It has the story in 3 different languages; Simplified Chinese,English and French.
Richard Howard Livres






Richard Howard Loves Henry James
- 128pages
- 5 heures de lecture
A lauded American poet's tributes to Walt Whitman and Henry James, now collected for the first time. Richard Howard has long been recognized as one of America’s finest poets, celebrated as an author for his keen engagement with other authors, and especially for his sparkling and trenchant dramatic monologues and two-part inventions. Through the years, Howard has, in this way, given voice to all sorts of historical and literary figures, but two of his favorite subjects are two of his favorite writers—Walt Whitman and Henry James—and this book gathers an array of poems in which he responds to these great gay forebears, as well as to two other beloved Americans, Hart Crane and Wallace Stevens. Here Whitman the good gray poet opens his door to Bram Stoker and to Oscar Wilde; Henry James struggles to take stock of Los Angeles, where he is to have lunch with L. Frank Baum; Edith Wharton reminisces about her fraught friendship with the Master; poor Pansy from The Portrait of a Lady broods on her dreadful father; and late in life Wallace Stevens visits Paris—as Stevens never did. Howard’s wonderful inventions are as expansive and celebratory and human as Whitman, as deeply and subtly inquiring as James, as sumptuously meditative as Stevens, and as arresting and delightful as Richard Howard himself.
Les Fleurs du Mal
- 157pages
- 6 heures de lecture
" Mon enfant, ma sœur, songe à la douceur, d'aller là-bas vivre ensemble ! " Parce qu'il se complaît au seuil de la nuit, qu'il est cet homme témoin de l'éternelle misère, assailli d'angoisse devant le temps qui fuit et la vie qui s'use, Baudelaire s'étourdit, de rêves et d'espace. Il voyage sur une chevelure, se joue des couleurs, célèbre le vin, se grise de lunes, se mire dans les yeux des chats et dans ceux, plus troubles, des femmes. Le vent, la vague, l'étoile, l'oiseau... Tout est prétexte à s'enivrer. Même le Mal, dont il extrait la Beauté, fait de sa poésie " une gerbe épanouie de mille fleurs "...
These late essays of Roland Barthes's are concerned with the visible and the audible, and here the preoccupations are particularly intense and rewarding, in part because Barthes was himself, by predilection, an artist and a musician, and in part because he was of two minds about the very possibility of attaching to art and to music a written text, a criticism.
Stormy Waters on the Sagebrush Sea
- 212pages
- 8 heures de lecture
Adventures in fishing, falconry, and yoga intertwine with humor and poignant reflections in this exploration of the Northwest. Richard Howard, a native of Idaho, shares personal insights through "green tea revelations," capturing the essence of life’s highs and lows. Readers are invited to experience the beauty of the region while contemplating themes of courage, nature, and self-discovery. This book promises to inspire a fresh perspective on the great outdoors.
Une méditation sur la photographie qui met en évidence les rapports entre l'image et le temps
The Erasers
- 256pages
- 9 heures de lecture
Alain Robbe-Grillet is internationally hailed as the chief spokesman for the noveau roman and one of the great novelists of the twentieth century. The Erasers, his first novel, reads like a detective story but is primarily concerned with weaving and then probing a complete mixture of fact and fantasy. The narrative spans the twenty-four-hour period following a series of eight murders in eight days, presumably the work of a terrorist group. After the ninth murder, the investigation is then turned over to a police agent, who may in fact be the assassin.Both an engrossing mystery and a sinister deconstruction of reality, The Erasers intrigues and unnerves with equal force as it pull us along to its ominous conclusion.
In his consideration of the language of the fashion magazine―the structural analysis of descriptions of women's clothing by writers about fashion―Barthes gives us a brief history of semiology. At the same time, he identifies economics as the underlying reason for the luxuriant prose of the fashion "Calculating, industrial society is obliged to form consumers who don't calculate; if clothing's producers and consumers had the same consciousness, clothing would be bought (and produced) only at the very slow rate of its dilapidation."
The Paris Diary & The New York Diary 1951-1961
- 399pages
- 14 heures de lecture
When The Paris Diary exploded on the scene in 1966 there had never been a book in English quite like it: Its intimate combination of personal, literary, and social insights was unprecedented. Rorem's self-portrait of the artist as a young man, written between 1951 and 1955, was also a mirror of the times, depicting the now vanished milieu of Cocteau, Eluard, Gide, Landowska, Boulez, the Vicomtesse de Noailles, and others whose paths crossed with Rorem's in such settings as Paris, Morocco, and Italy. The New York Diary , published the following year, pictured the period between 1956 and 1960, when Rorem had returned to America. The diaries marked the beginnings of Gay Liberation, not because Rorem made a special issue of his sexuality, but because he did not; rather, he wrote of his affairs frankly and unashamedly. A casualness informs each sensual entry, and the overall tone is at once bratty and brilliant, insecure and vain, loving and cultured, but, above all, honest and entertaining.
Space for Peace
Fragments of the Irish Troubles in the Science Fiction of Bob Shaw and James White
- 312pages
- 11 heures de lecture
Examining the intersection of literature and context, this book analyzes the contributions of Belfast authors Bob Shaw and James White to the science fiction genre from the 1950s to the 1990s. It situates their work within the socio-political landscape of Belfast, employing frameworks from both Irish Studies and Science Fiction Studies to provide deeper insights into their narratives and themes.


