Archive for the ‘Book Reviews’ Category
Una reseña en inglés por Neil Langdon Inglis, Editor Adjunto de Interlitq de The Immortalists: Charles Lindbergh, Dr. Alexis Carrel, and Their Daring Quest to Live Forever por David M. Friedman será publicada en un número próximo de Interlitq
Filed under: Authors, Aviation, Book Reviews, Interlitq, Interlitq Editors, Medicine, The International Literary Quarterly, Writing, www.interlitq.wordpress.com |
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Neil Langdon Inglis
Una reseña en inglés por Neil Langdon Inglis, Editor Adjunto de Interlitq de The Immortalists: Charles Lindbergh, Dr. Alexis Carrel, and Their Daring Quest to Live Forever por David M. Friedman será publicada en un número próximo de Interlitq.

David M. Friedman

Charles Lindbergh

Alexis Carrel
As F Scott Fitzgerald felt he eventually understood ‘the exquisite inner mechanics’ of Keats’s Grecian Urn, Sarah Churchwell, a Consulting Editor for Interlitq, now feels the same way about The Great Gatsby
Filed under: Authors, Book Reviews, Interlitq, Interlitq Editors, Journalism, The International Literary Quarterly, Writing, www.interlitq.wordpress.com |
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Sarah Churchwell
Sarah Churchwell, a Consulting Editor for Interlitq, and a Senior Lecturer at the School of American Studies at the University of East Anglia, has been cited in “Catching the chime in it” (Guy Somerset, New Zealand Listener, 02.05.13): “There is a quotation from Fitzgerald I use in the book, about reading John Keats’s Grecian Urn: ‘I suppose I’ve read it a hundred times. About the tenth time I began to know what it was about, and caught the chime in it and the exquisite inner mechanics.’ That was what I always wanted to do with Gatsby: understand its exquisite inner mechanics, catch the chime in it and know what it was about. I think I’ve done that now.”

F. Scott Fitzgerald

John Keats

Guy Somerset
Review by Neil Langdon Inglis, a Deputy Editor for Interlitq, of David M. Friedman’s The Immortalists: Charles Lindbergh, Dr. Alexis Carrel, and Their Daring Quest to Live Forever, to be published in a forthcoming issue of Interlitq
Filed under: Authors, Aviation, Book Reviews, Interlitq, Interlitq Editors, Medicine, The International Literary Quarterly, Writing, www.interlitq.wordpress.com |
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Neil Langdon Inglis
A review by Neil Langdon Inglis, a Deputy Editor for Interlitq, of David M. Friedman’s The Immortalists: Charles Lindbergh, Dr. Alexis Carrel, and Their Daring Quest to Live Forever, is to be published in a forthcoming issue of Interlitq.

David M. Friedman

Charles Lindbergh

- Alexis Carrel
Tim Reuter of Forbes writes that Orlando Figes, a Consulting Editor for Interlitq, “ranges widely and probes deeply into the causes of the Russian Revolution”
Filed under: Authors, Book Reviews, History, Interlitq, Interlitq Editors, Journalism, The International Literary Quarterly, Writing, www.interlitq.wordpress.com |
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Orlando Figes
In “Karl Marx’s Russian Error Contains A Lesson For Liberal Democracies”, (Forbes, 07.04.13), Tim Reuter writes that with A People’s Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891-1924, Orlando Figes, the English historian who is a Consulting Editor for Interlitq, “ranges widely and probes deeply into the causes of the Russian Revolution.”
Rita Dove, a Consulting Editor for Interlitq, and a contributor to Issue 6 of Interlitq, and Joyce Carol Oates, a contributor to Issue 7 of Interlitq, cited in “Now Read This! The Neverending Mother’s Day Story”
Filed under: Authors, Book Reviews, Interlitq, Interlitq Editors, Issue 6, Issue 7, The International Literary Quarterly, Writing, www.interlitq.wordpress.com |
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Rita Dove

Joyce Carol Oates
Rita Dove, the U.S. poet who is a Consulting Editor for Interlitq, and a contributor to Issue 6 of Interlitq, and Joyce Carol Oates, the U.S. novelist who contributed prose to Issue 7 of Interlitq, have been cited in “Now Read This! The Neverending Mother’s Day Story”, Bethanne Patrick, AARP Blog): “What My Mother Gave Me: Thirty-One Women on the Gift That Mattered Most, edited by novelist Elizabeth Benedict, features fond-but-wise recollections by some high-candlepower daughters: Joyce Carol Oates, Roxana Robinson, Marge Piercy, Rita Dove — you get the picture. These essays are not fluff pieces. (Not a chocolate box or silk scarf in sight, I’m happy to report.) Instead they’re deeply considered, deeply felt writings on identity and relationships.”

Elizabeth Benedict

- Bethanne Patrick