Stoner by John Williams came highly recommended by a good friend. She told me this book is a must-read for folks in love with literature. What’s more, it even achieved a cult status after 50 years of its publishing. And so, with high expectations, I began reading this campus novel set in the University of Missouri. The novel chronicles the life of titular protagonist William Stoner.
A farm boy, Stoner is sent by his father to study agriculture in the university. As part of the curriculum, he takes up English Literature in the sophomore year. And studying this subject changes Stoner’s life forever. He realises that literature has answers to life’s biggest questions, and by studying it, he could awaken to life itself. The author Williams sums up this feeling beautifully. He writes: “The love of literature, of language, of the mystery of the mind and heart showing themselves in the minute, strange, and unexpected combinations of letters and words, in the blackest and coldest print–the love which he had hidden as if it were illicit and dangerous, he began to display, tentatively at first, and then boldly, and then proudly.”
As his love for literature deepens, Stoner stops attending the agriculture classes altogether. He takes up humanities and dedicates himself to studying literature instead. It is as if his only aim in life is to immerse himself in books. And eventually, he even goes on to teach Literature in the university.
Every sentence in the novel tries to convey this passion that Stoner has for literature. Stoner is an eternal love story with words and books. The novel, however, is not just about his love for the subject and teaching. It is also about his failed love with his wife, and his passionate love affair with a younger teacher. This side of Stoner is full of disappointments–he is married to the wrong woman, he has an extramarital affair, his relationship with his daughter is strained, and he is humiliated at work. By the end of his life, Stoner has seen it all–failure, dejection, and disappointment. But what remains constant is his passion for literature.
Philips v387 usb driver. The book is painfully beautiful, touching the right chords. There is constant melancholy in every page; a pain that makes a reader empathise with Stoner. His victory becomes our victory, his pain becomes our pain, and his story becomes our story. All thanks to John Williams’ simple, yet powerful prose.
Some books narrate the story of a time in history, whereas some others tell a story of the distant future. Many others are about heroes. But Stoner by John Williams is about an ordinary man, and his extraordinary love for learning. The novel is a must-read for all those who think their ordinary life has no extraordinary story to tell.
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Preview — Stoner by John Williams
William Stoner is born at the end of the nineteenth century into a dirt-poor Missouri farming family. Sent to the state university to study agronomy, he instead falls in love with English literature and embraces a scholar’s life, so different from the hardscrabble existence he has known. And yet as the years pass, Stoner encounters a succession of disappointments: marriage..more
Paperback, NYRB Classics, US / CAN Edition, 278 pages
Published 2006 by New York Review Books
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Madeleine GaddBecause it reminds us that ordinary people who live ordinary lives can have a beautiful story to tell too.
This question contains spoilers…(view spoiler)[Wouldn't it have been better for everyone in his family if Stoner had followed his heart? (hide spoiler)]
aPriL does feral sometimes At the end of the book, Stoner has some self-revelations in which he comes up with explanations how he is about it all, if I remember. New York Review Books - ClassicsI think despite…moreAt the end of the book, Stoner has some self-revelations in which he comes up with explanations how he is about it all, if I remember. I think despite Stoner's rationalizations about Edith, his daughter's issues and Katherine, he WAS true to his heart. He avoided the war when he was young. That exposed the choice he would make over and over - avoiding the wars of life in all of its aspects and echoes. That was who he really was, if not what he wanted to be. Perhaps we are following our hearts even as we think we have sacrificed, when actually it's because of unconscious and deeper feelings.(less)
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Apr 23, 2012Jeffrey Keeten rated it it was amazing
'In his extreme youth Stoner had thought of love as an absolute state of being to which, if one were lucky, one might find access; in his maturity he had decided it was the heaven of a false religion, toward which one ought to gaze with an amused disbelief, a gently familiar contempt, and an embarrassed nostalgia. Now in his middle age he began to know that it was neither a state of grace nor an illusion; he saw it as a human act of becoming, a condition that was invented and modified moment by..more
