Andrew Lang (1844-1912) was a prolific Scots man of letters, a poet, novelist, literary critic and contributor to anthropology. He now is best known as the collector of folk and fairy tales. He was educated at the Edinburgh Academy, St Andrews University and at Balliol College, Oxford. As a journalist, poet, critic and historian, he soon made a reputation as one of the ablest and most versatile writers of the day. Lang was one of the founders of the study of "Psychical Research," and his other writings on anthropology include The Book of Dreams and Ghosts (1897), Magic and Religion (1901) and The Secret of the Totem (1905). He was a Homeric scholar of conservative views. Other works include Homer and the Epic (1893); a prose translation of The Homeric Hymns (1899), with literary and mythological essays in which he draws parallels between Greek myths and other mythologies; and Homer and his Age (1906). He also wrote Ballades in Blue China (1880) and Rhymes la Mode (1884).
The Oxford Book of Japanese Short Stories includes many new, specially commissioned translations, and is the only anthology to span the whole of Japan's modern era.
Science.
A collection of classic science fiction short stories features tales by H. G. Wells, Arthur C. Clark, Frederik Pohl, Clifford Simak, Brian Aldiss, Ursala K. LeGuin, and many others.
full-time educational programs and extension courses, now taught entirely in English, in Berlin, such as a 5-month training course in brewing technology for prospective brewing professionals. In the UK, the center for academic brewing ...
Most of us today can expect to live into our seventies in reasonably good health. (In fact, the fastest growing segment of the population is the group eighty-five and older.)...
2 Rice E, Fisher C (1976) Fugue states in sleep and wakefulness: a psychophysiological study. J Nerv Ment Dis 163:79–87. 25 Carreño M, Fernández S (2016) Sleep-related epilepsy. Curr Treat PARASOMNIAS: ISOLAtED SYMPtOMS AND NORMAL ...
A thought-provoking assessment and documentation of one of the most terrible periods in history - the rise and fall of the Nazi Party.
Presents a collection of fifty-six familiar and unfamiliar stories by such writers as Washington Irving, Ernest Hemingway, Edgar Allan Poe, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Henry James, and Kate Chopin.
This is part of a ten volume set of reference books offering authoritative and engaging critical overviews of the state of political science.
Two mathematicians must join forces to stop a serial killer in this spellbinding international bestseller A paperback sensation in Argentina, Spain, and the United Kingdom, The Oxford Murders has...