Understanding Madame Bovary (III) SPOILERS

2020-10-01T12:50:16-04:00

Gustav Flaubert's Madame Bovary (1857) Trans. Alan Russell Penguin, 1987 SPOILERS ABOUND (not only for this novel, but for Anna Karenina, too) If you've been following along, you might recall my brief and unsatisfactory meeting with Emma Bovary, about twenty years ago: a passing acquaintance, which offered only a brief glimpse of the

Understanding Madame Bovary (III) SPOILERS2020-10-01T12:50:16-04:00

Understanding Madame Bovary (II)

2020-10-01T12:52:12-04:00

Gustav Flaubert's Madame Bovary (1857) Trans. Alan Russell Penguin, 1987 If you've been following along, you'll know that I was thrilled to join, and have wholly enjoyed the early discussion connected with, Frances' readalong of this classic novel, one which I had false-started with as a younger woman but had

Understanding Madame Bovary (II)2020-10-01T12:52:12-04:00

Understanding Madame Bovary (I)

2014-03-09T19:20:36-04:00

Gustav Flaubert's Madame Bovary (1857) Trans. Alan Russell Penguin, 1987 Emma Bovary and I have met before, but we were not long acquainted. I started to read Flaubert's novel in between high school and university, but I never finished it. Not even close, actually. When we last moved house, I

Understanding Madame Bovary (I)2014-03-09T19:20:36-04:00

From Graywolf Press: Native American Fiction

2014-07-11T15:57:29-04:00

David Treuer's Native American Fiction: A User's Manual Graywolf Press, 2006 I can tell you exactly, what the name of the first book that I read from Graywolf Press: Georgia Savage's The House Tibet (1991). What I recall now, nearly twenty years later, is simply that The House Tibet stood

From Graywolf Press: Native American Fiction2014-07-11T15:57:29-04:00
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