Roland Barthes (A Lover’s Discourse), Thomas Bernhard (Wittgenstein’s Nephew), Audre Lorde (Sister Outsider: Lectures and Speeches) Toni Morrison (Song of Solomon)]
Reference Books
The Oxford Companion to Philosophy
History of Philosophy, William Turner
A History of Women Philosophers, Vol I | Vol. II | Vol. III | Vol. IV
The Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers, Diogenes Laertius
History of Western and Eastern Philosophy, Radha Krishan
Companion Encyclopedia of Asian Philosophy, Brian Carr & Indira Mahalingam
Classic Asian Philosophy: A Guide to the Essential Texts, Joel Kupperman
History of Islamic Philosophy, Henry Corbin
A Short History of African Philosophy, Barry Hallen
Sadhana, Rabindranath Tagore
Databases
The Internet Classics Archive
Monoskop
Early Modern Texts
Forgotten Books
E-Books Directory
Gutenberg
UC Press
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Philosophy Pages
Marxists.org
Online Library of Liberty
Lucian of Samosata
Ontology/History of Logic
Medieval Philosophy
Ethiopian Philosophy
Free Online Courses/Podcasts
King’s College London, LMU
Coursera
University of Oxford
MIT
OpenCulture
The University of Edinburgh
Open Yale Courses
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!EVENEMENT!
Le mardi 23 avril 2019 est la Journée Mondiale du Livre et du Droit d’Auteur.
Celle-ci a été créé il y a 24 ans lors de la Conférence Générale de l’UNESCO à Paris en 1995. Le choix de cette date ne s’est pas fait au hasard mais pour sa forte symbolique puisqu’il s’agit de la date anniversaire de la mort de Shakespeare et Cervantes, tous deux décédés le 23 avril 1616. C’est aussi la date de naissance d’autres écrivains comme Maurice Druon en 1918 et Manuel Mejía Vallejo en 1923. Petite anecdote, c’est aussi le jour de la Saint Georges, jour où une jolie tradition catalane veut que les libraires offrent une rose à toute personne qui achète un livre.
Pour cette 24e édition, c’est la ville de Sharja aux Emirats Arabes Unis qui a été choisie comme capitale mondiale du livre pour un an à compter du 23 avril 2019.
Vous pouvez trouver plus d’informations au sujet de la Journée Mondiale du Livre et du Droit d’Auteur sur les sites de l’UNESCO et des Nations Unies.
Pour célébrer le livre à leur manière, le Centre de l’Illustration vous propose une sélection d’ouvrages chers au cœur de ses bibliothécaires, que vous retrouverez exposés au 5e étage de la Médiathèque André-Malraux :
- Les dix droits du lecteur – Daniel Pennac & Gérard Lo Monaco, éd. Gallimard Jeunesse (2012)
- L’art de la Fantasy Gothique – Jasmine Beckett-Griffith, éd. (2009)
- John Howe : sur les terres de Tolkien – Stéphanie Benson, Christophe Gallaz & Christopher Lee, éd. L’Atalante (2002)
- Cent aspects de la Lune – John Stevenson & Yoshitoshi, éd. Citadelles & Mazenod (2018)
- Les Contes Macabres – Edgar Allan Poe & Benjamin Lacombe, éd. Soleil (2010)
- Sketchbook – Pascal Moguérou, éd. Au bord des continents (2008)
- Steampunk – Antoni Cadalfach, éd. Le Pré aux Clercs (2015)
- Les Lettres des Fées Sechées de Lady Cottington – Brian Froud & Ari Berk, éd. Glénat (2008)
- Le grand Shakespeare illustré – Caroline Guillot, éd. Chêne (2016)
- Fashion addict – Jessica Jones, éd. Milan (2011)
- Couleurs – Francesco Pittau & Bernadette Gervais, éd. Albin Michel Jeunesse (2014)
- New York la nuit – Arnaud Roi & Louis Thomas, éd. Milan (2016)
- Jazz : dans le New York des années folles – Robert Nippoldt & Hans-Jürgen Schaal, éd. Taschen (2013)
- Dali pop-up – Courtney Watson McCarthy, éd. White Star (2014)
- Paris 2050 : almanach d'anticipation – Davide Cali (texte) & Ale + Ale (illustrations), éd. Actes Sud Junior (2014)
- Blue Note : les dernières heures de la prohibition (tome 1) – Mathieu Mariolle et Mickaël Bourgouin, éd. Dargaud (2013)
- Le Bestiaire Marin : histoires et légendes des animaux des mers et des océans – Jean-Baptiste de Panafieu, éd. Plume de carotte (2008)
- Tous les humains ont les même droits : la Déclaration universelle des droits de l'homme de 1948 racontée aux enfants – Marie-Agnès Combesque, images de Clotilde Perrin, éd. Rue du Monde (2008)
- Le temps des fées : 15 années de croquis, aquarelles, peintures – Sandrine Gestin, préface de John Howe, éd. Au bord des continents (2008)
À voir jusqu’au 10 mai 2019 !
#illustrations#arts#Coups de Coeur#bibliotheque#centredelillustration#strasbourg#journéemondialedulivre#journéedulivre#littérature
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Ya sé vestirme sola
Elena Odriozola Madrid: Ediciones Modernas El Embudo, 2019
Ya sé vestirme sola de Elena Odriozola es la primera obra de su carrera de la que la autora firma tanto las ilustraciones como el texto. Al tratarse de un libro dirigido a prelectores y a los que juegan a ser lectores, las ilustraciones adquieren vital importancia. La estructura y el material que las envuelven también están muy cuidados: edición de página gruesa, sin llegar a ser de cartón, manejable y fácil de manipular sin miedo a ser roto por parte de los más pequeños. Además, a partir de la segunda escena la página de la derecha se extiende, se dobla y se abre, ampliando el horizonte y añadiendo más curiosidades en la escenografía.
En cuanto a su contenido, puede considerarse un libro de iniciación con instrucciones. Siendo el tema principal el hecho de aprender a vestirse sola, todas las acciones e imágenes están orientadas a dicha tarea. Y esa aparente simplicidad la reflejan perfectamente la niña protagonista y el resto de los escuetos elementos: el armario, las tres prendas de ropa colgadas en las perchas (unas bragas blancas, una camiseta blanca y un vestido blanco) y los zapatos (también blancos). Y al desplegar la página de la derecha: el perro y la silla, las nubes y el pájaro al otro lado de la ventana y, por último, la flor del jarrón sobre la mesa. Sin olvidar las hermosas baldosas. Además, la secuencialización basada en la repetición permite elaborar elucubraciones previas y anticiparse a lo que se mostrará, o volver páginas atrás para percatarse de los detalles que cambian en las ilustraciones.
Libro de instrucciones que, sin embargo, no se acerca siquiera a un didactismo galopante; Ya sé vestirme sola trata de resaltar y reivindicar la autonomía y el autoaprendizaje de los niños y niñas. En definitiva, es ése el mensaje que predomina y, no en vano, el libro en cuestión abre la colección “Que ya sé” de la editorial El Embudo. ¿Qué sentido tiene enseñar a alguien qué y cómo debe hacer algo si uno no busca y aprende su manera de hacerlo? Es más, la niña se apropia de la máxima “Volver a intentarlo. Otra vez la derrota. Mejor derrota” de Beckett, y tras varios intentos, se viste por su cuenta, tal y como lo adelanta la portada. La estructura de preguntas y respuestas planteada por el texto también refuerza esa idea: duda y decisión, titubeo y reafirmación. Por otro lado, hay que destacar los toques de humor, como cuando la protagonista intenta ingenuamente ponerse las bragas por la cabeza, o acerca los zapatos al oído. Por no mencionar las brillantes y rematadoras dos frases finales.
En relación con la alfabetización visual, la obra de Odriozola ofrece otros detalles, otras historias mínimas, perceptibles con una astuta visión y rigurosa observación. O quizás, simplemente mediante la curiosidad o las sucesivas y consecutivas lecturas. En aquel maravilloso Aplastamiento de las gotas (2008) de Odriozola, junto a la escena principal de la pareja se representaba una historia de tensión paralela entre el pájaro y el gato; en este caso, el perro y el pájaro completan el plano adyacente. Y la participación del espectador/lector se convierte imprescindible en la elección de las diversas opciones de perspectiva y puntos de vista. Por ejemplo, el interesante juego de miradas entre los personajes: si se observa detenidamente el tríptico donde la niña pregunta al perro y dirige la mirada por primera vez hacia él, no sabemos si el perro está mirando a su vez a la niña, o al pájaro que lo observa a través de la ventana, como lo hace en la página anterior. Una vez vestida, esta cierra el armario (en elipsis), el perro se acerca a la niña con un obsequio inesperado y juntos se dirigen a alguna parte.
Las técnicas de ilustración son de igual contundencia, sencillos y eficaces a la par; las imágenes están dibujadas en acrílico sobre papel Sumi-e, marca de la casa de la artista Odriozola: tras el previo corte de las siluetas de todas y cada una de las partes de los elementos y un arduo trabajo artesanal, la ilustradora difunde la pintura acrílica con los dedos, toque tras toque, coloreando el interior de la silueta y obteniendo así un resultado único. Al igual que los memorables recortables pero adaptando la dinámica a las técnicas de ilustración. Es significativo, también, el contraste que producen las ropas blancas sin contorno alguno con el cuerpo de la niña perfilada con trazo negro. Y lo mismo ocurre con el contorno negro del perro y el resto de los elementos no perfilados.
Por último, cabe destacar la ilustración de la niña desnuda de las primeras páginas. Puede ser que percibamos lejana la época en que Maurice Sendak publicó In the Night Kitchen (1970) y las discusiones y censuras surgidas entonces por el hecho de haber dibujado al niño protagonista completamente desnudo; pero, desgraciadamente, a día de hoy no podemos decir que estemos demasiado acostumbrados a este tipo de imágenes.
En cualquier caso, la desnudez y el arte de vestirse tienen otra lectura alegórica en este libro: aunque al final la niña aprende a vestirse sola, la verdadera lección y logro consiste en la relevancia de la experimentación misma y en la importancia del propio proceso de aprendizaje.
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La entrada Ya sé vestirme sola apareció primero en Babar, revista de literatura infantil y juvenil.
https://ift.tt/3hzwBsc
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# 44
The Year of Living Locked Up (Gustavo Charif, 2020).
Runtime: 104 minutes.
Format: 16:9 HD / Color.
Country: Switzerland / Spain / USA.
Language: original in English and luzaniano, with Spanish version and few quotes in Russian, Chinese, German, French and Italian.
NOTE
Original in English available for free in YouTube (click here to see) from July 11, 2020.
Versión en castellano disponible gratis en YouTube (click aquí para ver) a partir del 18 de julio de 2020.
Trailer available here.
VISUAL EFFECTS, EDITION, SCRIPT and DIALOGUES
Gustavo Charif
ADDITIONAL DIALOGUES
William Shakespeare, John Clifford, Joseph Green with Rex Carlton, and Maurice Sandoz
FOOTAGE in PUBLIC DOMAIN
Benjamin Christensen (1922), Roland West (1925), Frank R. Strayer (1933), Louis J. Gasnier (1936), William Cameron Menzies (1953), Bert I. Gordon (1958), John Newland (1959), Sid Davis (1960), Herk Harvey (1962) and Joseph Green (1962)
QUOTATIONS
Georges Schéhad��, 冰心 (Bing Xin), Robert Walser, Ludwig Wittgenstein, André Gide, William Shakespeare, Samuel Beckett, Kurt Schwitters, Leonardo da Vinci, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Boris Vian, Bruno Teinturier, Meander of Mile End
MUSIC
Ludwig van Beethoven, Richard Wagner, Johann Strauss II, Edvard Gieg, Frédéric Chopin, J. S. Bach, Erik Satie, Gene Moore, Marlin Skiles, Albert Glasser, Manfred Drefnam, Gustavo Charif, Harry Lubin, Tony Restaino, Abe Baker, and Doug Maxwell / Media Right Productions.
