Ann douglas stories archives
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Christmas Roses allow Other Stories by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
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The Online Books Page
Online Books by
Anne Douglas Sedgwick
(Sedgwick, Anne Douglas, )
A Wikipedia article about this author is available.
- Sedgwick, Anne Douglas, Amabel Channice (New York: The Century Co., ) (Gutenberg text, illustrated HTML, and page images)
- Sedgwick, Anne Douglas, , contrib.: Atlantic Narratives: Modern Short Stories (first series; Boston: The Atlantic Monthly Press, c), ed. by Charles Swain Thomas, also contrib. by Cornelia A. P. Comer, John Galsworthy, Amy Wentworth Stone, Elizabeth Ashe, Dallas Lore Sharp, H. G. Dwight, Mary Lerner, Charles Caldwell Dobie, Henry Seidel Canby, Zephine Humphrey, Katharine Fullerton Gerould, Katharine Butler, Madeleine Z. Doty, F. J. Louriet, Ernest Starr, C. A. Mercer, Margaret Pollock Sherwood, E. Nesbit, E. V. Lucas, Margaret Lynn, Margaret Prescott Montague, and Arthur Russell Taylor
- Sedgwick, Anne Douglas, A Childhood in Brittany Eighty Years Ago (New York: The Century Co., ), illust. by Paul de Leslie
- Sedgwick, Anne Douglas, Christmas Roses, and Other Stories (Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Co., ) (Gutenberg text and illustrated HTML)
- Sedgwick, Anne Douglas, The Confounding of Camelia (New York: C. Scribner's Sons, ) (Gutenberg text)
- Sedgwick, Anne Douglas, The Dull Miss Archinard
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Sam NeedlemanOn Beats, Bollinger, and burgers.
The door to apartment A was propped open, as it often is, with a very large book, and the posters affixed to it looked eager to tear through their Scotch tape. “Organizers Needed! Fight For Lasting Change!” read the flier for the Eastern Service Workers Association, of Trenton, New Jersey. “ADVOCATE for low-income families to prevent utility shutoffs and reverse government policies that enrich utility companies while promoting use of fossil fuels.” Above it was a slightly larger poster for a film noir festival in San Francisco, featuring a buxom woman experiencing some kind of ecstasy in a closet full of film reels. Marx and movies: What more could you need?
Inside, something was slightly off: The afternoon light filtered in, a rarity in an apartment whose owner normally hosts her students at night. But Ann Douglas, the Parr Professor Emerita of English and Comparative Literature, proceeded as usual. She apologized for the piles of newspapers in the foyer, offered fresh-squeezed Westside fruit juice, sat across from me at her dining room table, and started talking. Her home is less a salon than a lair; there are no walls in sight, just rows of books and VHS tapes. Douglas has lived there since the fall of Saigon, whe