Oct 05, 2009Jimmy rated it it was amazing
Shelves: novel, year-1960s, male, nyrb, better-book-titles
Spoiler alert: read at your own peril. Jan 23, 2018Jim Fonseca rated it it was amazing
UPDATE December 2010: I just submitted this to Better Book Titles. I hope they accept it. Original Review October 2009: This is the most straight-forward linear narrative type of novel I've read in the past year. So at first, I was not impressed. But I soon realized that the novel is impressive precisely because it is able to be so damn linear, the writing style so damn plain, and the characters so damn dull and yet.. and yet it manages to make me continue rea..more
Shelves: academic-novel, favorite-books, american-authors
I read Stoner after I saw that almost all my friends on GR had read it. It’s an impressive work which I finished months ago but hard a hard time figuring out what to say about it with thousands of reviews already out there. Nov 17, 2014Cecily rated it it was amazing
Stoner is the life story of an unremarkable man and the consensus seems to be “he did his best.” He came from a Missouri farm family and a poor background but manages to become an English professor at the university. One theme is the ‘loneliness’ and ‘distant courtesy’ of man..more
Shelves: aaabsolute-favourites, solitary-protagonist, language-related, favourites, canada-and-usa, historical-fict-20th-cent, read-only-cos-of-gr-friends, miscellaneous-fiction
After 63 pages: “Stunned by Stoner. This is agonisingly wonderful.” Feb 16, 2016Sean Barrs the Bookdragon rated it it was amazing
At the end: “Finished. Him and me. Exquisite but exhausted.” Then I immediately started rereading - something I have only previously done with children’s picture books. It is, without question, my joint favourite book ever. The other, utterly different ones are Titus Groan/Gormenghast (which I reviewed HERE) and the Heaven and Hell trio (which I reviewed HERE). But it’s hard to explain its mesmerising power in a way that does it j..more
Recommends it for: Bibliophiles, book junkies, obsessive readers and those that are lost in words.
Recommended to Sean Barrs the Bookdragon by: Councillor's review
Shelves: 5-star-reads, favourites, contemporary-lit
THIS WAS MY BEST BOOK OF 2016!
It was a hard decision; it was a choice between this and The Vegetarian by Hang Kang. But I had to think which book taught be the most, and which book helped me the most. I enjoyed them both immensely, I loved them, but this one set me on my path in life; thus, I will always be grateful for John Williams and his Stoner. ****************************************************** He opened the book; and as he did so it became not his own. He let his fingers rifle throu..more For the hardworking men and women living in the open, windswept farm country of the American Midwest during the late 19th and early 20th century, day-to-day existence was frequently harsh an occasionally downright hostile, a stark, demanding life chiseling character as can be seen above in artist Grant Wood’s American Gothic. If you take a good look at this painting and then envision a son, an only child, working the fields alongside his father, you will have a clear image of the starting point..more
Shelves: misery-loves-company, much-ado-about-nothing, spurned, nyrb, feces
I was going to start out this review of Stoner by feigning comic incredulity that the former conductor of the Boston Pops wrote a novel about potheads, but that is far, far too obvious and unsatisfying even for the likes of me. Instead, I am going to confess that I read only half of it (and, thereby, my ignorance has been properly disclaimed) but that this aborted reading filled me with such unmitigated contempt for the author that I plan on mounting every soapbox (if soapboxes haven't been tech..more
Dec 23, 2015Ilse rated it really liked it
Those who can, do. Those who can't, teach.
What to do when everything goes wrong? Work, marriage, parenthood, eventually health? Plenty of benevolent advices and platitudes will whizz around your ears, to help you to bounce back . Remember, it is all in your mind. Happiness is the result of your approach to life, not of what happens to you. Revolt, anger, complaining or denial won’t change anything. Focus on what is instead of on what should be. Accept, accept, accept. Take one step at time, keep..more
Jul 03, 2012RandomAnthony rated it it was amazing
John Williams's Stoner blew me away. I've never read anything like it and some passages left me moved to the point of exhaustion. When I finished I put down the book (well, the Nook), picked it up again, and re-read highlighted pages. Stoner gave me strength; if you believe that the right books find you at the right time, as sometimes I believe, this book found me at the right time.
