Writers and cats have always shared a special bond. We’ve put together a post on the relationship between famous writers and their cats.
The following is from a book called Writers and Their Cats, which is a book about writers and their cats by Alison Nastasi. * Angela Carter English author Angela Carter, known for her dark feminist…
As a child, summer meant
Writers and cats have always shared a special bond. We’ve put together a post on the relationship between famous writers and their cats.
What do Charles Bukowski, Joyce Carol Oates, and Edgar Allan Poe have in common? They love cats. Writers and cats go together like salt and pepper, and here are 16 of our favorite pairs.
Dating in L.A.: She thought he was the man of her dreams, but they had little in common
"Sorry I Barfed on Your Bed (and Other Heartwarming Letters from Kitty) is a bold collection of full-color photos, letters and recommendations from cats to their devoted parents—the only people who will love them no matter what they've done this time. Writer and comedian, Jeremy Greenberg, filled this book with laugh-out-loud letters and photographs that offer a "cat's eye view." It's the perfect gift for cat lovers everywhere, no matter the occasion, and anyone who might get lost in translation during those conversations with their cat. For example, yes, your cat really does feel bad about barfing on your bed… because now he must get up, walk across the house, and sleep on your clean laundry instead.
A collection of photos with classical music composers posing with their beloved cats.
Like the rest of us, famed writers loved their furry companions. Here are Woolf, Mitchell, Wharton, and other authors with their dogs and cats.
The following is from a book called Writers and Their Cats, which is a book about writers and their cats by Alison Nastasi. * Angela Carter English author Angela Carter, known for her dark feminist…
Chekhov and dachshunds, Brodsky and cats: These authors' muses were not only women but also their animal friends.
David Barnett: They have their paws all over novelists' public profiles, but I'm really not sure why
Writers and cats have always shared a special bond. We’ve put together a post on the relationship between famous writers and their cats.
Like the rest of us, famed writers loved their furry companions. Here are Woolf, Mitchell, Wharton, and other authors with their dogs and cats.
Pablo Picasso Flavorwire has posted a photo gallery of famous artists posing with their feline friends. Among the top cat fiends in the art world: Chinese
What do Charles Bukowski, Joyce Carol Oates, and Edgar Allan Poe have in common? They love cats. Writers and cats go together like salt and pepper, and here are 16 of our favorite pairs.
Like the rest of us, famed writers loved their furry companions. Here are Woolf, Mitchell, Wharton, and other authors with their dogs and cats.
What do Charles Bukowski, Joyce Carol Oates, and Edgar Allan Poe have in common? They love cats. Writers and cats go together like salt and pepper, and here are 16 of our favorite pairs.
Writers and cats have always shared a special bond. We’ve put together a post on the relationship between famous writers and their cats.
Like the rest of us, famed writers loved their furry companions. Here are Woolf, Mitchell, Wharton, and other authors with their dogs and cats.
What do Charles Bukowski, Joyce Carol Oates, and Edgar Allan Poe have in common? They love cats. Writers and cats go together like salt and pepper, and here are 16 of our favorite pairs.
What do Charles Bukowski, Joyce Carol Oates, and Edgar Allan Poe have in common? They love cats. Writers and cats go together like salt and pepper, and here are 16 of our favorite pairs.
