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Stephen Vincent Brennan

Auteur de The Adventurous Boy's Handbook: For Ages 9 to 99

36 oeuvres 499 utilisateurs 2 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Comprend les noms: Stephen V. Brennan

Comprend aussi: Stephen Brennan (1)

Œuvres de Stephen Vincent Brennan

An Autobiography of Davy Crockett (2011) 33 exemplaires
An Autobiography of Jack London (2013) 10 exemplaires
An Autobiography of General Custer (2012) 10 exemplaires
An Autobiography of John Muir (2014) 7 exemplaires
Shakespeare on Love (2015) 6 exemplaires
Corner Of Your Eye (2019) 6 exemplaires
An Autobiography of Joseph Conrad (2014) — Directeur de publication — 6 exemplaires
The Darkness Between: A Novella (2012) 2 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Autres noms
Brennan, Steve
Date de naissance
1952-01-19
Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA

Membres

Critiques

Well, they are classics for the most part (or written by classic authors), but a great many of them aren’t stories in themselves, they’re excerpts from novels. Classic novels, but chopping out the opening chapters and calling it a story makes for a whole lack of closure. It is more annoying because these aren’t marked as such. Still, they might peak the reader’s interest to find the complete works.
 
Signalé
Jon_Hansen | Jul 10, 2018 |
The Greatest Circus Stories Ever Told (2005) is an anthology of 13 essays and book excerpts from sources first published between about 1900 and 1926 (two are from 1955 and 1972). The editor is Stephen Brennan, a former circus clown, who provides an introduction to each piece with a little background about the author and facet of circus life. Since most of the pieces are old, they mostly discuss the circus silver age (golden age?) between about post-Civil War to WWI. However the age of the pieces should not discourage readership as the pieces are all well written, engrossing and capture a more romantic time in America.In addition I love anthologies like this because they reveal obscure but good authors and works I never would have heard of otherwise.

Of the 13 pieces I found 8 to be stand-outs. Two of these are excerpts from novels which I am now reading in full: James Otis' Toby Tyler, or Ten Weeks with a Circus (1881) and Edward Hoagland's Cat Man: A Novel (1955) and for that reason alone, discovering these novels, the anthology has been well worth it. The other six favorites include an essay by Dan Rice: The Most Famous Man You've Never Heard Of; two essays by Courtney Ryley Cooper who is new to me but endlessly entertaining and sadly obscure today (see his Wikipedia profile); an essay by another obscure ex-clown with a talent for writing Robert Edmund Sherwood.

Water for Elephants, a modern novel about old circuses, has been in in the best seller list for years now. In comparison, reading about real life experiences from people who actually lived it, in short approachable extracts, vetted by an old hand, is an authentic and rewarding experience. While the crowds ohh and ahh their attention on the center best-seller ring, reading this book is like being out back of the tent, hanging with the circus people as they tell stories around a campfire: old retired clowns, the skeleton man and his wife the Fat lady, the romantic tight-rope walker, canvas men on the run, rummies - memorable stuff.

--Review by Stephen Balbach, via CoolReading (c) 2008 cc-by-nd
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Stbalbach | May 27, 2008 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
36
Membres
499
Popularité
#49,589
Évaluation
3.1
Critiques
2
ISBN
76

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