MUSIC (opening credits)
E Minor Prelude, composed by Frédéric Chopin and performed by Charif.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCERS
Daniel Abigador - Manuel Zamora
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER and TECHNICAL ADVISOR
Martín Ramírez
CAST (archive footage) in order of appearance
John Newland : Virus Man
Ken Miller : Little Man
Scott Peters : Little Man
John Agar : Little Man
June Kenney : Little Woman
Laurie Mitchell : Little Woman
Marlene Willis : Little Woman
Jason Evers : Gunnar Eduard von Hashem Hausenrhïn
Lola Mason : Donna
Audrey Devereau : Jeannie
Virginia Leith : Violet
Bruce Brighton : Dr. Whisker
Benjamin Christensen : Lord of the Tar, the Devil
Johnny Arthur : Honolulu Man
Doris Brent : Talker Nurse
Gerald LeRoy : American Guy
Kevin Tighe : American Guy
Shannon Wallace : American Boy
Anthony La Penna : Dr. Britva
George Diestel : Government Receptionist
Adele Lamont : Lola
Mike Connors : Anarchist Friend in a Bar
Ruggero Romor : Duceist Friend in a Bar
Jason Evers : PePe Guy
Eddie Carmel : Podemos Guy
Tora Teje : Woman Dreaming
Fay Wray : Silent Film Actress
Melvyn Douglas : Silent Film Actor
Stella Adams : Enlightened Woman
Arny Freeman : Manolo
Dan Abigator : Himself
Bruce Kerr : Beauty Contest M.C.
Marilyn Hanold : First Contest
“Terri Lund” : Conchita
“Betty Brockton” : Valkyrie
“Helen Appleton” : Pam
Candace Hilligoss : Mary
Sidney Berger : John
Bonnie Sharie : Pin Up Dancer
Herk Harvey : Man in the Waters
June Kenney : Stalked Girl in Advertisement
John Hoyt : Enlightened Man
Stan Levitt : Psychiatrist
Jack Sheldon : Romeo Betto -the Dolce Duce-
Anthony Holland : Voice Over reading Vian
Katherine Emery : Lady Producer
Richard Carlson : Man Producer
Veronica Hurst : Girl Producer
Herk Harvey : Enlightened Man on Route
Josef Forte : Newscaster
Michael Pate : Charif’s Steward
Robin Hughes : New Character - Funny Man
John Dodsworth : New Character - Thinker Man
Veronica Hurst : New Character - Young Lady
Hillary Brooke : New Character - Elegant Woman
Richard Carlson : New Character - The Third Man
Frances Feist : Pariah Lady
Stan Levitt : Pariah Man
Judith O’Dea : Swedish Activist Teen
June Kenney : Charif’s Bride
John Agar : Gustavo Charif
SPECIAL THANKS
Rick Prelinger, Prelinger Archives, Brewster Kahle, The Internet Archive, Eric Eldred, Lawrence Lessig III, Hal Abelson, Creative Commons, YouTube Audio Library
Official Charif’s Site: infinilogy.wordpress.com
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National Enquirer, June 8
Cover: Chinese COVID-19 Cover-up -- defecting diplomat murdered in Israel
Page 2: Former Jenny Craig weight-loss spokesperson Valerie Bertinelli is packing on the pounds again and said she doesn’t care anymore
Page 3: Disgraced former Today host Matt Lauer has come out guns blazing in his own defense claiming the rape charges against him were not only false but widely embraced by the #MeToo movement without proper verification
Page 4: Ryan Seacrest shocked audiences with his slurred speech and shriveled eye on the finale of American Idol prompting fears he could go blind, busybody Jennifer Aniston and cagey ex-husband Justin Theroux are playing cat-and-mouse with each other about their love lives -- while Justin’s been living the single life since their 2017 split Jen is doing everything she can to get the details about his dates
Page 5: Celebrity Cov-Idiot of the Week -- Maurice Fayne has been arrested for taking millions in emergency money from the government and spending it on over-the-top blind like a Rolex watch, a diamond bracelet and a 5.73 carat diamond ring plus leasing a Rolls-Royce Wraith and paying $40,000 in back child support from money loaned his company under the Paycheck Protection Program which is supposed to be used to prop up small companies during the COVID-19 crisis
Page 6: The tragic overdose death of Melissa Etheridge’s son Beckett Cypher has insiders fearing for the well-being of his sperm-donating dad rock legend David Crosby -- David had an active role in the boy’s life and with his long list of health woes his friends are afraid he won’t be able to stand the strain of a loss like this
Page 7: Wannabe actor Prince Harry is so desperate to make it big in Tinseltown that he’s subjecting himself to a grueling Hollywood boot camp and has signed up for a string of special classes and training sessions to follow in the footsteps of his actress wife Meghan Markle, Chip Gaines is going to trial in a million-dollar lawsuit against former partners who accused him of swindling them out of a fortune
Page 8: Last year doctors concluded that Dolly Parton’s face had been partially paralyzed by Bell’s palsy and she may never sing again -- two videos last month showed her barely able to move her lips and struggling to get her words out and medical experts have warned she also may have suffered a ministroke, Brian Austin Green finally admitted his marriage to Megan Fox is finished
Page 9: Phyllis George was hailed as a TV pioneer when she broke up the boys’ club as the first female anchor of The NFL Today but faced humiliation after being shredded by horrific reviews as an anchor on CBS Morning News -- Phyllis died brokenhearted at 70 following a long illness 30 years after being run out of network television
Page 10: Hot Shots -- Kristin Chenoweth and her dog Thunder, Chris Sullivan on a bike ride in Brentwood, Pierce Brosnan goes snorkeling in Hawaii, Dean McDermott and son Beau
Page 11: Tom Cruise is keeping his romance with Sofia Boutella secret and is even donning disguises to avoid detection when he sneaks out to see his co-star from The Mummy, Zooey Deschanel’s pals think her hot romance with Property Brothers star Jonathan Scott will be a flash in the pan because she’s only interested in him for booty calls and raising her profile
Page 12: Straight Shuter -- comedian Michael Showalter with shopping bags and coffee (picture), in a 2008 interview with Beyonce on the Tyra Banks Show all the questions were cleared in advance with Beyonce, friends and fans are worried about Adele’s recently unveiled massive weight loss because this is a cry for help from someone who’s always claimed she was very comfortable being her size and would never go all Hollywood skinny, now that Bruce Willis and Demi Moore have spent time together in lockdown the former couple are looking to make it permanent with Demi moving in with Bruce and his wife Emma and Emma is the driving force behind the idea -- she loves Demi and wants to get a place where they can all live together, super-healthy Gwyneth Paltrow didn’t always live on a strict diet but as a struggling actress she seemed to survive on cigarettes alone
Page 13: Kristin Cavallari’s diva behavior was behind the demise of her reality show as ratings for E!’s Very Cavallari plummeted in the third season and many of the crew say it was because she’s a royal pain, blowhard Alec Baldwin has been browbeating his pregnant wife in lockdown after Hilaria offered to cut his hair and he replied I don’t think she knows what she’s doing -- Hilaria and Alec hoped her latest pregnancy would boost their sagging union but his behavior may be a sign that the glow of the pregnancy has worn off, Jonah Hill doesn’t go anywhere without his dog Carmela but his pals said the dog stinks
Page 14: True Crime
Page 15: Internet hackers who stole a trove of celebrities’ information from law firm Grubman Shire Meiselas & Sacks are getting desperate as the FBI closes in on their $42 million extortion scheme, devastated Mary-Kate Olsen is begging sister Ashley Olsen for help navigating her ugly divorce from Olivier Sarkozy and the twins are working up a game plan to protect the $500 million fortune they built together from the French banker
Page 18: Real Life
Page 19: George Clooney has resurrected his decades-long feud with romance-novel cover icon Fabio Lanzoni which was so bad the two had to be separated during a vicious confrontation in a Beverly Hill restaurant -- now that George moved back to L.A. after spending years at his homes in England and Italy their rivalry has reared its ugly head again because they run in a few of the same circles and word has gotten back to Fabio that George thinks he’s some type of big shot who deserves special treatment, Ruby Rose landed the role of a lifetime as the title superheroine in Batwoman but after the dark drama turned into a disaster she flew the coop -- Ruby was the face of the show and she got the blame when the writers didn’t do as good as job as they could have plus there was also a lot of fighting behind the scenes among writers and producers
Page 21: How to teach your kids
Page 22: Health Watch, Ask the Vet
Page 24: Sarah Palin and her husband Todd are no officially divorced
Page 26: Cover Story -- Doomed Du Wei was China’s ambassador to Israel and he knew too much about his country’s involvement in the COVID-19 pandemic and its evil expansion plans and he paid with his life
Page 30: Scott Disick has been hit with a second wave of heartbreak after girlfriend Sofia Richie ditched him after he checked into rehab to treat past traumas caused by the death of his parents and Sofia has already been hanging out with a new mystery man, Hollywood Hookups -- Rooney Mara and Joaquin Phoenix are expecting, Dan Soder and Katie Nolan dating, Katie Maloney-Schwartz and Tom Schwartz are ready to start a family
Page 32: Kanye West’s ridiculous rules and drastic demands have earned him the title of the worst boss in Hollywood and the bad rap has wife Kim Kardashian at her wit’s end, they’re liberal laugh legends but Bill Maher and Stephen Colbert can’t stand each other and they don’t need a camera running to batter each other with punch lines -- Stephen thinks Bill is pompous and Bill thinks Stephen is a smart-ass
Page 34: Jennifer Lawrence admitted on Amy Schumer’s new cooking show that she can’t even wait for darkness to fall before drinking alcohol and getting her private house party going -- she said she tries to wait until 6 so she has a preemptive beer at 5, Charlize Theron hates ex Sean Penn so much she pretends he doesn’t even exist -- she dated Sean for a year and a half before calling it quits in 2015 but in 2019 she insisted she’d been single for a decade
Page 36: Nicole Kidman shattered her ankle in a freak accident while running through their Nashville neighborhood and now her husband Keith Urban and concerned pals fear the effects may cripple her career
Page 42: Red Carpet Stars & Stumbles -- designer Atelier Versace -- Lupita Nyong’o, Anne Hathaway, Jessica Alba
Page 45: Spot the Differences -- Nancy Lenehan and Liza Snyder in Man with a Plan
Page 47: Odd List
#tabloid#tabloid toc#grain of salt#du wei#du wei death#valerie bertinelli#matt lauer#ryan seacrest#jennifer aniston#justin theroux#maurice fayne#david crosby#prince harry#chip gaines#dolly parton#megan fox#brian austin green#phyllis george#tom cruise#sofia boutella#zooey deschanel#jonathan scott#Kristin Cavallari#alec baldwin#jonah hill#mary-kate olsen#george clooney#fabio lanzoni#sofia richie#scott disick
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Book recs
Poetry :
Crush, Richard Siken
War of the Foxes, Richard Siken
The Anatomy of Being, Shinji Moon
If Not, Winter, Anne Carson
A Season in Hell, Arthur Rimbaud
Illuminations, Arthur Rimbaud
The Wild Iris, Louise Glück
Live or Die, Anne Sexton
Coal, Audre Lorde
Another Time, W.H. Auden
The Collected Poems, Dylan Thomas
The Colossus and Other Poems, Sylvia Plath
Novels :
The Secret History, Donna Tartt
The Goldfinch, Donna Tartt
The Millennium trilogy, Stieg Larsson
The Picture of Dorian Gray, Oscar Wilde
The Waves, Virginia Woolf
Orlando, Virginia Woolf
The Song of Achilles, Madeline Miller
Six of Crows, Leigh Bardugo
Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe, Benjamin Alire Sáenz
Dangerous Liaisons, Choderlos de Laclos
The Unbearable Lightness of Being, Milan Kundera
The Metamorphosis, Franz Kafka
The Trial, Franz Kafka
The Bell Jar, Sylvia Plath
Mademoiselle de Maupin, Théophile Gautier
Madame Bovary, Gustave Flaubert
Maurice, E. M. Forster
Froth on the Daydream, Boris Vian
Heartsnatcher, Boris Vian
Crime and Punishment, Fyodor Dostoyevsky
The Stranger, Albert Camus
The Plague, Albert Camus
Lolita, Vladimir Nabokov
Memoirs of Hadrian, Marguerite Yourcenar
A Single Man, Christopher Isherwood
Plays :
The Bald Soprano, Eugène Ionesco
Waiting for Godot, Samuel Beckett
Exit the King, Eugène Ionesco
Don Juan, Molière
Stairs to the Roof, Tenneessee Williams
No Exit, Jean-Paul Sartre
Dirty Hands, Jean-Paul Sartre
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25/03/2016
The Woman in the Dunes, Kobo Abe Things Fall Apart, Chinua Achebe The Jolly Postman or Other Peoples Letters, Janet & Allan Ahlberg The Wolves Of Willoughby Chase, Joan Aiken The Wanderer, Alain-Fournier Commedia, Dante Alighieri Skellig, David Almond The President, Miguel Angel Asturias Alcools, Guillaume Apollinaire It's Not About The Bike - My Journey Back to Life, Lance Armstrong Behind The Scenes At The Museum, Kate Atkinson The Handmaid's Tale, Margaret Atwood Jonathan Livingstone Seagull, Richard Bach Go Tell It on the Mountain, James Baldwin The Ghost Road, Pat Barker Carrie's War, Nina Bawden Molloy; Malone Dies; The Unnamable, Samuel Beckett Waiting for Godot, Samuel Beckett The Adventures of Augie March, Saul Bellow G, John Berger Noughts And Crosses, Malorie Blackman Mister Magnolia, Quentin Blake Forever, Judy Blume The Magic Faraway Tree, Enid Blyton Five On A Treasure Island, Enid Blyton The Enchanted Wood, Enid Blyton A Bear Called Paddington, Michael Bond Ficciones, Jorge Luis Borges The Boy In The Striped Pyjamas, John Boyne The Snowman, Raymond Briggs Flat Stanley, Jeff Brown Gorilla, Anthony Browne The Good Earth, Pearl S. Buck The Pilgrim's Progress, John Bunyan A Clockwork Orange, Anthony Burgess Junk, Melvin Burgess Would You Rather?, John Burningham The Soft Machine, William S. Burroughs The Way of All Flesh, Samuel Butler Possession, A.S. Byatt The Princess Diaries, Meg Cabot If on a Winter's Night a Traveler, Italo Calvino Invisible Cities, Italo Calvino The Stranger, Albert Camus Oscar and Lucinda, Peter Carey Nights at the Circus, Angela Carter Looking For JJ, Anne Cassidy Journey to the End of the Night, Louis-Ferdinand Céline Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China, Jung Chang Papillon, Henri Charriere The Canterbury Tales, Geoffrey Chaucer "Clarice Bean, That's Me", Lauren Child I Will Not Ever Never Eat a Tomato, Lauren Child Les Liaisons Dangereuses, Pierre Choderlos de Laclos Disgrace, J.M. Coetzee Waiting for the Barbarians, J.M Coetzee Princess Smartypants, Babette Cole Nostromo, Joseph Conrad The Public Burning, Robert Coover Millions, Frank Cottrell Boyce The Power Of One, Bryce Courtenay That Rabbit Belongs To Emily Brown, Cressida Cowell House Of Leaves, Mark Z. Danielewski The Black Sheep, Honoré de Balzac Old Man Goriot, Honoré de Balzac The Second Sex, Simone de Beavoir The Story of Babar, Jean De Brunhoff The Little Prince, Antoine De Saint-Exupery White Noise, Don DeLillo Slouching Towards Bethlehem, Joan Didion Sybil, Benjamin Disraeli Hairy Maclary from Donaldson's Dairy, Lynley Dodd The 42nd Parallel, John Dos Passos The Brothers Karamzov, Fyodor Dostoevsky An American Tragedy, Theodore Drieser The Name Of The Rose, Umberto Eco My Naughty Little Sister, Dorothy Edwards Invisible Man, Ralph Ellison The Horse Whisperer, Nicholas Evans The Siege of Krishnapur, J.G Farrell The Sound and the Fury, William Faulkner "Absalom, Absalom!", William Faulkner Light in August, William Faulkner Take it or Leave It, Raymond Federman Magician, Raymond E. Feist Flour Babies, Anne Fine Madam Bovary, Gustav Flaubert A Passage to India, E. M. Forster The Diary of a Young Girl, Anne Frank Cross Stitch, Diana Gabaldon That Awful Mess on the Via Merulala, Carlo Emilio Gadda JR, William Gaddis The Graveyard Book, Neil Gaiman One Hundred Years Of Solitude, Gabriel García Márquez Love In The Time Of Cholera, Gabriel García Márquez Maggot Moon, Sally Gardner The Owl Service, Alan Garner In the Heart of the Heart of the Country & Other Stories, William H. Gass Coram Boy, Jamila Gavin Once, Morris Gleitzman The Conservationist, Nadine Gordimer Asterix The Gaul, Rene Goscinny The Tin Drum, Günter Grass Sunset Song, Lewis Grassic Gibbon Little Mouse's Big Book of Fears, Emily Gravett Lanark, Alasdair Gray The Quiet American, Graham Greene Life and Fate, Vasily Grossman The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time, Mark Haddon Jude The Obscure, Thomas Hardy The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne Stranger in a Strange Land, Robert A. Heinlein The Sun Also Rises, Ernest Hemingway For Whom the Bell Tolls, Ernest Hemingway The Old Man And The Sea, Ernest Hemingway The Blue Lotus, Hergé The Adventures Of Tintin, Hergé The Glass Bead Game, Herman Hesse Where's Spot?, Eric Hill The Secret Garden, Frances Hodgson Burnett The Odyssey, Homer High Fidelity, Nick Hornby Point Blanc, Anthony Horowitz Skeleton Key, Anthony Horowitz Dogger, Shirley Hughes Journey To The River Sea, Eva Ibbotson Little House In The Big Woods, Laura Ingalls Wilder A Prayer For Owen Meany, John Irving Goodbye to Berlin, Christopher Isherwood The Portrait of a Lady, Henry James The Ambassadors, Henry James Finn Family Moomintroll, Tove Jansson Lost and Found, Oliver Jeffers The Far Pavilions, M. M. Kaye A Confederacy of Dunces, John Kennedy Toole The Tiger Who Came To Tea, Judith Kerr One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest, Ken Kesey In Praise of Hatred, Khaled Khalifa Gate of the Sun, Elias Khoury It, Stephen King The Queen's Nose, Dick King-Smith The Sheep-Pig, Dick King-Smith Diary Of A Wimpy Kid, Jeff Kinney Kim, Rudyard Kipling I Want My Hat Back, Jon Klassen Darkness at Noon, Arthur Koestler The Unbearable Lightness of Being, Milan Kundera The Milly-Molly-Mandy Storybook, Joyce Lankerster Brisley Women in Love, D.H. Lawrence Seven Pillars of Wisdom, T.E Lawrence A Wrinkle in Time, Madeleine L'Engle The Golden Notebook, Doris Lessing Tristes Tropiques, Claude Lévi-Strauss Pippi Longstocking, Astrid Lindgren The Call of the Wild, Jack London Nightmare Abbey, Thomas Love Peacock Under the Volcano, Malcolm Lowry The Good Soldier, Ford Madox Ford The Cairo Trilogy, Naguib Mahfouz The Naked and the Dead, Norman Mailer Man's Fate, Andre Malraux The Magic Mountain, Thomas Mann Wolf Hall, Hilary Mantel The Road, Cormac McCarthy The Kite Rider, Geraldine McCaughrean The Heart Is A Lonely Hunter, Carson McCullers "Not Now, Bernard", David McKee Tent Boxing: An Australian Journey, Wayne McLennan No One Sleeps in Alexandria, Ibrahim Abdel Meguid A Fine Balance, Rohinton Mistry The Cruel Sea, Nicholas Monsarrat Private Peaceful, Michael Morpurgo Beloved, Toni Morrison Song of Solomon, Toni Morrison The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, Haruki Murakami Under the Net, Iris Murdoch The Worst Witch, Jill Murphy Pale Fire, Vladimir Nabokov A Bend in the River, V.S Naipaul Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston A Monster Calls, Patrick Ness The Knife Of Never Letting Go, Patrick Ness The Borrowers, Mary Norton Master And Commander, Patrick O'Brian The Silent Cry, Kenzaburo Oe My Name is Red, Orhan Pamuk Gormenghast, Mervyn Peake Night Watch, Terry Pratchett The Colour Of Magic, Terry Pratchett The Truth, Terry Pratchett Witches Abroad, Terry Pratchett Truckers, Terry Pratchett Life: An Exploded Diagram, Mal Prett Paroles, Jacques Prévert The Shipping News, Annie Proulx In Search of Lost Time, Marcel Proust The Ruby In The Smoke, Philip Pullman Eugene Onegin, Alexander Pushkin Gravity's Rainbow, Thomas Pynchon Live and Remember, Valentin Rasputin Witch Child, Celia Rees Mortal Engines, Philip Reeve Clarissa: Or the History of a Young Lady, Samuel Richardson How I Live Now, Meg Rosoff I Want My Potty!, Tony Ross Portnoy's Complaint, Philip Roth The God Of Small Things, Arundhati Roy Midnight's Children, Salman Rushdie Holes, Louis Sachar Blindness, Jose Saramango Being and Nothingness, Jean-Paul Sartre Nausea, Jean-Paul Sartre Austerlitz, W.G. Sebald Revolver, Marcus Sedgwick Where The Wild Things Are, Maurice Sendak The Silver Sword, Ian Serraillier Katherine, Anya Seton Come over to My House, Dr Seuss Daisy-Head Mayzie, Dr Seuss Great Day for Up!, Dr Seuss Hooray for Diffendoofer Day!, Dr Seuss Horton and the Kwuggerbug and More Lost Stories, Dr Seuss Hunches in Bunches, Dr Seuss I Am NOT Going to Get Up Today!, Dr Seuss I Can Lick 30 Tigers Today! and Other Stories, Dr Seuss I Had Trouble in Getting to Solla Sollew, Dr Seuss My Book about ME, Dr Seuss My Many Colored Days, Dr Seuss "Oh, the Thinks You Can Think!", Dr Seuss On Beyond Zebra!, Dr Seuss The Bippolo Seed and Other Lost Stories, Dr Seuss The Butter Battle Book, Dr Seuss The Cat's Quizzer, Dr Seuss The Pocket Book of Boners, Dr Seuss The Seven Lady Godivas, Dr Seuss The Shape of Me and Other Stuff, Dr Seuss What Pet Should I Get?, Dr Seuss You're Only Old Once!, Dr Seuss Dr Seuss's Book of Bedtime Stories, Dr Seuss Special shapes: A flip-the-flap book, Dr Seuss Dizzy days: A flip-the-flap book, Dr Seuss The Tale of Genji, Murasaki Shikibu A Town Like Alice, Nevil Shute I Capture The Castle, Dodie Smith "The Gulag Archipelago, 1918-1956: An Experiment in Literary Investigation", Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn Memento Mori, Muriel Spark The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, Muriel Spark Heidi, Johanna Spyri The Making of Americans, Gertrude Stein The Charterhouse of Parma, Stendhal "The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman", Laurence Sterne Driving Over Lemons: An Optimist in Andalucia, Chris Stewart Goosebumps, R.L. Stine Ballet Shoes, Noel Streatfeild The Home and the World, Rabindranath Tagore The Arrival, Shaun Tan The Secret History, Donna Tartt The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists, Robert Tressell Fathers and Sons, Ivan Turgenev Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain Froth on the Daydream, Boris Vian Creation, Gore Vidal Slaughterhouse-Five, Kurt Vonnegut Breakfast of Champions, Kurt Vonnegut The Color Purple, Alice Walker Scoop, Evelyn Waugh The War Of The Worlds, H.G. Wells The Time Machine, H.G Wells The Once And Future King, T.H. White Double Act, Jacqueline Wilson Vicky Angel, Jacqueline Wilson Girls In Love, Jacqueline Wilson The Illustrated Mum, Jacqueline Wilson The Dare Game, Jacqueline Wilson Bad Girls, Jacqueline Wilson Lola Rose, Jacqueline Wilson Girls In Tears, Jacqueline Wilson Sleepovers, Jacqueline Wilson Secrets, Jacqueline Wilson Girls Out Late, Jacqueline Wilson Dustbin Baby, Jacqueline Wilson The Code of the Woosters, P.G. Wodehouse Native Son, Richard Wright Going Native, Stephen Wright The Day Of The Triffids, John Wyndham The Dream of the Red Chamber, Cao Xueqin Red Sorghum: A Novel of China, Mo Yan Revolutionary Road, Richard Yates We, Yevgeny Zamyatin Germinal, Emile Zola Amazing Grace, Mary Hoffman & Caroline Binch Horrid Henry, Francesca Simon & Tony Ross Meg And Mog, Helen Nicholls & Jan Pienkowski Ten Little Fingers and Ten Little Toes, Mem Fox & Helen Oxenbury The Elephant And The Bad Baby, Elfrida Vipont & Raymond Briggs The True Story Of The Three Little Pigs, Jon Scieszka & Lane Smith
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what i‘ve read
(links to my own posts abt the respective books)
2024
frankenstein(mary shelley, reread)
the demon and miss prym (paulo coelho)
satyricon (petronius)