Stoner outlines the life of a farm kid who, at his dad's recommendation, attends college for agricultural studies b..more
Aug 27, 2007Maria Headley rated it it was amazing
Devastating novel of academia, unfulfilled hope, and a life not-entirely-lived. Gorgeous writing, heartbreaking plot, and if you're a fan, as I tend to be, of stories set in the dark halls of libraries and universities, this is one to read. The love story within this book is suddenly out-of-nowhere rapturous, and the marriage is brittle, delicate, insensible and perfectly done. The book feels so modern, though the bulk of the action is set in the 30's and 40's. I kept stopping to check that this..more
Dec 04, 2013Samadrita rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Shelves: in-by-about-america, cherished, human-drama, melancholia, adoration, arc-netgalley, modern-classics, tear-jerkers
“Most men lead lives of quiet desperation and go to the grave with the song still in them.” - Henry David Thoreau The triumph of this work lies in its self-effacing world-weariness, its tone of indifference even to the prospective reader's concerns. In the manner of the protagonist's iron stoicism in the face of misfortune and persecution, the narrative revels in its own lacklustreness, its state of diffused melancholy. William Stoner, first student and eventually English professor at (fictional..more
Sep 02, 2016Luca Ambrosino rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
ENGLISH (Stoner) / ITALIANO Mar 06, 2015Seemita rated it
«William Stoner entered the University of Missouri as a freshman in the year 1910, at the age of nineteen. Eight years later, during the height of World War I, he received his Doctor of Philosophy degree and accepted an instructorship at the same University, where he taught until his death in 1956. He did not rise above the rank of assistant professor, and few students remembered him with any sharpness after they had taken his courses. When he died his colleagues made..more
Recommends it for: those who prefer a serene stream to a wild wave
Shelves: fiction, favorites, me, singing_words, america
As a child, I had a thing for inanimate things. A sling, a pond, a pebble, a mica chip; they would catch my attention and hold it hostage. I would play for hours together with these silent, placid beings, drawing great solace from their harmless, non-fluctuating colour, and intention. Occasionally, a friend or two would drop in and ask in mock incredulity, ‘Don’t you ever get tired playing with them? They neither move nor speak.’ I wouldn’t answer. Only under my breath, after their departure, wo..more
Mar 19, 2013Dolors rated it it was amazing
This might be for me the best book of the year.
Sublimely told and with such a subtle narrative which flows easily displaying the life of an ordinary man during an extraordinary time in America. This might be the story of a whole becoming country or only the unheroic account of a simple existence. But its simplicity is what makes it unearthly beautiful, nostalgic and moving. Early 1900's, Missouri, although Stoner comes from a modest family of farmers his father sends him to the state university to..more
Jun 19, 2017Lisa rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
'Look! I am alive!'
Being alive, and feeling it, is more important than striving for perfect happiness, which is an illusion in any case, - that is what Stoner seems to say over the course of his life. And reading his story made me acutely aware of being alive myself, going through the range of emotions it inspired in me, from sadness and anger over tenderness and love to deeply felt satisfaction when I closed the novel. Stoner is Don Quixote stuck in reality. He has the same love of reading and le..more
Dec 20, 2013Fionnuala added it · review of another edition
Albrecht Dürer: Job and his Wife Vintage books seem to specialise in producing beautiful paperback editions of titles that have been out of print or have only recently been translated into English. I have a small collection of their red-spined covers sitting on my shelves. They all have something in common apart from the red spines; they are books I may read again sometime in my life because of the quality of the writing, the depth of the characterisation and the overall worth of the contents. T..more
The story evolves so gently and quietly that talking about it feels like tainting it and violently intruding on something that prefers to be left in peace. This has as much to do with the story’s subtle and eluding tone, as with the parallel narrative. Stoner is a quiet and gentle men with the purest of intentions, but which, as it often happens, get tainted when materialized. His life advances in an isolated manner, devoid of the force that transforms a thought into action or the knowledge of h..more
Apr 22, 2014Carol rated it it was amazing
“The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation.”
