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Where there’s life, there’s death. Though a true statement, for some it seems that life and legacy continue on long after death. Many artists, poets, writers, and others have been able to continue to live on through their stories, theories, art, and ideas. Though not immortal, the works of certain people allow them to continue [...]
Posted by Ash Grant on Friday, February 19, 2010 at 8:55 am
Filed under All, People · Tagged alfred Wegener, artist, authors, death, edgar allen poe, El Greco, emily dickinson, explorer, famous after death, franz kafka, Galileo, Gregor Johann Mendel, Henry Darger, Henry David Thoreau, kafka, painter, poet, Thoreau, tortured artists, van gogh, Vincent van Gogh, writer
There’s nothing better than being able to pick up a book one day and sitting down to read it. It’s a wonderful experience being able to find that one book that really grabs your eyes and fingers and doesn’t let you put it down until you’re finished. Finding a book that sucks you in and [...]
Posted by Ash Grant on Wednesday, January 13, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under All, Literature · Tagged author, authors, book, Books, cooking, Dark Carnival, David Yallop, Dear and Glorious Physician, In God's Name, jim jones, Jon K. Hahn, June Hemmon Hiatt, Legally Sane, Literature, madonna, madonna sex, Marilyn Monroe, Marilyn: A Biography, Mary and Vincent Price - A Treasury of Great Recipes, nora roberts, Norman Mailer, out of print books, pope john paul, promise me tomorrow, Raven: The Untold Story of the Reverend Jim Jones and his People, Ray Bradbury, short stories, Taylor Caldwell, The Principles of Knitting
From the earliest records of ancient civilizations to the most recent works produced by modernity, the history of literature bears witness to the creative power of the human mind. We have before us a vast library of stories, plays, and poetry to enjoy at our leisure, but in some cases this creativity came with a [...]
Posted by Brandt Ketterer on Wednesday, October 14, 2009 at 12:01 am
Filed under All, Literature, People · Tagged anne sexton, author, authors, authors Who Committed Suicide, Books, depression, Ernest Hemingway, hunter s. thompson, jerzy kosinski, john berryman, karin boye, mental health, mental illness, richard brautigan, suicide, top 10 suicidal writers, tyunosuke akutagawa, virginia woolf, writer, writers, Writers Who Committed Suicide, yukio mishima
Ever since writing has been known to man, literature as become an extremely important part of everyday life, even for those who aren’t writers. Literature allows people to express their thoughts and feelings, and then have others read them, take it in, and draw their own conclusions and thoughts.
As a writer myself, it’s definitely hard [...]
Posted by Ash Grant on Wednesday, August 19, 2009 at 12:01 am
Filed under All, Literature · Tagged albert camus, answered prayers, authors, Books, Canterbury Tales, Charles Dickens, death, Geoffrey Chaucer, history of the Peloponnesian War, Jane Austen, Kubla Khan, Literature, Mark Twain, Samuel Coleridge, sanditon, The Aeneid, The first man, The Mysterious Stranger, The mystery of Edwin Drood, Thucydides, Top 10 Unfinished Works of Literature, truman, truman capote, Virgil
These writers, musicians, and painters created masterpieces in the realms of literature, music, and art. At different stages of their lives, every person on this list suffered from severe hardships, mental illness and feelings of loneliness and despair. All of them suffered for their art in order to create legacies of great imagination and epic [...]
Posted by Heather Matthews on Wednesday, July 1, 2009 at 12:03 am
Filed under All, Literature, Music, People · Tagged Add new tag, alcohol, artists, authors, bohemian, Dostoyevsky, Ernest Hemingway, gambling, gambling addiction, George Orwell, haunting, Henri Marie Raymond de Toulouse-Lautrec, heroin, homosexual, Kurt Cobain, Literature, Ludwig van Beethoven, musician, painters, passion, playwright, poets, suicide, Sylvia Plath, Tennessee Williams, Thomas De Quincey, tortured artists, Vincent van Gogh
F. Scott Fitzgerald was one of the greatest artists of the 20th century. His lyrical phrasing, his rich characters, and his unmistakable voice have placed him in the high echelon of American authors. Even though we only got to keep him until the young age of 44, he managed in that short time to give [...]
Posted by Elizabeth Downing Johnson on Monday, May 18, 2009 at 1:55 am
Filed under All, Literature · Tagged authors, Babylon Revisited, Bernice Bobs Her Hair, Esquire, f. scott fitzgerald, men, newspaper, romance, Saturday Evening Post, short stories, Short Story, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, The Diamond As Big As The Ritz, The Ice Palace, The Jelly Bean, The Lost Decade, The Offshore Pirate, Winter Dreams, writers
Throughout the history of the world, starting with the church, censors have been put on many different things. The church was able to create a list of banned books, and many of the books were burned. The first list of banned books came from Pope Paul IV who established The Index of Prohibited Books to [...]
Posted by Ash Grant on Wednesday, January 7, 2009 at 12:02 am
Filed under All, Literature, Politics, Religion, Sex, Shopping · Tagged 1984, authors, banned, banned books, Books, Brave New World, Candide, catcher in the rye, Controversial, controversy, funny, George Orwell, Harry Potter, homosexual, Huckleberry Finn, humber humbert, Humor, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, innocence, Literature, Lolita, magazines, Mark Twain, nabokov, salinger, Sex, The color Purple, To Kill a Mockingbird, violence, Voltaire