the word for world is forest (ursula k le guin)
2023
crime and punishment (dostoyevski)
life ceremony (sayaka murata)
rule of wolves (leigh bardugo)
in the penal colony (franz kafka)
undine (de la motte fouqué)
earthlings (sayaka murata)
dark matter (blake crouch)
the old man and the sea (ernest hemmingway)
the secret history (again.) (donna tartt)
annihilation (jeff vandermeer)
king of scars (leigh bardugo)
the little friend (donna tartt)
reeling (lola lafon)
fleisch mit weißer soße (christian schmacht)
tschick (why we took the car) (wolfgang herrndorf)
a little life (hanya yanagihara)
the left hand of darkness (ursula k. le guin)
2022
what i've read in 2022 (blogpost) 2022 reading recap (tag)
in my dreams i hold a knife (ashley winstead)
the gambler (dostoyevsky)
maurice (e. m. forster)
ninth house (leigh bardugo)
ordinary thunderstorms (william boyd)
tausend zeilen lüge (juan moreno)
the war of the worlds (h. g. wells)
entschuldigen sie meine störung (jan-uwe fitz)
dark side of the moon (martin suter)
the reader (bernhard schlink)
house of leaves (mark z danielewski)
the alchemist (paulo coelho)
versteckt (simon beckett)
letters to a young poet (rainer maria rilke)
the vampire diaries the return: nightfall (book 5, lisa j. smith, reread)
the vampire diaries 3+4 (lisa j. smith, reread)
ari and dante dive into the waters of the world (benjamin alire sáenz)
ari and dante discover the secrets of the universe (benjamin alire sáenz, reread)
moby dick (herman melville, abridged)
tender is the flesh (agustina bazterrica)
arsene lupin, gentleman burglar (maurice leblanc)
convenience store woman (sayaka murata)
the vampire diaries 1+2 (lisa j. smith, reread)
2021
what i‘ve read in 2021 (blogpost) 2021 reading recap (tag)
verity (colleen hoover)
the trial (franz kafka)
the stranger (albert camus)
six of crows and crooked kingdom (leigh bardugo)
shadow and bone (trilogy) (leigh bardugo)
one flew over the cuckoo’s nest (ken kesey)
the witcher (blood of elves) (andrzej sapkowski)
something in the water (catherine steadman)
marianengraben (jasmin schreiber)
do androids dream of electric sheep? (blade runner) (p. k. dick)
reykjavík noir (snare, trap, cage) (lilja sigurdadottir)
red white royal blue (casey mcquiston)
2020
what i‘ve read in 2020 (blogpost)
thirteen storeys (jonathan sims)
charley’s web (joy fielding)
stone butch blues (leslie feinberg)
the death of iwan ilyitsch (leo tolstoy)
the wicked cometh (laura carlin)
nach uns die pinguine (hans stein)
the tiger in the smoke (margery allingham)
the great gatsby (f. scott fitzgerald)
american gods (neil gaiman)
töchter (lucy fricke)
2019
the goldfinch (donna tartt)
macbeth (jo nesbo)
moriarty (anthony horowitz)
der pfau (isabel bogdan)
the girl on the train (paula hawkins)
lord of the flies (william golding)
if we were villains (m. l. rio)
fahrenheit 451 (ray bradbury)
2018 and earlier
trainspotting (irvene welsh)
the secret history (donna tartt)
a clockwork orange (anthony burgess)
the hound of the d'urbervilles (kim newman)
the picture of dorian gray (oscar wilde)
1984 (george orwell)
animal farm (george orwell)
frankenstein (mary shelley)
the vampire diaries (lisa j. smith)
aristotle and dante discover the secrets of the universe (benjamin alire saenz)
love, simon. (becky albertally)
a long way down (nick hornby)
fight club (chuck palahniuk)
wonder (raquel j. palacio)
island of the blue dolphins (scott o’dell)
the girl with glass feet (ali shaw)
fever (karen marie moning)
insel der dämonen (torsten fink)
lots of sherlock holmes stories (arthur conan doyle)
lights on the sea (miquel reina)
schattensturm (andreas d. hesse)
rabenmond (jenny-mai nuyen)
tschick: why we took the car (wolfgang herrendorf)
to kill a mockingbird (harper lee)
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Below are some of the people from the theater community who died in 2019. Click on any photograph to read the caption.
Danny Aiello, 86, an Oscar-nominated actor for Do the Right Thing, and a veteran of seven Broadway productions in 11 years.
Rene Auberjunois, 79, a 13-time Broadway veteran, nominated for four Tony Awards, and winning for Coco in 1970.
Kaye Ballard, 93, Broadway veteran (The Golden Apple, Carnival, The Pirates of Penzance), familiar face on TV, funny lady. She was impersonating Maurice Chevalier at age 5)
Diahann Carroll, 84, best known as the first black woman to star on a TV series in a non-servant role, “Julia” in 1968, but she was a barrier breaker on Broadway too. Making her Broadway debut in 1954, at the age of 19, she became the first black woman to win the Tony Award for Best Actress for a musical, for ��No Strings” in 1962.She returned to Broadway in 1982 to portray Doctor Martha Livingstone in “Agnes of God” and even this was reportedly a first — the first black actress to replace a white actress in a play on Broadway
Carol Channing, 97, 12-time Broadway veteran, three-time Tony winner, who became a Broadway legend thanks to two roles — the gold-digging Lorelei Lee in “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” and the matchmaker Dolly Gallagher Levi in “Hello, Dolly!” a role she originated in 1964 and performed again , in Broadway revivals in 1978 and 1995
Martin Charnin, 84, who began his Broadway career portraying Big Deal in West Side Story, and went on to become a big deal lyricist — especially for the musical Annie.
Jean Cinader, 96, star of the 1940s Broadway comedy Dream Girl
Betty Corwin, 98, creator of the Theater on Film and Tape Archive, at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center
Ann Crumb, 69, four-time Broadway veteran included in “Aspects of Love,” the first American actress chosen by Andrew Lloyd Webber to originate a starring role.
Doris Day, 97, singer, actress, leading star of romantic comedies and Hollywood musicals, including the screen adaptation of Broadway’s “The Pajama Game”
Stanley Donen, 94, film director and choreographer who specialized in movie musicals, including The Pajama Game (see Doris Day), as well as Singin’ in the Rain and On the Town, both of which he co-directed with actor and dancer Gene Kelly. “I wanted to do anything but what Busby Berkeley did.”
Richard Easton, 86, 24-time veteran of Broadway, Tony winning actor for Tom Stoppard’s ” Invention of Love”
Georgia Engel, 70, in the original cast of Hello, Dolly!, best known for the Mary Tyler Moore Show
Alvin Epstein, 93, actor, master of Beckett
Albert Finney, 82, Tony and Oscar nominee, star of Tom Jones, Murder on the Orient Express, and Annie, Dies at 82
“Henry Fonda’s son: That’s how everybody identified me until Easy Rider came along.” Peter Fonda, 79, who was also a Broadway veteran, appearing in the 1961 “Blood, Sweat and Stanley Poole”
Laurel Griggs, 13, Broadway veteran of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, and Once.
Andile Gumbi , 36, longtime Simba in The Lion King on both Broadway and internationally
Valerie Harper, 80, beloved for her character Rhoda Morgenstern, yes, but also eight-time veteran of Broadway – most recently in 2010 in a Tony-nominated role as Tallulah Bankhead in “Looped.” Whatever she played, you felt like you knew her.
Katherine Helmond, 89, best known for her performance as Jessica Tate on the ABC series Soap, a four-time Broadway veteran Tony-nominated for The Great God Brown.
E. Katherine Kerr,82, a stage and screen actress and playwright who won strong reviews for her Off Broadway work and an Obie Award in 1982 for her performance in Caryl Churchill’s “Cloud 9.”
Ron Leibman, 82, a familiar face on TV (Friends) and the movies (Norma Rae) he was also a ten-time Broadway veteran who won a Tony Award for Best Actor in a Play in 1993 for originating the role of Roy Cohn in Angels in America: Millennium Approaches
Jo Sullivan Loesser, 91, nine-time Broadway veteran who received a Tony Award nomination for Best Featured Actress in a Musical for creating the role of Rosabella in the original Broadway production of The Most Happy Fella, written by her husband, composer Frank Loesser.
William Luce, 88, playwright of Belle of Amherst and Barrymore
Marion McClinton, 65, playwright, actor, and director; premier interpreter of the work of August Wilson
Mark Medoff, 79, Tony-winning playwright of Children of a Lesser God, screenwriter, director and a long-time arts educator. “I can’t teach students to write, to direct, to act, but I can create an atmosphere in which they can teach themselves.”
Jonathan Miller, 85, director and humorist.
“If there’s a book that you want to read, but it hasn’t been written yet, then you must write it.” Toni Morrison, 88, Nobel Prize winning novelist (Beloved, Song of Solomon, The Bluest Eye, etc) Toni Morrison wasn’t just a literary giant–her work has also inspired memorable stage adaptations, including Lydia Diamond’s The Bluest Eye and Nambi Kelley’s Jazz
Phyllis Newman, 86, an entertainer from the age of 4; veteran of 11 Broadway shows (Tony winner for Subways Are For Sleeping); daughter of a fortune teller and a hypnotist; widow of legendary lyricist Adolph Green; mother of Broadway songwriter Amanda Green and theater critic Adam Green. She was a prodigious fund-raiser on behalf of women in entertainment dealing with illness
Playwright Peter Nichols , 92, best-known for A Day in the Death of Joe Egg.
Jessye Norman, 74, opera singer, major recording artist, and an adventurous performer, collaborating with the dancer, choreographer and director Bill T. Jones in 1999 on a piece called “How! Do! We! Do!” – a mosaic of song, dance, spoken word, and the poems of Frank O’Hara
John O’Neal, 78, playwright, actor, and activist — co-founder of Free Souther Theater, a groundbreaking troupe that brought theater to black audiences in the South during the civil rights era
Michael J. Pollard, 80, best known for TV roles (“The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis”) and his Oscar-nominated part in the movie “Bonnie and Clyde”, was also a 5-time veteran of Broadway, such as the original Hugo Peabody in “Bye, Bye Birdie.”
Luke Perry, 52, after a stroke. Best-known as an actor on “Beverly Hills 90210” and “Riverdale,” he was also a Broadway veteran, performing in the Rocky Horror Show in 2001.
André Previn, 89, celebrated conductor, jazz pianist and Oscar-winning film composer. Mia Farrow was one of his five ex-wives. He was also a Tony nominated composer for the 1969 Broadway musical “Coco”
Harold Prince, 91, inventive and influential producer and director with an astonishing 70-year career, who received 21 Tony Awards — more than twice as many as anybody else in history.
Anna Quayle, 86, who won a Tony for playing four women in “Stop the World — I Want to Get Off,” and bantered with John Lennon in “A Hard Day’s Night.”
Antonia Rey, 92, eight-time Broadway veteran, “with scores of small parts on the stage (including in “A Streetcar Named Desire”), in movies (“Klute”) and on television (“Who’s the Boss?”). But with few leading roles available for Hispanic actresses in the New York theater world of her era, she would not regain the stature she had achieved in Havana. Still, she did not regret leaving.”
John Simon, 94, theater critic
Joseph Sirola, 89, actor and Tony-winning producer.
JoJo Smith, 80, Broadway veteran, dancer and choreographer. Debbie Allen’s teacher, John Travolta’s dance consultant on Saturday Night Fever
Eric LaJuan Summers, 36, master dancer
Valerie Taylor-Barnes, 88, dancer and founder of the Clive Barnes Awards
Rip Torn, 88, ten-time Broadway veteran starting with Sweet Bird of Youth, familiar face on TV and the movies. His secret as a performer? “Play drama as comedy and comedy as drama”
Gloria Vanderbilt, 95, heiress, model, socialite, designer, entrepreneur, mother of @AndersonCooper….and Broadway veteran: She performed in William Saroyan’s “The Time of Your Life” in 1955.