― Henry David Thoreau, I loved this novel! I’ve had this story downloaded for some time but I’ve always passed it over anticipating a dull and depressing slog…in spite of all the glowing reviews from my Goodreader friends. But, it was as compelling for me to read as any thriller. .The critic Morris Dickstein called Stoner, 'something rarer than a great novel -- it is a perfect novel, so well told and beautifully written, so deeply moving, it take..more
This book is surprising, not so much for any plot twists or odd behavior, but for how we come to regard an overtly unremarkable man as interesting and likable. William Stoner was the only child at his family’s farm in Missouri, with a work-to-play ratio that was high even by turn-of-the-last-century standards. When he came of age, his father sat him down and explained in about two minutes’ time how he thought it best to send his son to college to study modern agriculture. It was the longest Ston..more
May 17, 2017Paul Bryant rated it liked it
I asked my daughter if me and her and her mother were in a hot air balloon and it was about to crash into the ocean who would you throw out to keep the balloon aloft, me or your mother? She said she’d throw me out. I said Why? She said Because you’re bigger than her. So I said okay, imagine that me and your mother weigh exactly the same, then who would you throw out? She said she’d throw me out. I said why? She said because you’re older, so you’ve had your fun. So I said okay, imagine that me an..more
Jul 14, 2009David rated it did not like it
Shelves: wrist-slashingly-depressing, never-gonna-finish, read-in-2010, mind-numbingly-boring, disappointing
Reading 'Stoner' gave me another one of those parallel universe experiences. In the goodreads universe, where everyone else lives, this is apparently a much loved and lauded book. Heck, those good folks at the New York Review of Books tell us it's a classic. And has this to say about the main protagonist:
William Stoner emerges from it not only as an archetypal American, but as an unlikely existential hero, standing, like a figure in a painting by Edward Hopper, in stark relief against an unforg..more
Nov 05, 2014Jonathan Ashleigh rated it really liked it
I would have never thought the bland life of an unfulfilled midwestern professor could be so grasping. Stoner is not someone you want to know or be related to but his struggles are real and worth knowing about. At times, it appears he will find contentment (he is able to get out of the laborious life led by his parents) but his hardships are rough and his life is never lived for himself.
I've read such an excessive amount of books, you might imagine I stumble upon treasures like Stoner every day. Ha! That's hilarious.
I read every day, and I discover through that process many good books and average books, but rarely do I find a life-altering gem such as this. Stoner is one of those quiet, slow-paced novels that stabs you right in the heart with its painful, accurate knowledge about life and how most people live it. Yes, it's sad but true; the average person will have a less than..more
This book really 'is' as special as people say!
The subtle beauty of writing provides a revealing look at a life of an everyday man. The richness of the storytelling --page by page -- is pure elegance. This type of richness is not found in all novels. Its 'timeless' -- nothing dated about it! Stoner is deeply webbed into my own thoughts --(a character impossible to forget). I have a couple of questions I would have wanted to ask Stoner about choices he made-- but isn't that what great novels do--l..more
An incredibly melancholy, wistful campus novel whose flurries of hope are always the perfect length - we root for Stoner, even knowing from the beginning where the story will end. There are incredible descriptions: marble stairs wearing down over 40 years; college greens stretching forever; memorable bodies on memorable characters; faces of loved ones flashing through light. And the supporting characters! One pleasure of this book is that no one, except a certain love interest, is particularly m..more
Sep 26, 2014Zoeytron rated it it was amazing
How many of us wander through life expecting the world to be something it isn't? I fell hard for William Stoner with his quiet, patient strength. This is a somber tale of love and the lack of love, the slow death of a heart haunted by loss; the vindictiveness of college politics, the logic of grammar, and the absolute joy of reading. Dec 28, 2010Aubrey rated it it was amazing
..he wandered through the stacks, among the thousands of books, inhaling the musty odor of leather, cloth, and drying page as if it were an exotic incense. All five..more
Shelves: heartbreak, 5-star, books-are-the-best-invention, nyrb-classic, r-2014, reviewed, r-goodreads
The US does not have sadness on its agenda. Its psyche is a constant concern with happiness, fulfillment, the American Dream and the way to this god given of all rights. Never has the isolated country been brought to its knees. Never has the culture and creed and thought of civilization of the American people been forced to view sadness as something other than an error to be fixed. Sadness is the result of tragedy, grief, a lightning strike catastrophe that time will heal. Naturally.
America, you..more
Of course, I can't be objective, but my philosophy prof partner is beautiful inside and out, with an otherworldly mind and delightful character. He is also somewhat an 'odd duck' (Asperger's much??) somewhat similar to Stoner, except he was raised in New York by artist parents, and always had the academic knack. We read this sequentially last summer at a lake rental way up the coast here in Maine, and when he brought it to me over the porch he had tears in his eyes. Both of us, until this year,..more
Nov 11, 2015Darwin8u rated it it was amazing
“Lust and learning. That's really all there is, isn't it?”
