Writer’s Wedneday: Bertold Brecht

Bertolt-Brecht

Click Here to Read: Bertolt Brecht on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Rescuing Brecht, Review of Bertolt Brecht: A literary life by Stephen Parker, Reviewed by Michael Hoffman in the Times Literary Supplement on August 13, 2014.

Click Here to Read: Bertolt Brecht (1898-1956) on imagi-nation website.

Click Here to Read: Epic Theatre Conventions by Justin Cash on the Drama Teacher website on March 17, 2014. Continue reading Writer’s Wedneday: Bertold Brecht

Writer’s Wednesday: Eugène Ionesco

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Click Here to Read: Eugène Ionesco on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Eugene Ionesco, The Art of Theater No. 6, Interviewed by Shusha Guppy in the Paris Review in the Fall 1984 Issue.

Click Here to Read:  Eugène Ionesco (1912-1994) on the Levity.com website.

Click Here to Read: The Ionesco Festival, a production of Untitled Theater Co. #61 Eugène Ionesco: Man of the Theatre/Theatrical Man 1909 (Slatina, Romania) – 1994 (Paris, France) on the Untitled Theater.com website. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Eugène Ionesco

Writer’s Wednesday: Jean Racine

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Click Here to Read: Jean Racine on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read:  Jean Racine on the Imagin-Nation website.

Click Here to Read: Phaedra By Jean Baptiste Racine on the Gutenberg.org website.

Click Here to Read: Jean Racine on the NNDB website.

Click Here to Read: Jean Racine French dramatist by Ronald W. Tobin on the Encyclopedia Britannica website. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Jean Racine

Writer’s Wednesday: Molière

Moliere

Click Here to Read: Molière on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Molière (1622-1673) on the Imagi-nation.com website.

Click Here to Read: Tartuffe on Wikipedia.

Click Here to View: Tartuffe – the complete stage play on YouTube on Jan 15, 2014,  Tartuffe (The Imposter) by Jean-Baptiste Poquelin, aka Molière, Translated into English verse by Richard Wilbur, Scored by Cole Thomason-Redus. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Molière

Writer’s Wednesday: Andreï Makine

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Click Here to Read:  Andreï Makine on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Andrei Makine: interview: Tim Martin speaks to Andrei Makine, a Russian novelist who has been compared to Stendhal, Tolstoy and Proust on the Telegraph website on April 18, 2013.

Click Here to Read: A writer’s life: Andreï Makine: Philip Delves Broughton meets a Siberian-born novelist whose life is as spare as his art on the Telegraph website on March 24, 2004. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Andreï Makine

Writer’s Wednesday: Rainer Maria Rilke

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Click Here to Read: Rainer Maria Rilke on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read:  Rainer Maria Rilke 1875–1926 on the Poetry Foundation website.

Click Here to Read: Rilke on How Great Sadnesses Bring Us Closer to Ourselves by Maria Popova on the Brain Pickings website.

Click Here to Read: Letters To A Young Poet by Rainer Maria Rilke on the Carrothers.com website. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Rainer Maria Rilke

Writer’s Wednesday: Jonathan Safran Foer

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Click Here to Read: Jonathan Safran Foer on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Love Is Blind and Deaf BY Jonathan Safran Foer in The Ne Yorker in the June 8, 2015 Issue.

Click Here to Read:  Against Meat By Jonathan Safran Foer in The New York Times on October 7, 2009.

Click Here to Read: A Bag of Tired Tricks: Blank pages? Photos of mating tortoises? The death throes of the postmodern novel B. R. Myers in The Atlantic Monthly in the MAY 2005 Issue. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Jonathan Safran Foer

Writer’s Wednesday: Margaret Atwood

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Click Here to Read: Margaret Atwood on Wikipedia.

Click Here to Read: Stone Mattress by Margaret Atwood in The New Yorker in the December 19, 2011 ISSUE.

Click Here to Read:  Are Humans Necessary? Margaret Atwood on Our Robotic Future by margaret Atwood in The New York Times on December. 4, 2014.

Click Here to Listen to:  Margaret Atwood’s ‘Stone Mattress’ Is Full Of Sharp And Jabbing Truths Interview by Meg Wolitzer on the NPR Radio website on September 24, 2014. Continue reading Writer’s Wednesday: Margaret Atwood