Rest in Peace: Theater Community Members Who Died in 2019 Below are some of the people from the theater community who died in 2019. Click on any photograph to read the caption.
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Sélection de septembre : le théâtre contemporain.
Difficile, vraiment de définir le théâtre contemporain. Il est trop mouvant, trop changeant. Et pas seulement d’un auteur à l’autre : un même texte peu changer drastiquement de mise-en-scène en mise-en-scène. Aussi avons-nous décidé de voir large et notre sélection s’étend-elle sur près de quatre-vingt ans. La première pièce, Les Parents terribles de Cocteau, fut crée en 1938, à la veille de la Seconde Guerre Mondiale. La dernière, Incendies de Wajdi Mouawad, date de 2013. Entre les deux, 18 pièces qui témoignent des (r)évolutions du théâtre.
Les Parents terribles, de Jean Cocteau (image : affiche de l’adaptation cinématographique par Cocteau lui-même) :
Le beau Michel est adoré par sa mère, Yvonne. Mais tout bascule lorsqu’il présente à ses parents sa fiancée Madeleine. Yvonne est jalouse de Madeleine. Et doublement, car celle-ci n’est pas seulement l’amante de Michel : elle était également celle de son père.
Mère Courage, de Bertolt Brecht (image : création de la pièce en 1941) :
De 1618 à 1648, la guerre de Trente Ans a dévasté l'Europe. Pour Brecht, cette guerre est « l'une des premières guerres gigantesques que le capitalisme a attirées sur l'Europe. » Anna Fierling reconnaît l'essence mercantile de cette guerre : elle suit les armées avec sa carriole de marchandises et fait de bonne affaires, prête à tout sacrifier pour gagner quelques pièces. Tout ? Même ses enfants ?
Pour un oui ou pour un non, de Nathalie Sarraute (image : affiche de la mise-en-scène d’Alain Prioul) :
“Maintenant ça me revient : ça doit se savoir...Je l'avais déjà entendu dire. On m'avait dit de toi :《Vous savez, c'est quelqu'un dont il faut se méfier. Il parait très amical, affectueux...et puis, paf ! Pour un oui ou pour un non...on ne le revoit plus.》J'étais indigné, j'ai essayé de te défendre... Et voilà que même avec moi...”
H1 se rend chez son ami H2 : cela fait longtemps qu’ils ne se sont plus vus, eux qui sont amis depuis l’enfance, qui sont l’un pour l’autre des frères. Alors, H1 voudrait comprendre.
En attendant Godot, de Samuel Beckett (image : mise en scène de Lorenzo Malaguerra, Jean Lambert-Wild et Marcel Bozonnet) :
Préoccupé de peu de choses hormis ses chaussures, la perspective de se pendre et Vladimir, son compagnon d'infortune, Estragon attend. Il attend Godot comme un sauveur. Mais pas plus que Vladimir, il ne connaît Godot. Aucun ne sait au juste de quoi ce mystérieux personnage doit les sauver, si ce n'est peut-être, justement, de l'horrible attente.
Les bonnes, de Jean Genet (image : mise en scène de Jacques Vincey) :
Claire et Solange sont sœurs. Elles sont aussi bonnes. Les bonnes de Madame, en fait, qui a elle-même été si bonne avec elles. La nuit, quand Madame est partie, elles s’introduisent dans sa chambre, portent ses robes, ses bijoux et brouillent les rôles, pour mieux attiser leur rancœur.
Un Tramway nommé désir, de Tennessee Williams (image : extrait de l’adaptation cinématographique de Elia Kazan) :
Blanche DuBois, coquette et cultivée mais fragile et mythomane, vient s’installer chez sa sœur Stella à La Nouvelle-Orléans. Elle est perdue dans cet univers ouvrier et ne parvient pas à combattre la répulsion qu’elle éprouve pour son beau-frère, Stanley, qu’elle considère comme une brute mal élevée. Stanley, lui, déteste vite cette nouvelle venue qui accapare les attentions de sa femme. Stella, enceinte, doit se rendre à l’hôpital. La tragédie peut se nouer...
Le Souper, de Jean-Claude Brisville (image : affiche de l’adaptation cinématographique de Édouard Molinaro) :
Après la défaite de Waterloo et l’exil de Napoléon, les allemands et les anglais sont dans Paris. La révolte gronde. Qui va gouverner le pays ? Le 6 juillet 1815, les « faiseurs de rois » Fouché et Talleyrand se retrouvent lors d’un souper pour décider du régime à donner à la France. Le premier souhaite une république, le second envisage le retour des Bourbons. Aucun des deux ne peut agir sans l’autre. Commence alors une joute verbale qui ne fera pas de prisonniers.
L’homme qui... suivi de Je suis un Phénomène, de Peter Brook et Marie-Hélène Estienne (image : mise en scène de L’Homme qui... par Wahid Chakib) :
L’homme qui et Je suis un phénomène, écrits à partir des travaux du neurologue Oliver Sacks pour le premier et de ceux du neuropsychologue Alexander Luria pour le second, explorent tous deux un monde quasi inconnu : le cerveau. Alors que L’homme qui, à travers des dialogues entre patients et soignants, est une succession de cas cliniques où les troubles de la perception déroutent et bouleversent, Je suis un phénomène s’attache plus particulièrement au destin d’un individu : un homme doué d’une mémoire si grande qu’elle ne lui permet pas d’oublier.
Les travaux et les jours, de Michel Vinaver (image : mise en scène de Valérie Grail) :
Le quotidien d’un service après-vente d’une société spécialisée dans la fabrication de moulins à café. M. Jaudouard supervise, Guillermo analyse les pannes et les trois standardistes, Anne, Nicole et Yvette, s’évertuent à écouter, informer et rassurer les clients. Toujours avec le sourire dans la voix. Un sourire qui se craquelle face aux avances du petit chef, aux soucis personnels qui ne vous quittent pas et aux conditions de travail qui ne vont pas en s’améliorant…
La Controverse de Valladolid, de Jean-Claude Carrière (image : extrait du de l’adaptation cinématographique de Jean-Daniel Verhaeghe) :
En 1550, une question agite la chrétienté : qui sont les Indiens (d’Amérique) ? Des êtres inférieurs qu'il faut soumettre et convertir ? Ou des hommes, libres et égaux ? Un légat envoyé par le pape doit en décider. Pour l'aider, deux religieux espagnol :. Sépulvéda, fin lettré, rompu à l'art de la polémique, et Las Casas, prêtre ayant vécu de nombreuses années dans le Nouveau Monde. Le premier défend la guerre au nom de Dieu. Le second lutte contre l'esclavage des amérindiens. Un face-à-face dramatique aux échos grinçants.
La Compagnie des Hommes, d’Edward Bond (image : mise en scène d’Alain Françon) :
Olfield, la soixantaine, possède une usine d'armement dont doit hériter son fils adoptif, Léonard. Mais cette succession provoque convoitises, haines, trahisons et violences chez les grands industriels. Une pièce sombre et brutale.
Dreyfus..., suivi de L’Atelier, suivi de Zone Libre, de Jean-Claude Grumberg (image : mise en scène de L’Atelier par la compagnie Boss Kapok) :
Dreyfus...: Pologne, 1930. Maurice a écrit une pièce sur l’affaire Dreyfus et tente de la faire jouer par ses amis. Mais ceux-ci sont sceptiques. L’antisémitisme, ça, d’accord, ils connaissent. Mais ne dit-on pas “heureux comme un juif en France ?” et puis un juif officier, ils ne trouvent pas ça très crédible... L’Atelier : Dans l’atelier de Léon, les femmes travaillent, rient, chantent, parlent, s’engueulent et se font engueuler. Dans l’atelier de Léon se dessine en filigranes, sur sept ans, l’histoire de Simone qui se débrouille seule avec ses deux enfants car son mari “est déporté”. Dans l’atelier de Léon, personne ne sait trop comment appréhender ce qu’ils ont vécu, ou pas vécu, pendant la guerre. Zone Libre : Simon, sa femme, sa belle-mère, sa belle-sœur et son neveu ont réussi à passer en zone libre. Ils logent chez un paysan du coin, se font appeler Girard au lieu de Zilberberg et prétendent que la vieille madame Schwartz parle, non pas yiddish, mais alsacien. Bon. Et maintenant, quoi ?
Musée haut, musée bas, de Jean-Michel Ribes (image : affiche de l’adaptation cinématographique par Ribes lui-même) :
Un conservateur terrorisé par les plantes vertes, une mère plastifiée pour être exposée, un ballet de Saintes Vierges, des gardiens épuisés par Rodin, un ministre perdu dans une exposition de sexes, une voiture disparue au parking Rembrandt, des provinciaux amoureux des Impressionnistes, touristes galopins galopant d'une salle à l'autre, passager clandestin dans l'art premier... ils sont tous là dans ce petit monde qui ressemble au grand, dans ce musée pas si imaginaire que ça, valsant la comédie humaine jusqu'au burlesque.
Le Sas, suivi de Bled, suivi de Vie et Mort de Pier Paolo Pasolini, de Michel Azama (image : affiche de la mise en scène de Josanne Rousseau) :
Le Sas : une femme, après des années d’emprisonnement, va sortir de prison. Elle passe une dernière nuit, blanche, dans la cellule des “partantes”. Et nous raconte... Bled : Mohammed retourne au pays. Ibrahim voudrait en partir. Tous deux ont le Maroc dans le sang, dans les tripes, dans le cœur. Tous deux vont devoir confronter leurs espoirs à la réalité. Vie et mort de Pier Paolo Pasolini : Pasolini, dramaturge et cinéaste dérangeant, apologiste des voyous, prince des hérétiques, vit son dernier procès. Ceux “d’en face” veulent sa peau. Ils l’auront.
Dans la solitude des champs de coton, de Bernard-Marie Koltès (image : mise en scène de Alice Ronfard) :
“si deux hommes, deux espèces contraires, sans histoire commune, sans langage familier, se trouvent par fatalité face à face – non pas dans la foule ni en pleine lumière, car la foule et la lumière dissimulent les visages et les natures, mais sur un terrain neutre et désert, plat, silencieux, où l'on se voit de loin, où l'on s'entend marcher, un lieu qui interdit l'indifférence, ou le détour, ou la fuite ; lorsqu'ils s'arrêtent l'un en face de l'autre, il n'existe rien d'autre entre eux que de l'hostilité”
Juste la fin du monde, de Jean-Luc Lagarce (image : extrait de l’adaptation cinématographique de Xavier Dolan) :
Louis reviens dans sa famille pour leur annoncer sa mort, “prochaine et inévitable”. Mais comment mettre les mots sur une certitude aussi dévastatrice ? Et puis, quand on est parti depuis si longtemps, on ne revient pas si facilement que ça. Les autres aussi ont des choses à nous dire.
Tom à la ferme, suivi de Le Peintre des madones, de Michel Marc Bouchard (image : affiche de l’adaptation cinématographique de Tom à la ferme par Xavier Dolan) :
Tom à la ferme : Le petit ami de Tom vient de mourir. Alors Tom va à son enterrement, à la campagne, et loge chez la famille du défunt, dans une ferme. La ferme est au milieu de nulle-part, la campagne au milieu de rien. Coincé entre une mère dévastée qui ignore tout de l’homosexualité de son fils défunt et un frère d’autant plus brutal qu’il souffre, Tom souffre aussi, en silence. Douleur et colère montent... Le Peintre des Madones : La grippe espagnole approche, semant la mort sur son passage. Mais le nouveau curé du village (trop jeune, trop beau pour être prêtre) a un plan pour épargner les sien : il a fait venir d’Italie un peintre pour qu’il orne les murs de l’église d’une fresque à la gloire de Dieu. Hélas, la foi est peu de choses face aux passion. Et il y a les Maries ; Marie-Anne qui croit n’importe quoi, Marie-Paule qui voudrait qu’on l’embrasse, Marie-Louise qui devine les corps dans les draps qu’elle lave et l'étrange Marie des Morts... toutes ces Maries, que vont-elles devenir ?
