Posted in Book Reviews, Books, History, Literature, tagged Alan Furst, Espionage, Graham Greene, Historical Fiction, John Le Carre, Poland, Romance, Spies, Spy Novels, The Spies of Warsaw, Thrillers, Warsaw, World War Two on June 23, 2008 | 1 Comment »
Atmospheric and Meandering
Reviewed by:
David H. Schleicher “Author of The Thief Maker”
- See all my reviews
Colonel Jean-Francois Mercier, a military attache and French spy living in Poland, begins an affair with a lovely Polish lawyer named Anna while trying to obtain inside information on Germany’s planned invasion of France in Alan Furst’s atmospheric and meandering [...]
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Posted in Book Reviews, Book to Film Adaptations, Books, Literature, Movie Reviews, Movies, Psychology, tagged Horror Films, Psychological Thrillers, Ghost Stories, Film Classics, Henry James, The Turn of the Screw, Repression, Freud, The Innocents, Jack Clayton, Freddie Francis, Deborah Kerr, Victorian Era, Film School, Novellas on May 5, 2008 | No Comments »
Henry James’ classic novella from 1898, “The Turn of the Screw” opens with a group of friends discussing ghost stories:
“I quite agree–in regard to Griffin’s ghost, or whatever it was-that its appearing first to the little boy, at so tender an age, adds a particular touch. But it’s not the first occurrence of its charming [...]
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Posted in Books, Language, Literature, Movies, Pop Culture, tagged Atonement, colloquialisms, Double Indemnity, Film Noir, Graham Greene, Henry Wordsworth Longfellow, humor, Old Timey, phrases, slang, The Little Rascals, vernacular, Victorian Era Novels on April 19, 2008 | 7 Comments »
Part of the wonder of a living language is reviving dead words and phrases. When I recently began to toy with the idea of doing a series of novels set in the 1920’s, 1930’s, and 1940’s, I began to wonder if my knowledge of The Little Rascals would be enough to create that period dialog [...]
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Posted in Awards, Books, Literature, Publishing, The Thief Maker, tagged D. H. Schleicher, Eric Hoffer, Eric Hoffer Awards, Finalists, Hopewell Publications, Independent Books, Philosophy on April 13, 2008 | 4 Comments »
Nearly a year and a half after its publication, my novel The Thief Maker continues to accumulate accolades.
The Thief Maker was recently named a Finalist in the 2008 Eric Hoffer Award for Independent Books.
Though it will not be taking home one of the grand prizes, being named a Finalist places The Thief Maker in “the top [...]
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Posted in Arts and Entertainment, Book to Film Adaptations, Books, History, Literature, Politics, Television, tagged Abigail Adams, Alexander Hamilton, American History, American Revolution, Beer, Ben Franklin, Boston, Charles Adams, Danny Huston, David McCullough, David Morse, Drinking, Founding Fathers, George Washington, HBO, John Adams, John Adams Episode Guide, John Quincy Adams, Laura Linney, Miniseries, Paul Giamatti, Philadelphia, Revolutionary War, Rufus Sewel, Samuel Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Tom Hooper, Tom Wilkinson on March 16, 2008 | 11 Comments »
**This was a post in progress.
Weekly updates appeared as each episode of John Adams aired Sunday nights on HBO.
And remember, faithful viewers, Samuel Adams White Ale is the (un)official beer of HBO’s John Adams. Real Patriots Drink Samuel Adams.
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*Above: Political Propaganda circa 1776.
PREVIEW:
Ever since the demise of The Sopranos and Rome, the only thing even remotely worth [...]
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Posted in Art, Book Reviews, Books, Inspiration, Literature, Publishing, tagged Caleb Carr, Dublin, Dubliners, Edgar Allan Poe, Elsie Sheridan, Graham Greene, Ireland, James Joyce, Kurt Vonnegut, Matthew Pearl, Novels, Philip Pankov, Short Stories, The Dead, The Poe Shadow, William Faulkner on March 1, 2008 | 8 Comments »
CAPTION: Man dies from boredom on Dublin’s Ha’Penny Bridge while reading a very long novel. *Photo courtesy of Philip Pankov (www.philpankov.com) and www.thenocturnes.com.
Kurt Vonnegut once said of novels that “reading one is like being married forever to somebody nobody else knows or cares about.”
I couldn’t agree more while I find myself in a laborious relationship with The [...]
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Posted in Books, Literature, tagged Graham Greene, New Year, 2008, Resolutions, Authors, Writing, Reading, James Joyce, Ernest Hemingway, Clive Barker, Late Night Talk Shows on January 2, 2008 | 4 Comments »
With the ever increasingly stressful (and quite frankly, unnecessary) holiday season finally over, we can all now look forward to 2008. “Go with the flow and pay as you go” is my annoying little motto for the year. It’s a mantra I can repeat internally to remind myself to relax more.
I’m not much for the [...]
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Divided Attention
By
David H. Schleicher “Author of The Thief Maker” - See all my reviews
Michael Ondaatje’s “Divisadero” tells the tale of Anna, her adopted sister Claire, and their father’s farmhand Coop, growing up in the poetic splendor of their California homestead. After scandal and tragedy separate the three, Anna eventually ends up in France years [...]
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This contest is now over! DO NOT LEAVE A COMMENT TO THIS POST.
However, all hope is not lost! Please click the link below to find out about the monthly book drawings starting in January of 2008 and how to enter:
http://davethenovelist.wordpress.com/win-a-free-book/
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December marks the one year anniversary of the launching of this blog.
In honor of the [...]
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Posted in Arts and Entertainment, Awards, Book Reviews, Book to Film Adaptations, Books, History, Inspiration, Literature, Pop Culture, tagged Bram Stoker, Graham Greene, Harper Lee, Irene Nemirovsky, Iris Murdoch, Nick Tosches, R. L. Fisher, Toni Morrison, William Faulkner on October 27, 2007 | 10 Comments »
Halloween always brings to mind that classic of gothic literature, Bram Stoker’s Dracula.
This is a novel that has so enamored me over the years I once took a class dedicated solely to the study of it line by line. The mythology it created is still alive and well today (witness the recent box office champ 30 Days [...]
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