| David Pierce - Language Arts & Disciplines - 2014 - 473 pages
`Is there one who understands me?' So wrote James Joyce towards the end of his final work, Finnegans Wake. The question continues to be asked about the author who claimed that ... | |
| David Pierce - Literary Criticism - 2006 - 190 pages
Joyce and Company is a comparative study which encourages a way of thinking about Joyce not as an isolated figure but as someone who is best understood in the company of others ... | |
| David Pierce - Literary Criticism - 2005 - 380 pages
In this absorbing analysis of modern Irish writing, an acknowledged expert considers the hybrid character of modern Irish writing to show how language, culture, and history ... | |
| David Pierce - History - 2000 - 1380 pages
With five Nobel Prize-winners, seven Pulitzer Prize-winners and two Booker Prize-winning novelists, modern Irish writing has contributed something special and permanent to our ... | |
| David Pierce - Juvenile Fiction - 1993 - 244 pages
After Alec brought his girlfriend Callie back from the dead, he finds she is not the old Callie. Now Alec has to make a choice: destroy Callie, or watch as evil consumes her ... | |
| David Pierce, Peter Jan de Voogd - Literary Criticism - 1996 - 228 pages
Laurence Sterne's Tristram Shandyis the most wayward -- and in some respects the most powerful -- critique of Locke's theory of knowledge, while his interest in the gulf ... | |
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