“Art”, de Yasmina Reza (image : mise en scène de Patrice Kerbra en 2018) :
Serge vient d’acheter, pour une somme astronomique un tableau... blanc. Il en est plus que ravi. Marc, qui déteste l’art contemporain, est lui plus que dubitatif. Et Yvan, lui, s’en fiche un peu : il pense surtout à son mariage. Il aimerait qu’on arrête de lui demander son avis. Mais c’est loin de suffire à Serge ou à Marc, qui s’énervent de plus en plus. Si le but de l’Art contemporain est de bouleverser nos habitudes, de nous faire trébucher dans notre routine, alors ce tableau blanc va remplir sa mission d’une manière bien particulière...
La Nuit de Valognes, d’Eric-Emmanuel Schmitt (image : mise en scène de la compagnie fées et gestes) :
Par une nuit orageuse, quatre femmes se retrouvent dans le château de la duchesse de Vaubricourt. Don Juan, qui les a bafouées autrefois, sera jugé et devra réparer ses torts en épousant Angélique, filleule de la duchesse. À la surprise générale, le séducteur mythique accepte ! Serait-il, pour la première fois, tombé amoureux pour de bon ?
Le Sang des promesses, tome 2 : Incendies, de Wajdi Mouawad (image : affiche de l’adaptation cinématographique de Denis Villeneuve) :
A la lecture du testament de leur mère, Jeanne et Simon Marwan se voient remettre deux enveloppes : l’une destinée à un père qu’ils croyaient mort et l‘autre à un frère dont ils ignoraient l’existence. Jeanne voit dans cet énigmatique legs la clé du silence de sa mère, enfermée dans un mutisme inexpliqué les dernières semaines précédant sa mort. Elle décide immédiatement de partir au Moyen Orient exhumer le passé de cette famille dont elle ne sait presque rien… Une pièce inspirée à la fois de la vie de Souha Bechara et des tragédies grecques.
#auteur : jean cocteau#auteur : bertolt brecht#autrice : nathalie sarraute#auteur : samuel beckett#auteur : jean genet#auteur : tennessee williams#auteur : jean-claude brisville#auteur : peter brook#autrice : marie-hélène estienne#auteur : michel vinaver#auteur : jean-claude carrière#auteur : edward bond#auteur : jean-claude grumberg#auteur : jean-michel ribes#auteur : michel azama#auteur : bernard-marie koltès#auteur : jean-luc lagarce#auteur : michel marc bouchard#autrice : yasmina reza#auteur : eric emmanuel schmitt#auteur : wajdi mouawad#la sélection du mois#sélection septembre#année 2019-2020#théâtre
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“Ho meno ricordi che se avessi sei mesi di vita”: le lettere di Beckett, Eliot, Auden, Golding, Sylvia Plath all’editore Faber (che compie 90 anni, tra grandi glorie e clamorosi rifiuti)
C’era una volta un’era in cui fare l’editore significava usare la testa e non essere proni al denaro. Pardon, I’m sorry, c’era un tempo in cui, in zona editoriale, si pensava che si potevano fare i soldi con la testa. Fare l’editore, insomma, significava più che altro imporre un pensiero, una cultura. C’è sempre questo aspetto ‘aggressivo’ nel fare editoria che se te lo scordi, sei scordato al mondo. Penso, ad esempio, all’azione editoriale di Elio Vittorini, di Cesare Pavese, infine di Italo Calvino che – con testa fina – hanno fatto delle scelte, determinando cosa si dovesse leggere e cosa no. Adelphi, in parte, con altro stile, fa ancora così – il resto è il privilegio dei piccoli e medi editori di talento – nei grandi è come fare zapping: le cose belle ci sono, ma manca la testa, cioè il fatidico ‘progetto editoriale’. Faber & Faber, che nasce esattamente 90 anni fa, quando Geoffrey Faber – un parente ecclesiastico, Father Frederick William, esperto nella compilazione di inni, e una vaga vena poetica presto abortita – si sgancia da Sir Maurice Gwyer, con cui, quattro anni prima, aveva creato la Faber and Gwyer, ha fondato una certa cultura letteraria in England. Per capire. In UK la Faber & Faber è una autorità come l’Ovetto Kinder, la Ferrari e il Colosseo (in ordine di priorità) da noi. In particolare, pubblicare con Faber significa entrare nell’olimpo dei poeti, partecipare alle olimpiadi della letteratura mondiale. Merito di Thomas S. Eliot, lo sappiamo. Che con Faber cominciò a lavorare dal 1925 – grazie alle buone premesse poste per lui dall’insigne letterato Charles Whibley – imponendo la sua visione letteraria. Che – nel bene e nel male – ha fatto storia. Il nipote di Faber, Tony, ha appena pubblicato – per Faber, ovviamente – Faber & Faber: The Untold Story. Il testo è mirabile perché, spulciando tra gli archivi dell’editore più noto nel mondo anglofono, vengono fuori appunti, note, lettere intriganti. Insomma, il ‘dietro le quinte’ di una mente editoriale, il fuoco del progetto editoriale. Ecco alcune lettere emblematiche. (d.b.)
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Geoffrey Faber a T.S. Eliot, 28 maggio 1925
Sono fiero di avere La terra desolata. Non credere che sia irriguardoso se ti dico che mi sono eccitato a strappi. Sei oscuro, e lo sai! Di una oscurità che Meredith nei suoi punti più sconcertanti è un raggio sereno al tuo confronto. Mi chiedo se sai quanto sei difficile. In alternativa, mi domando se sia io particolarmente stupido.
*
T.S. Eliot a Wystan H. Auden, 9 settembre 1927
Devi perdonarmi se ho tenuto così a lungo le tue poesie, ma sono lento quando devo decidere. Non credo che ciò che mi hai mandato sia adatto, ma devo seguire con interesse il tuo lavoro. Sono troppo impegnato per darti un giudizio critico dettagliato, ma quando vieni a Londra, potresti farmelo sapere, io sarei felice di incontrati e parlarne di persona.
Il rifiuto fu temporaneo e non preoccupò molto Auden, che scrisse a Christopher Isherwood: “Una riserva da parte di Eliot. Nel complesso, la trovo gratificante”.
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T.S. Eliot a Eric Blair [George Orwell], 19 febbraio 1932
Perdonami se ho conservato il manoscritto. Lo abbiamo trovato di grande interesse, ma non ci pare possibile pubblicarlo. Decisamente troppo breve, costruito in modo troppo approssimativo, gli episodi di Francia e Inghilterra si dividono in due parti che hanno poche connessioni tra loro.
Si tratta di “Senza un soldo a Parigi e Londra”, poi pubblicato, nel 1933, da Victor Gollacz.
*
W.H. Auden a Bennett Cerf [il suo editore americano], novembre 1936
Faber si è inventata un titolo delirante mentre ero via senza dirmi nulla. Sembra l’opera di una scrittrice vegetariana. Ti prego di intitolare la versione americana On This Island.
Auden era in Islanda, introvabile. Eliot decise di intitolare il suo secondo volume di poesie, “Look, Stranger!”, traendo spunto da un verso della raccolta.
*
T.S. Eliot a George Orwell, 13 luglio 1944
So che volevi un rapido giudizio su La fattoria degli animali; ma il minimo è avere l’opinione di due lettori, e questo non si può ottenere in meno di una settimana. L’altro lettore è d’accordo con me sul fatto che si tratta di un lavoro raffinato; la favola è gestita con abilità, la narrazione è interessante – un risultato che pochi, da Gulliver in qua, credo abbiano raggiunto in questo genere specifico. Il problema è che non pensiamo sia questo il punto di vista coretto per criticare la situazione politica di oggi. […] Sono dispiaciuto perché chiunque pubblichi questo lavoro, avrà certamente l’interesse a pubblicare il prossimo: ho grande considerazione del tuo lavoro, costruito su una buona scrittura e su una integrità fondamentale.
Rifiutando “La fattoria degli animali”, sostanzialmente perché ‘maleducato’ verso i sovietici, allora alleati agli inglesi, Eliot si precludeva la possibilità di leggere “1984”.
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William Golding a Faber & Faber, 14 settembre 1953
Invio il manoscritto del mio romanzo, “Strangers from Within”, che potrebbe essere definito come una interpretazione allegorica della situazione attuale. Spero interessi per la pubblicazione.
Il lettore di Faber legge il testo. I suoi commenti sono scritti a mano, in alto a sinistra, sulla lettera di presentazione: “Fantasia assurda e poco interessante sull’esplosione di una bomba atomica nelle colonie. Un gruppo di bambini sbarca in una giungla prossima alla Nuova Guinea. Noiosa spazzatura. Inutile. Rifiutare”.
Charles Monteith, che affiancava Thomas S. Eliot alla direzione letteraria della Faber, e fu protagonista di alcuni dei grandi successi della casa editrice, si portò il manoscritto con sé, sul treno. Vi trovò qualcosa di interessante, oltre il giudizio del lettore. Nel 1953 risponde a Golding che “il suo manoscritto ci interessa, vorrei parlarne con lei”. Un delicato lavoro editoriale, esteso soprattutto al titolo, che diventa “Lord of the Flies”, porta alla pubblicazione del libro che consentirà a Golding il Nobel per la letteratura. Il 20 maggio 1954 così scrive Monteith a Golding: “Ho appena finito di leggere le prove del ‘Signore delle Mosche’. Sono ancora più entusiasta della prima volta che l’ho letto. Ormai l’ho letto quattro o cinque volte, e il mio parere è condiviso da altri in redazione. Alcuni, dopo la lettura, hanno avuto gli incubi. Che libro fantastico!”.
*
Charles Monteith a Samuel Beckett, 16 febbraio 1956
Mi perdoni se la disturbo ancora ma forse le farà piacere sapere che Waiting for Godot sta avendo molto successo. Il libro vende molto, interessa, fa scaturire ampio dibattito. A proposito, mi chiedo se abbia mai pensato di scrivere un libro di memorie. Se lo ha fatto, sarei lieto ci considerasse tra i suoi lettori in vista di una pubblicazione.
Samuel Beckett a Charles Monteith, 27 febbraio 1956
Sono felice per ‘Godot’. Il mio unico rimpianto è che è incompleto. Qualche passaggio andrebbe riscritto, mi pare insignificante. Quanto alle mie memorie, le vedo improbabili. Ho meno ricordi che se avessi sei mesi di vita.
*
Charles Monteith a “Mr Eliot”, 9 aprile 1957
The Hawk in the Rain: Ted Hughes.
Hai voglia di dare un’occhiata a questo? Devo confessare che il nome di Ted Hughes mi era del tutto sconosciuto prima dell’arrivo di queste poesie; è un giovane autore inglese le cui poesie sono state pubblicate per lo più negli Stati Uniti. Questo libro ha vinto un concorso sponsorizzato dal New York Poetry Centre e giudicato da Auden, Spender, Marianne Moore. La qualità mi pare irregolare, ma penso che alcune poesie siano buone per farci un libro. Forse basterebbe una lettera di incoraggiamento.
T.S. Eliot a Charles Monteith, più tardi, lo stesso giorno
Direi che dovremmo accaparrarci questo tipo. Discutiamone. TSE
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Sylvia Plath ad Aurelia Plath, 24 giugno 1960
Ieri sera io e Ted a una festa alla Faber in onore di Auden. Ho bevuto champagne adornata dagli apprezzamenti che si fanno a una casalinga in serata libera, che odora di latte e pannolini. Durante la festa, Charles Monteith mi ha fatto segno di entrare nella sala. Ted era in piedi, di fianco a T.S. Eliot, a W.H. Auden, a Louis MacNeice; Stephen Spender era dall’altro lato. “Tre generazioni di poeti Faber”, ha esclamato Charles, “Magnifico!”. Ovviamente, ero immensamente orgogliosa. Devo dire che Ted era molto a suo agio tra quei grandi.
Nel 1965 la Faber pubblicherà “Ariel”, il secondo libro di poesie della Plath. Purtroppo, lei si era suicidata due anni prima.
L'articolo “Ho meno ricordi che se avessi sei mesi di vita”: le lettere di Beckett, Eliot, Auden, Golding, Sylvia Plath all’editore Faber (che compie 90 anni, tra grandi glorie e clamorosi rifiuti) proviene da Pangea.
from pangea.news http://bit.ly/2Ib1ogG
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SAN BENEDETTO – Il Presidente delle OffiCine Teatrali, Marco Trionfante, annuncia ufficialmente la nomina del Maestro Michele Monetta, docente e membro dell’Accademia di Arte Drammatica Silvio D’Amico, quale Direttore didattico pedagogico dei corsi di teatro 2019/21 OCT.
