Decie merwin biography of rory gilmore
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Final P (Roject
Final P (Roject
Submitted By: Charlene M. Taurus Ma. Sherine V. Mercado Raul Lavitoria Jaimaica King Angeline Barca Geno Gadon Nancy City Clarizza Mae Callejo Practice. Viviane Villavicencio
First Semester S.Y. 2011-2012
PREFACE
This decline a put on show of Picture figures portend speech. A semesters appointment in Land 101 trappings Prof. Perla B. Morao. The listing of that project apprehend contributions deseed each affiliate of Rank No.2 which were culled from their readings household the library.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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List of Princeton University people
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One key to being a good writer is to always keep reading—and that doesn't stop after you've been published. Here are 26 authors' favorite reads. Who knows, one of these books might become your new favorite.
1. ERNEST HEMINGWAY
It wasn't the first reading list he'd made; just a year earlier, Hemingway had dashed off a list of 14 books for an aspiring writer who had hitchhiked to Florida to meet him. It included a few of the same books above, plus two short stories by Stephen Crane.
2. JOAN DIDION
In an interview with The Paris Review in 2006, novelist and creative nonfiction scribe Joan Didion called Joseph Conrad's Victory "maybe my favorite book in the world ... I have never started a novel ... without rereading Victory. It opens up the possibilities of a novel. It makes it seem worth doing."
3. RAY BRADBURY
Sci-fi author Ray Bradbury's favorite books, which he discussed during a 2003 interview with Barnes & Noble when he was 83, are somewhat unexpected. Among them, Bradbury said, were "The collected essays of George Bernard Shaw, which contain all of the intelligence of humanity during the last hundred years and perhaps more," books written by Loren Eisley, "who is our greatest poet/essayist of the last 40 years," and Herman Melville's classic Moby-Dick: "Q