PROJECT GUTENBERG - Catalog By Author - Index - Steinmetz, Andrew INDEX What is PG Etext Listings. Etexts by Author Steinmetz, Andrew, 18161877 S Index Main Index The Gaming Table; The Gaming Table Volume 2. http://www.informika.ru/text/books/gutenb/gutind/TEMP/i-_steinmetz_andrew_.html
Browse Top Level > Texts > Project Gutenberg > Titles > G text. Author Steinmetz, Andrew, 18161877 Keywords Authors S Steinmetz,Andrew, 1816-1877; Titles G ; Subject subject unknown. http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Ti
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Extractions: Project Gutenberg Part 1 Authors Use Control-f to find keywords This is Project Gutenberg. This list has been downloaded from: "The Official and Original Project Gutenberg Web Site and Home Page" (http://promo.net/pg/) PROJECT GUTENBERG ETEXTS AUTHORS IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER Last Updated: Saturday 30 March 2002 by Pietro Di Miceli (webmaster@promo.net) The following etext have been released by Project Gutenberg. This list serves as reference only. For downloading books, please use our catalogs or search at: http://promo.net/pg/ Or check our FTP archive at: ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/ and etext subdirectories. For problems with the FTP archives (ONLY) email gbnewby@ils.unc.edu, be sure to include a description of what happened AND which mirror site you were using. THANKS for visiting Project Gutenberg. * (No Author Attributed) A Young Girl Abbott, David Phelps, 1863-1934 Abbott, Edwin Abbott, 1838-1926 AKA: Square, A Abbott, John S. C. (John Stevens Cabot), 1805-1877 Ackland, T. S. (Thomas Suter), 1817-1892 Adams, Andy, 1859-1935
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Project Gutenberg Author Record Project Gutenberg Author record. Steinmetz, Andrew, 18161877. Titles. GamingTable, The. To the main listings page. Main Project Gutenberg Web page (online). http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/authors/steinmetz__andrew__1816-1.html
Untitled This is Project Gutenberg. K. Steele, Richard, Sir, 16721729 Steinmetz, Andrew, 1816-1877 Stendhal, 1783-1842 AKA Beyle, Marie-Henri, 1783-1842 http://www.quux.org:70/Archives/gutenberg/authors.txt
LitSearch: An Online Literary Database Steinmetz, Andrew (18161877) Works by this author Gaming Table, The Volume 1Gaming Table, The Volume 2. Copyright 2001 Keith Ito. All Rights Reserved. http://daily.stanford.edu/litsearch/servlet/DescribeAuthor?name=Steinmetz, Andre
LitSearch: An Online Literary Database Gaming Table, The Volume 1 by Steinmetz, Andrew (18161877). Copyright2001 Keith Ito. All Rights Reserved. Admin Control Panel. http://daily.stanford.edu/litsearch/servlet/DescribeWork?work=473
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At The Mad Cybrarian's Library The Mad Cybrarian's Library. Andrew Steinmetz. 18161877. The Gaming TableIts Votaries and Victims, In All Times and Countries, especially http://www.fortunecity.com/victorian/richmond/88/Steinmetz-Andrew.html
Manuscript Collections - Language And Literature California. Inclusive dates 19491990. Finding aid. Steinmetz, Andrew(1816-1877). Papers. Accession Number -D10. Mini-collection. http://www.lib.ucdavis.edu/specol/html/langc.html
Extractions: Manuscript Collections - Language and Literature Accession Number: D-49. 1 linear foot. Biography: Northern California poet and novelist; author of The doorway (1990); The woman who was wild (1989), and The rising of the flesh (1983). Description: Correspondence, poetry, journals, publications, and flyers. Inclusive dates: 1955-1993. Accession Number: O-004. Open collection. 12.2 linear feet. Description: Collected poetical works of three or more poets, written between 1955 and 1980. Inclusive dates: 1955-1980. Accession Number: O-006. Open collection. 7.2 linear feet. Description: Single poems, often including graphics, meant for display. Inclusive dates: 1955-1980. Accession Number: O-030. Open collection. 2 linear feet. Description: Advertisements for book fairs, poetry readings, and other public events; press releases announcing new books and printing services. Inclusive dates: 1955-1980.
Index Steinmetz, Andrew (18161877) The Gaming Table Volume One Volume TwoStephen, Leslie (1832 - 1904) The English Utilitarians Volume http://www.changanyouth.xahu.edu.cn/pages/novel/S/
Extractions: L arge conclusions seem inappropriate for this present stage of earliness in our reception of this wonder-filled new gift from Pynchon. We need to keep our discussions as open and wide-ranging and undogmatic as possible, to place the novel's comic and tragic world views in continual juxtaposition. We need to keep our humility and our sense of humor about us as well, even as we try for readings as ambitious as the novel clearly is. We need to meditate on the irony that Pynchon's deepest exploration of aging and mortality may be also the novel whose humor is freest and most liberated, the book in which Pynchon is able to satirize most trenchantly those personal and artistic traits-creative paranoia and a mania for invisibility-for which he is most notorious. Most tellingly, we need to reflect on the paradox that Pynchon may have written his most prophetic work by taking his furthest leap back in time, writing an historical novel that problematizes more profoundly than any of his other works what it means to "write" history or measure how history writes us, which includes the study how others have been written in or out as agents of history. Pynchon in Mason and Dixon discovers the sources of the postmodern in the contradictions of the Enlightenment as lived by his two intrepid surveyors and tragicomic antiheroes.