«In centro Italia -dice Marco Trionfante– non c’è un vero polo sociale per quanto riguarda la formazione e i giovani sono spesso costretti a trasferirsi a Roma o nel nord Italia, sostenendo spese molto elevate. OffiCine Teatrali – Accademia di Formazione – si pone come obiettivo di portare nelle Marche, il meglio dei formatori teatrali e cinematografici, non solo Italiani, ma europei, in una grande “Isola” delle arti dello spettacolo, appunto OCT. Michele Monetta è tra i migliori formatori europei su questo non c’è dubbio. Basti pensare che quest’anno ai nostri Stage hanno partecipato allievi provenienti da altre città tra cui Roma e Napoli, se non è una rivoluzione questa…».
Michele Monetta – Regista, attore e insegnante di mimo corporeo (tecnica Decroux), maschera e commedia dell’arte, specializzato in pedagogia teatrale. Allievo del M° Etienne Decroux Docente di maschera e mimo corporeo all’Accademia Nazionale d’Arte Drammatica Silvio D’Amico, Roma. Insegna recitazione e commedia dell’arte all’École-Atelier Rudra del coreografo Maurice Béjart, Lausanna, Svizzera. Docente di educazione al movimento drammatico alla Scuola di Teatro del Teatro Nazionale di Napoli.
Dal 2013 al 2016 è stato membro del Consiglio Accademico dell’Accademia Nazionale d’Arte Drammatica Silvio D’Amico di Roma. Gli studi artistici-figurativi e poi di architettura all’Università di Napoli Federico II gli creano un interesse particolare per la scenografia e lo studio del corpo e del movimento nello spazio. Dopo i primi studi di dizione, clown e pantomima a Roma al MimoTeatroMovimento, si trasferisce a Parigi e per circa tre anni studia mime corporel con il M° Etienne Decroux.
Contemporaneamente si perfeziona all’École de Mime Corporel Dramatique de Paris con i maestri Steve Wasson e Corinne Soum. Negli stessi anni frequenta l’École Nationale du Cirque Fratellini per la danza, l’equilibrismo e il clown.
Dal 1976 ad oggi è stato regista, attore, mimo e coreografo in produzioni teatrali di testi di Goldoni, Gozzi, Piron, Beckett, Rodari, Lorca, Rilke, Petrolini, Compagnone, Artaud, Scabia, Majakovskij, e in Opere Musicali di Stravinskij, Rossini, Offenbach, Mozart, Cimarosa, Paisiello, Jommelli, Donizetti, Pergolesi, Monteverdi, Lucchetti, Banchieri.Si è specializzato negli anni ’90 a Parigi con Monika Pagneux in pedagogia teatrale.
Ha lavorato con i registi: Vera Bertinetti, Giacomo Battiato, Giancarlo Cobelli, Mico Galdieri, Ruggero Cappuccio, Ugo Gregoretti, Peter Clough, Ken Rea, Dino Partesano, Constantin Costa-Gavras, Mariano Rigillo, Lorenzo Salveti e con i musicisti Salvatore Accardo, Riccardo Muti, Roberto De Simone.
Ha collaborato come regista con la Sezione didattica del Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli. Ha lavorato come curatore dei movimenti scenici, mimo e regista per Il Teatro di San Carlo di Napoli, Teatro alla Scala di Milano, Teatro Comunale di Bologna, Teatro Lirico Vittorio Emanuele di Messina, Rossini Opera Festival di Pesaro, Teatro Lirico Sociale di Rovigo, Teatro Francesco Stabile di Potenza, Teatro Lirico dell’Aquila di Fermo e per il Teatro Yusupov di San Pietroburgo, Festival dei due Mondi di Spoleto e il Teatro Nazionale di Strasburgo.
Dal 1991 collabora con il prof. Marco De Marinis e con il DAMS di Bologna per seminari, laboratori, videoforum e convegni. Ha condotto laboratori di mimo corporeo alla sessione del Teatro Eurasiano diretta da Eugenio Barba.
Ha coperto il ruolo di regista, attore e insegnante in Italia, Francia, Svizzera, Ungheria, Polonia, Russia, Grecia, Spagna, Lituania, Olanda, Belgio, Indonesia e Malesia. Nel 1999 è co-fondatore e co-direttore dell’ICRA Project Centro Internazionale di Ricerca sull’Attore.
Le informazioni sui nuovi corsi sono disponibili sul sito officineteatrali.org – 0735 566172
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GTA Listings March 5 2019
All of the House Listings as of March 5th 2019
Search and find the home you're looking for right here. All of the listings are here as of March 5th 2019. Come take a look now, because these homes are bound to sell quickly.
Street and TownMLS CodeLink 995 E Dundas St, TorontoE4373667995 E Dundas St, Toronto 117 Spring Azure Cres, OakvilleW4371527117 Spring Azure Cres, Oakville 6 Espana Lane, TorontoC43718486 Espana Lane, Toronto 91 Holden Dr, KingN437224291 Holden Dr, King 654 Byngmount Ave, MississaugaW4372090654 Byngmount Ave, Mississauga 3842 Larisa Grve, MississaugaW43736223842 Larisa Grve, Mississauga 1136 Streambank Dr, MississaugaW43735841136 Streambank Dr, Mississauga 3283 Joan Dr, MississaugaW43725523283 Joan Dr, Mississauga 412 Devanjan Circ, NewmarketN4372177412 Devanjan Circ, Newmarket 172 Maxwell St, TorontoC4371834172 Maxwell St, Toronto 5155 Hidden Valley Crt, MississaugaW43724105155 Hidden Valley Crt, Mississauga 129 Rose Branch Dr, Richmond HillN4373717129 Rose Branch Dr, Richmond Hill 3319 Erin Centre Blvd, MississaugaW43713433319 Erin Centre Blvd, Mississauga 38 Brookfam St, Richmond HillN437175038 Brookfam St, Richmond Hill 31 Oxford St, Richmond HillN437075331 Oxford St, Richmond Hill 3157 Millicent Ave, OakvilleW43706753157 Millicent Ave, Oakville 924 Tegal Pl, NewmarketN4371457924 Tegal Pl, Newmarket 3312 Meadow Marsh Cres, OakvilleW43707583312 Meadow Marsh Cres, Oakville 1267 King St, TorontoW43713491267 King St, Toronto 7 Mcnutt St, BramptonW43710057 Mcnutt St, Brampton 50 Scott St, BramptonW437077750 Scott St, Brampton 105 Roslin Ave, TorontoC4371428105 Roslin Ave, Toronto 151 Bishop Ave, TorontoC4371936151 Bishop Ave, Toronto 64 Starhill Cres, MarkhamN437270064 Starhill Cres, Markham 5119 Silverwater Mill Cres, MississaugaW43736495119 Silverwater Mill Cres, Mississauga 65 Crocker Dr, BramptonW437193065 Crocker Dr, Brampton 129 N Kleinburg Summit Way, VaughanN4372048129 N Kleinburg Summit Way, Vaughan 24 Dunrobin Cres, VaughanN437102224 Dunrobin Cres, Vaughan 53A Bond Cres, Richmond HillN437248753A Bond Cres, Richmond Hill 33 Topham Cres, Richmond HillN437347333 Topham Cres, Richmond Hill 12 Raindrop Terr, BramptonW437152412 Raindrop Terr, Brampton 241 Selwyn Rd, Richmond HillN4372384241 Selwyn Rd, Richmond Hill 156 Scrivener Dr, AuroraN4370802156 Scrivener Dr, Aurora 9 Fleetwell Crt, TorontoC43736569 Fleetwell Crt, Toronto 3365 Sanderling Cres, MississaugaW43708623365 Sanderling Cres, Mississauga 28 Hertonia St, BramptonW437223528 Hertonia St, Brampton 2990 Kingsway Dr, OakvilleW43727212990 Kingsway Dr, Oakville 21 Bristol Sands Cres, UxbridgeN437155221 Bristol Sands Cres, Uxbridge 8 Dovetail Dr, Richmond HillN43721678 Dovetail Dr, Richmond Hill 959 Eighth St, MississaugaW4370868959 Eighth St, Mississauga 6 Prince Michael Crt, CaledonW43723346 Prince Michael Crt, Caledon 927 Ingersoll Crt, MississaugaW4372272927 Ingersoll Crt, Mississauga 90 Parkheights Tr, KingN437065990 Parkheights Tr, King 3230 George Savage Ave, OakvilleW43709083230 George Savage Ave, Oakville 175 Thomas Phillips Rd, AuroraN4372578175 Thomas Phillips Rd, Aurora 30 Campi Rd, VaughanN437338130 Campi Rd, Vaughan 14016 Sixth Line, Halton HillsW437061014016 Sixth Line, Halton Hills 5 Avatar Cres, BramptonW43705965 Avatar Cres, Brampton 25 Plowman Lane, Richmond HillN437353125 Plowman Lane, Richmond Hill 25 Mcnicoll Ave, TorontoC437148325 Mcnicoll Ave, Toronto 1331 Heathfield Cres, OakvilleW43720991331 Heathfield Cres, Oakville 31 Edinburgh Dr, Richmond HillN437127931 Edinburgh Dr, Richmond Hill 39 Simpson Ave, TorontoE437361439 Simpson Ave, Toronto 1349 Northmount Ave, MississaugaW43712391349 Northmount Ave, Mississauga 4680 Webb St, BurlingtonW43705744680 Webb St, Burlington 747 Queensway W, MississaugaW4371459747 Queensway W, Mississauga 18 Shortill Rd, Halton HillsW437091318 Shortill Rd, Halton Hills 295 Eaton St, Halton HillsW4372397295 Eaton St, Halton Hills 100 Redmond Dr, VaughanN4372198100 Redmond Dr, Vaughan 118 Lockheed Ave, VaughanN4371702118 Lockheed Ave, Vaughan 236 Berkeley St, TorontoC4371168236 Berkeley St, Toronto 280 Frank Endean Rd, Richmond HillN4371242280 Frank Endean Rd, Richmond Hill 162 Norfolk Ave, Richmond HillN4371833162 Norfolk Ave, Richmond Hill 107 Devonsleigh Blvd, Richmond HillN4370657107 Devonsleigh Blvd, Richmond Hill 390 Roy Harper Ave, AuroraN4371921390 Roy Harper Ave, Aurora 265 Kingslake Rd, TorontoC4371156265 Kingslake Rd, Toronto Lot 155 Cobriza Cres, BramptonW4370589Lot 155 Cobriza Cres, Brampton 223 Manning Ave, TorontoC4371616223 Manning Ave, Toronto 174 Maurice Dr, OakvilleW4371790174 Maurice Dr, Oakville 41 Asterfield Dr, TorontoE437217841 Asterfield Dr, Toronto 2165 Sunnyvale Dr, OakvilleW43734512165 Sunnyvale Dr, Oakville 69 Gannett Dr, Richmond HillN437164369 Gannett Dr, Richmond Hill 54 Ridgevale Dr, TorontoC437257354 Ridgevale Dr, Toronto 35 Creston Rd, TorontoW437261535 Creston Rd, Toronto 2546 Robinson St, MississaugaW43726612546 Robinson St, Mississauga 127 Rhodes Circ, NewmarketN4371683127 Rhodes Circ, Newmarket 79 Walter English Dr, East GwillimburyN437171279 Walter English Dr, East Gwillimbury 88 Beckett Ave, East GwillimburyN437135988 Beckett Ave, East Gwillimbury 141 Henderson Ave, MarkhamN4370760141 Henderson Ave, Markham 198 Broadway Ave, HamiltonX4372451198 Broadway Ave, Hamilton 184 Pemberton Ave, TorontoC4372521184 Pemberton Ave, Toronto 314 Alex Doner Dr, NewmarketN4371204314 