Writer’s Wednesday: Isaac Babel

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Click Here to Read:  Isaac Babel on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Welcome to Freidin’s Isaac Babel Page on the Stanford.edu website.

Click Here to Read:  Hide-and-Seek The complete Isaac Babel by John Updike in The New Yorker on November 5, 20101.

Click Here to Read: Saunders on Babel, Prose Poet of the Grotesque on the NPR Books website on May 26, 2006. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Isaac Babel

Writer’s Wednesday: Bernard-Henri Lévy

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Click Here to Read:Bernard-Henri Lévy on Wikipedia.

Click Here to View: Interview with Bernard-Henri Lévy, interviewed by Charlie Rose on Bloomberg.com.

Click Here to Read:  Bernard-Henri Levy urges French voters to reject Front National
Philosopher publishes list of allegations against FN candidates and says far-right party has not changed by Kim Willsher on the Guardian website on March 25, 2014. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Bernard-Henri Lévy

Writer’s Wednesday: Samuel Beckett

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Click Here to Read: Samuel Beckett on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read:  Beckett in Love: Review of The Letters of Samuel Beckett, Volume III: 1957–1965, edited and translated from the French by George Craig, and edited by Martha Dow Fehsenfeld, Dan Gunn, and Lois More Overbeck, Reviewed by Fintan O’Toole in the New York Review of Books in the April 2, 2015 issue.

Click Here to Read:  Samuel Beckett Reviews on the Guardian website. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Samuel Beckett

Writer’s Wednesday: Emile Zola

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Click Here  to Read:  Émile Zola on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Blood and nerves: Murder, suicide, cat-killing and psychological torture – 150 years after it was written, Émile Zola’s Thérèse Raquin is as shocking as ever. But does it work as a play, asks Julian Barnes on the Guardian Website on November 25, 2006.

Click Here to Read: The Rougon-Macquart Novels of Emile Zola (for English-speaking Readers) by Jack J. Woehr on the Well.com website. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Emile Zola

Writer’s Wednesday: Pablo Neruda

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Click Here to Read: Pablo Neruda on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read:  Pablo Neruda Poems on the Poem Hunter.com Website.

Click Here to Read: The Ecstasist: Pablo Neruda and his passions by  Mark Strand in The New Yorker on September 6, 2003.

Click Here to Read:  Disturbing Pablo Neruda’s Rest By Ilan Stavans in The New York Times on April 9, 2013. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Pablo Neruda

Writer’s Wednesday: D.H. Lawrence

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Click Here to Read: D.H. Lawrence on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: D.H. Lawrence Biography Poet, Playwright, Author, Journalist (1885–1930) on the Biography.com Website.

Click Here to Read: The Deep End: A new life of D. H. Lawrence. by Benjamin Kunkel In The New Yorker in the December 19, 2005 Issue.

Click Here to Read: The trial of Lady Chatterley’s Lover: No other jury verdict has had such a profound social impact as the acquittal of Penguin Books in the Lady Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: D.H. Lawrence

Writer’s Wednesday: Fyodor Dostoyevsky

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Click Here To Read: Fyodor Dostoyevsky on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: When Dickens met Dostoevsky by Eric Naiman in the Times Literary Supplement on April 10, 2013.

Click Here to Read: Dostoevsky and psychoanalysis – psychiatry in 19th-century literature by Ruth Yvonne Pavlovic and Alexandar Mido Pavlovic on the BJPsych Website on March 1, 2012. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Fyodor Dostoyevsky

Writer’s Wednesday: Gary Shteyngart

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Click Here to Read: Gary Shteyngart on the Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: ‘Finally, proof that 12 years of psychoanalysis paid off for someone’ Reviews of Little Failure by Gary Shtengart on this website.

Click Here to Read: Why Gary Shteyngart Remains His Own Best Creation, Review of  Gary Shteyngart’s Little Failure in the Jewish Daily Forward on this website. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Gary Shteyngart