― John Williams, Stoner “Sometimes, immersed in his books, there would come to him the awareness of all that he did not know, of all that he had not read; and the serenity for which he labored was shattered as he realized the little time he had in life to read so much, to learn what he had to know.” ― John Williams, Stoner If one considers the total professional output of John Williams, it is pretty difficult to find his equal for sheer br..more
Aug 20, 2017William2 marked it as to-read
Flat flat flat prose. Stoic main character. Intellectual awakening from dirt farm boy to Ph.D. candidate in literature at Missouri University. Spare description, defamiliarizing techniques used brilliantly. He learns Greek and Latin. His thesis is about an aspect of The Canterbury Tales. Though he's soaring among the literary gods and beginning to teach freshman grammar, one does not yet sense how he thinks. His move from farm work to academic work, and how it challenges him, if at all, is burie..more
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John Edward Williams, Ph.D. (University of Missouri, 1954; M.A., University of Denver, 1950; B.A., U. of D., 1949), enlisted in the USAAF early in 1942, spending two and a half years as a sergeant in India and Burma. His first novel, Nothing But the Night, was published in 1948, and his first volume of poems, Th..more
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“Sometimes, immersed in his books, there would come to him the awareness of all that he did not know, of all that he had not read; and the serenity for which he labored was shattered as he realized the little time he had in life to read so much, to learn what he had to know.”
“In his forty-third year William Stoner learned what others, much younger, had learned before him: that the person one loves at first is not the person one loves at last, and that love is not an end but a process through which one person attempts to know another.” More quotes…
In 1965 a brief, favourable review of Stoner, a novel by an English professor called John Williams, ran in the New Yorker. The book was described as 'a masterly portrait … of the life of an ordinary, almost an invisible, man'. Before long, Williams himself was invisible; Stoner received no further coverage and was out of print within a year, and despite wider critical approval his later novel Augustus failed to find much of an audience. But rather than disappearing altogether, Stoner is now being heralded by some as a lost classic, and since its initial republication a few years ago has been enjoying an unlikely second act, even becoming a breakout hit in the Netherlands.
Perhaps the novel's unremarkable subject matter was out of step with the upheavals of its time; certainly its restrained, delicate brand of realism was out of fashion. But then it is a strange novel to provoke raucous applause in any age. It tells the life story of an unassuming literary scholar called William Stoner. Williams makes a point of his very ordinariness on the first page – Stoner was 'held in no particular esteem when he was alive', and 'few students remembered him with any sharpness'. But his ordinary life is treated with bracing sincerity, and an enraptured state of attention.
The hushed dysfunction of Stoner's marriage, the furtive joys of an affair, the struggles of his fragile, wayward child – rarely has the intimate detail of a life been drawn with such emotional clarity. Most affecting is the portrayal of the disintegration of Stoner's mind in his final days, but even passing details are freighted with melancholy: the trees that 'trembled like soft clouds, translucent and tenuous', 'the sweet scent of dying lilac blossoms', the leaves that 'rustled and turned, ghost-like in the darkness'. Williams renders an invisible life lustrous in all its quotidian triumphs and tragedies; his novel deserves similar illumination.
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Author: Bright Summaries DownloadEditor: BrightSummaries.com ISBN: 2808016522 Size: 17,20 MB Format: PDF, ePub Read: 861 Unlock the more straightforward side of Stoner with this concise and insightful summary and analysis! This engaging summary presents an analysis of Stoner by John Williams, which tells the life story of a man named William Stoner from the cradle to the grave. Stoner’s life resembles the author’s in many respects: he finds his vocation as a writer and teacher fairly early in life, and devotes the rest of his life to literature. Stoner’s everyday struggles are not those of a traditional literary hero – indeed, he is exempted from military service – but he comes to realise that the battles he faces in the classroom are no less important for going unsung. Stoner was a relatively unknown novel during Williams’ lifetime, but has come to be seen as a classic of 20th-century American literature in recent years. Find out everything you need to know about Stoner in a fraction of the time! This in-depth and informative reading guide brings you: • A complete plot summary • Character studies • Key themes and symbols • Questions for further reflection Why choose BrightSummaries.com? Available in print and digital format, our publications are designed to accompany you on your reading journey. The clear and concise style makes for easy understanding, providing the perfect opportunity to improve your literary knowledge in no time. See the very best of literature in a whole new light with BrightSummaries.com! Stoner
Author: John Edward Williams DownloadEditor: ISBN: 9783763267064 Size: 14,89 MB Format: PDF, ePub, Docs Read: 321
Author: Mark Asquith Download
Editor: Rowman & Littlefield ISBN: 1498545432 Size: 13,84 MB Format: PDF, Kindle Read: 927 Stoner John Williams Pdf ItaA Flaw of Light:Reading the Novels of John Williams is a comprehensive and accessible introduction to the novels of one of America’s unfairly neglected writers. This clearly structured study offers detailed readings of the major novels combined with a brief assessment of Williams as an academic, poet and teacher. William Stoner And The Battle For The Inner Life Bookmarked
Author: Steve Almond DownloadEditor: Ig Publishing ISBN: 9781632460875 Size: 17,24 MB Format: PDF, Kindle Read: 389 In his entry in Ig's Bookmarked series, best-selling author Steve Almond takes on John Willams's classic American novel, Stoner.