Hundreds of German-speaking film professionals took refuge in Hollywood during the 1930s and 1940s, making a lasting contribution to American cinema. Hailing from Austria, Hungary, Poland, Russia, and the Ukraine, as well as Germany, and including Ernst Lubitsch, Fred Zinnemann, Billy Wilder, and Fritz Lang, these multicultural, multilingual writers and directors betrayed distinct cultural sensibilities in their art. Gerd Gemünden focuses on Edgar G. Ulmer’s The Black Cat (1934), William Dieterle’s The Life of Emile Zola (1937), Ernst Lubitsch’s To Be or Not to Be (1942), Bertold Brecht and Fritz Lang’s Hangmen Also Die (1943), Fred Zinneman’s Act of Violence (1948), and Peter Lorre’s Der Verlorene (1951), engaging with issues of realism, auteurism, and genre while tracing the relationship between film and history, Hollywood politics and censorship, and exile and (re)migration. | Author: Gerd Gem?Nden | Publisher: Columbia University Press | Publication Date: Jan 21, 2014 | Number of Pages: 276 pages | Language: English | Binding: Paperback | ISBN-10: 0231166796 | ISBN-13: 9780231166799
In The Cat Inside William Burroughs paid a great compliment to his favorite animals: “My relationships with my cats has saved me from a deadly, pervasive ignorance.” Now, isn’t that a true thing? That our relationship with animals can have such a benevolent influence. I’m spending the week looking after a friend’s dog (a cute, wee strawberry-blonde, Lakeland Terrier), who has, over the years, taught me much about myself, for which I will always be grateful. In thanks for that, here is a small selection of some interesting people and their lovely animal companions. James Dean and his cat, Marcus, a gift from Elizabeth Taylor, who took custody of Marcus after Dean’s death. Marilyn Monroe and her Terrier, Maf. Humphrey Bogart and his beloved Scottish Terrier. Paul McCartney wrote a song about his English Sheepdog Martha While Cat Stevens proclaimed ‘I Love My Dog’ - the title of his first single. Freddie Mercury loved cats, and he also wrote a song about his favorite, Delilah. Yoko, John and friend. Joan Baez and her friend. The best cure for a hangover, Errol Flynn and Arno. Lana...
H.P. Lovecraft with Felis, the cat of Frank Belknap Long It’s fitting that I learned of H.P. Lovecraft’s “Waste Paper” by listening to some interview or other Alan Moore did. Of course, as a parody of “The Waste Land,” Lovecraft’s poem begins with a totally obscure epigraph, unsourced, and in the original Greek: Πἀντα γἐλως καἱ πἀντα κὀνις καἱ πἀντα τὁ μηδἐν. This turns out to be part of the sole surviving verse by Glycon—not the snake god whose priest on Earth is Alan Moore, mind you, but the eponymous poet and inventor of “glyconic meter.” Just as Glycon the god was a hoax, “exposed as a glove-puppet in the second century” (Alan Moore), the Oxford Classical Dictionary says Glycon the poet probably didn’t even write the lonely couplet that comprises his entire literary oeuvre. And, as John Brannon would say, check it out: the second line Lovecraft left out of this two-line poem, presumably because he didn’t know it existed, elegantly summarized his worldview in seven Greek words: πάντα γὰρ ἐξ ἀλόγων ἐστὶ τὰ γινόμενα. It’s enough to make you agree with what Glycon, or whoever, was saying all along in his single, slender entry in the Greek Anthology, to which one translator added the heading “...
Cats and dogs are cool enough on their own, but just in case you weren't convinced about this verified fact, here are some famous people with their pets to convince you. Given how most of the pet owners on this list are larger-than-life celebrities, it's nice to know that even they enjoyed the company of pets just like we do. Sure, maybe not all of us can afford an ocelot like Salvador Dali, but it's nice to know that even he had a cat to scratch behind the ears from time to time.
Gorgeous Illustrations Of Famous Writers' Lives
From Paula Fox to Richard Yates, literary rediscoveries are in vogue. The latest model is wry satirist Barbara Pym
What do Charles Bukowski, Joyce Carol Oates, and Edgar Allan Poe have in common? They love cats. Writers and cats go together like salt and pepper, and here are 16 of our favorite pairs.
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Philadelphia-based artist and journalist, Alison Nastasi, has put together a collection of more than 50 snaps of famous artists and their feline friends in her book, Artists And Their Cats.
Like the rest of us, famed writers loved their furry companions. Here are Woolf, Mitchell, Wharton, and other authors with their dogs and cats.
If you love cats and you love to read, then you'll want to check out our list of favorite fiction books starring felines. There are some new genres waiting for you.