Alex Doner Dr, Newmarket 267 Fincham Ave, MarkhamN4372728267 Fincham Ave, Markham 18 Bleinham Crt, MarkhamN437067218 Bleinham Crt, Markham 73 Wicklow Dr, TorontoE437075673 Wicklow Dr, Toronto 2 Birgitta Cres, TorontoW43725082 Birgitta Cres, Toronto 44 Foxley St, TorontoC437166344 Foxley St, Toronto 9 Sherin Crt, TorontoW43708669 Sherin Crt, Toronto 6203 Kisby Dr, MississaugaW43708876203 Kisby Dr, Mississauga 8 Ash Hill Ave, CaledonW43726978 Ash Hill Ave, Caledon 9 Cooperage St, BramptonW43714989 Cooperage St, Brampton 39 Owl Ridge Dr, Richmond HillN437263039 Owl Ridge Dr, Richmond Hill 31 Monarchwood Cres, TorontoC437077331 Monarchwood Cres, Toronto 55 Hopewell St, VaughanN437236855 Hopewell St, Vaughan 13551 Fourth Line, Halton HillsW437203413551 Fourth Line, Halton Hills 10 Clifton Crt, BramptonW437234810 Clifton Crt, Brampton 14431 Danby Rd, Halton HillsW437103314431 Danby Rd, Halton Hills 4774 King St, CaledonW43712814774 King St, Caledon 1679 Sorensen Crt, MiltonW43722261679 Sorensen Crt, Milton 867 Coxwell Ave, TorontoE4371615867 Coxwell Ave, Toronto 4602 Phoenix Park Cres, MississaugaW43723594602 Phoenix Park Cres, Mississauga 513 Strathmore Blvd, TorontoE4369737513 Strathmore Blvd, Toronto 829 Elvidge Tr, NewmarketN4370851829 Elvidge Tr, Newmarket 3150 Velebit Park Blvd, BurlingtonW43717293150 Velebit Park Blvd, Burlington 1375 Lancaster Dr, OakvilleW43720801375 Lancaster Dr, Oakville 87 Mill Rd, TorontoW437141887 Mill Rd, Toronto 16 Schurman St, AuroraN437230716 Schurman St, Aurora 245 Cossack Crt, MississaugaW4372784245 Cossack Crt, Mississauga 13721 Humber Station Rd, CaledonW437226613721 Humber Station Rd, Caledon 13685 Humber Station Rd, CaledonW437227313685 Humber Station Rd, Caledon 13741 Humber Station Rd, CaledonW437227013741 Humber Station Rd, Caledon 84 Citation Dr, TorontoC437188284 Citation Dr, Toronto 16 Eversley Hall, KingN437278316 Eversley Hall, King 439 Sunset Beach Rd, Richmond HillN4370883439 Sunset Beach Rd, Richmond Hill 19 Gardiner Rd, TorontoC437128019 Gardiner Rd, Toronto 256 Donnelly Dr, MississaugaW4371814256 Donnelly Dr, Mississauga 10006 Yonge St, Richmond HillN437153710006 Yonge St, Richmond Hill 81 Chatsworth Dr, TorontoC437107181 Chatsworth Dr, Toronto 1456 Duncan Rd, OakvilleW43714561456 Duncan Rd, Oakville 1417 Birchview Dr, MississaugaW43709991417 Birchview Dr, Mississauga 2 Poplar Dr, Richmond HillN43706802 Poplar Dr, Richmond Hill 38 Caswell Dr, TorontoC437149338 Caswell Dr, Toronto 8 Liebeck Cres, MarkhamN43708958 Liebeck Cres, Markham 6483 Main St, Whitchurch StouffvilleN43737336483 Main St, Whitchurch Stouffville 126 W Heath St, TorontoC4371213126 W Heath St, Toronto 30 Hiawatha Pkwy, MississaugaW437154430 Hiawatha Pkwy, Mississauga 2040 Eckland Crt, MississaugaW43723502040 Eckland Crt, Mississauga 76 Dorwood Crt, VaughanN437227876 Dorwood Crt, Vaughan 391 Sandhurst Dr, OakvilleW4371817391 Sandhurst Dr, Oakville 46 Autumn Grove Crt, VaughanN437079646 Autumn Grove Crt, Vaughan 22 Thorndale Ave, TorontoW437134722 Thorndale Ave, Toronto 18 Petrolia Crt, Richmond HillN437085218 Petrolia Crt, Richmond Hill 6 Berkindale Dr, TorontoC43721266 Berkindale Dr, Toronto 692 Montbeck Cres, MississaugaW4370640692 Montbeck Cres, Mississauga 44 Ormiston St, ClaringtonE437067944 Ormiston St, Clarington 71 Edenvale Cres, TorontoW437075471 Edenvale Cres, Toronto 27 Ava Cres, Richmond HillN437065627 Ava Cres, Richmond Hill 69 Peter St, MarkhamN437250669 Peter St, Markham 48 Laurelcrest Ave, TorontoC437144248 Laurelcrest Ave, Toronto 94 Holmes Ave, TorontoC436003794 Holmes Ave, Toronto 16802 Hurontario St, CaledonW437297016802 Hurontario St, Caledon 42 Baby Point Cres, TorontoW437360142 Baby Point Cres, Toronto 239 Third Line, OakvilleW4371075239 Third Line, Oakville 8 Natural Terr, BramptonW43707148 Natural Terr, Brampton 60 Brock Ave, TorontoW437274660 Brock Ave, Toronto 8 Burncrest Dr, TorontoC43727478 Burncrest Dr, Toronto 2542 Glengarry Rd, MississaugaW43715942542 Glengarry Rd, Mississauga 40 Archerhill Crt, AuroraN437199640 Archerhill Crt, Aurora 29 Cedar Ridge Rd, Whitchurch StouffvilleN437076829 Cedar Ridge Rd, Whitchurch Stouffville 207 Ruggles Ave, Richmond HillN4372035207 Ruggles Ave, Richmond Hill 67 Munro Blvd, TorontoC437171067 Munro Blvd, Toronto 1421 Watersedge Rd, MississaugaW43706951421 Watersedge Rd, Mississauga 125 Veronica Dr, MississaugaW4371842125 Veronica Dr, Mississauga 44 Aspen Leaf Crt, AuroraN437258644 Aspen Leaf Crt, Aurora 69 Carlton Rd, MarkhamN437120569 Carlton Rd, Markham 29 Thirty Eighth St, TorontoW437269129 Thirty Eighth St, Toronto 14407 Kennedy Rd, CaledonW437096714407 Kennedy Rd, Caledon 778 Dack Blvd, MississaugaW4372752778 Dack Blvd, Mississauga 8 Knollview Cres, TorontoC43604078 Knollview Cres, Toronto 498 Hounslow Ave, TorontoC4372581498 Hounslow Ave, Toronto 331 Pleasant Ave, TorontoC4371397331 Pleasant Ave, Toronto 334 Pleasant Ave, TorontoC4371410334 Pleasant Ave, Toronto 179 Cornelius Pkwy, TorontoW4371411179 Cornelius Pkwy, Toronto 765 W Glengrove Ave, TorontoW4373742765 W Glengrove Ave, Toronto 304 Delta St, TorontoW4370681304 Delta St, Toronto 138 Colonel Danforth Tr, TorontoE4372482138 Colonel Danforth Tr, Toronto 2431 Taylorwood Dr, OakvilleW43710372431 Taylorwood Dr, Oakville 326 Pleasant Ave, TorontoC4371414326 Pleasant Ave, Toronto 276 Walkers Line, BurlingtonW4371417276 Walkers Line, Burlington 2447 Bon Echo Dr, OakvilleW43710612447 Bon Echo Dr, Oakville 91 Baldry Ave, VaughanN437143991 Baldry Ave, Vaughan 384 Bathurst St, TorontoC4371454384 Bathurst St, Toronto 216 Roslin Ave, TorontoC4373534216 Roslin Ave, Toronto 13265 Fallbrook Tr, Halton HillsW437084413265 Fallbrook Tr, Halton Hills 4 Man O War Crt, CaledonW43713134 Man O War Crt, Caledon 15 Brushwood Crt, TorontoC437266215 Brushwood Crt, Toronto 16 Rae Cres, MarkhamN437246716 Rae Cres, Markham 1526 Edencrest Dr, MississaugaW43736591526 Edencrest Dr, Mississauga 20 Humbervale Blvd, TorontoW437271120 Humbervale Blvd, Toronto 52 Winners Circ, TorontoE437252552 Winners Circ, Toronto 199 Corner Ridge Rd, AuroraN4372176199 Corner Ridge Rd, Aurora 568 Dynes Rd, BurlingtonW4371231568 Dynes Rd, Burlington 158 Sweet Water Cres, Richmond HillN4371706158 Sweet Water Cres, Richmond Hill 840 W Queensway, MississaugaW4370982840 W Queensway, Mississauga 1 Silkstone Gate, Richmond HillN43737321 Silkstone Gate, Richmond Hill 235 Quebec Ave, TorontoW4372511235 Quebec Ave, Toronto 21 Bathford Cres, TorontoC437116921 Bathford Cres, Toronto 3030 Franze Dr, MississaugaW43713613030 Franze Dr, Mississauga 80 Avondale Ave, TorontoC437214580 Avondale Ave, Toronto 125 S Queen St, MississaugaW4371517125 S Queen St, Mississauga 104 Macarthur Dr, VaughanN4370616104 Macarthur Dr, Vaughan 19 Elderfield Cres, TorontoW437070519 Elderfield Cres, Toronto 84 Willow Farm Lane, AuroraN437177484 Willow Farm Lane, Aurora 244 Elmwood Ave, TorontoC4372490244 Elmwood Ave, Toronto 207 Bayview Heights Dr, TorontoC4372471207 Bayview Heights Dr, Toronto 681 Village Pkwy, MarkhamN4373647681 Village Pkwy, Markham 166 Hillmount Ave, TorontoC4370685166 Hillmount Ave, Toronto 292 Wilfred Murison Ave, MarkhamN4370805292 Wilfred Murison Ave, Markham 35 Lynvalley Cres, TorontoE437279935 Lynvalley Cres, Toronto 3095 Daniel Way, OakvilleW43724893095 Daniel Way, Oakville 28 Bradgate Rd, TorontoC437372928 Bradgate Rd, Toronto 3 Snowcrest Crt, MarkhamN43723663 Snowcrest Crt, Markham 32 Chant Cres, MarkhamN437248532 Chant Cres, Markham 231 Pine Hill Rd Bradford, West GwillimburyN4371785231 Pine Hill Rd Bradford, West Gwillimbury 116 Strawbridge Farm Dr, AuroraN4371229116 Strawbridge Farm Dr, Aurora 306 Ilan Ramon Blvd, VaughanN4372286306 Ilan Ramon Blvd, Vaughan 280 Warren Rd, KingN4371238280 Warren Rd, King 142 Digby Rd, OakvilleW4370569142 Digby Rd, Oakville 31 Library Lane, MarkhamN437174331 Library Lane, Markham 1 Emmanuel Dr, Richmond HillN43720151 Emmanuel Dr, Richmond Hill 221 Village Green Dr, VaughanN4370987221 Village Green Dr, Vaughan 1053 Truman Ave, OakvilleW43713941053 Truman Ave, Oakville 21 Sachet Dr, Richmond HillN437145821 Sachet Dr, Richmond Hill 37 Banner Lane, KingN437137637 Banner Lane, King 85 S Prince Edward Dr, TorontoW437069385 S Prince Edward Dr, Toronto 538 Douglas Ave, TorontoC4372574538 Douglas Ave, Toronto 2264 Bethnal Green Rd, OakvilleW43712552264 Bethnal Green Rd, Oakville 51 Milos Rd, Richmond HillN437102851 Milos Rd, Richmond Hill 217 Willis Dr, AuroraN4372609217 Willis Dr, Aurora 2918 Bayview Ave, TorontoC43722402918 Bayview Ave, Toronto 1 Tadcaster Pl, TorontoC43737271 Tadcaster Pl, Toronto 7 James Walker Crt, MarkhamN43720177 James Walker Crt, Markham 31 Sir Francesco St, VaughanN437357831 Sir Francesco St, Vaughan 1247 Royal York Rd, TorontoW43725721247 Royal York Rd, Toronto 164 Chebucto Dr, OakvilleW4371181164 Chebucto Dr, Oakville 72 Cedarcrest Blvd, TorontoE437144472 Cedarcrest Blvd, Toronto 196 Conklin Cres, AuroraN4370600196 Conklin Cres, Aurora 9 Shilton Rd, TorontoE43703849 Shilton Rd, Toronto 66 Threshing Mill Blvd, OakvilleW437108766 Threshing Mill Blvd, Oakville
GTA Listings March 5 2019 first appeared on: GTA Real Estate Pros 154 Bathurst St, Toronto, ON, M5V 2R3 647-362-2000 https://goo.gl/Yj7G5g
source https://www.gtarealestatepros.ca/gta-listings-mar-5-2019/
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