Author: Nancy Easterlin DownloadEditor: JHU Press ISBN: 1421405040 Size: 19,53 MB Format: PDF, ePub, Mobi Read: 665 'A Biocultural Approach to Literary Theory and Interpretation offers a fresh and reasoned approach to literary studies that at once preserves the central importance that interpretation plays in the humanities and embraces the exciting developments of the cognitive sciences. Saturday Review
Author: Bernard Augustine De Voto DownloadEditor: ISBN: Size: 15,58 MB Format: PDF, ePub, Mobi Read: 274
Author: John Williams DownloadEditor: New York Review of Books ISBN: 1590173937 Size: 10,84 MB Format: PDF, Mobi Read: 434 William Stoner is born at the end of the nineteenth century into a dirt-poor Missouri farming family. Sent to the state university to study agronomy, he instead falls in love with English literature and embraces a scholar’s life, so different from the hardscrabble existence he has known. And yet as the years pass, Stoner encounters a succession of disappointments: marriage into a “proper” family estranges him from his parents; his career is stymied; his wife and daughter turn coldly away from him; a transforming experience of new love ends under threat of scandal. Driven ever deeper within himself, Stoner rediscovers the stoic silence of his forebears and confronts an essential solitude. John Williams’s luminous and deeply moving novel is a work of quiet perfection. William Stoner emerges from it not only as an archetypal American, but as an unlikely existential hero, standing, like a figure in a painting by Edward Hopper, in stark relief against an unforgiving world. Walter Kaufmann
Author: Stanley Corngold DownloadEditor: Princeton University Press ISBN: 0691165017 Size: 19,58 MB Format: PDF, ePub, Docs Read: 814 The first complete account of the ideas and writings of a major figure in twentieth-century intellectual life Walter Kaufmann (1921–1980) was a charismatic philosopher, critic, translator, and poet who fled Nazi Germany at the age of eighteen, emigrating alone to the United States. He was astonishingly prolific until his untimely death at age fifty-nine, writing some dozen major books, all marked by breathtaking erudition and a provocative essayistic style. He single-handedly rehabilitated Nietzsche’s reputation after World War II and was enormously influential in introducing postwar American readers to existentialism. Until now, no book has examined his intellectual legacy. Stanley Corngold provides the first in-depth study of Kaufmann’s thought, covering all his major works. He shows how Kaufmann speaks to many issues that concern us today, such as the good of philosophy, the effects of religion, the persistence of tragedy, and the crisis of the humanities in an age of technology. Few scholars in modern times can match Kaufmann’s range of interests, from philosophy and literature to intellectual history and comparative religion, from psychology and photography to art and architecture. Corngold provides a heartfelt portrait of a man who, to an extraordinary extent, transfigured his personal experience in the pages of his books. This original study, both appreciative and critical, is the definitive intellectual life of one of the twentieth century’s most engaging yet neglected thinkers. It will introduce Kaufmann to a new generation of readers and serves as a fitting tribute to a scholar’s incomparable libido sciendi, or lust for knowledge.
Author: DownloadEditor: ISBN: Size: 13,82 MB Format: PDF, Mobi Read: 185 Includes entries for maps and atlases. Catalog Of Copyright Entries Third Series
Author: Library of Congress. Copyright Office Download
Editor: Copyright Office, Library of Congress ISBN: Size: 18,78 MB Format: PDF, ePub Read: 386 Stoner By John Williams Pdf FileStoner John Williams AmazonIncludes Part 1, Number 1: Books and Pamphlets, Including Serials and Contributions to Periodicals (January - June)Comments are closed.
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