You can access the site from our website at www.georgehail.org and follow the links to our electronic databases -- or directly here. Start by looking up your favorite author and seeing the information available about them. Try it, and let me know if you find is useful!
For example, the opening screen for my favorite book, Jane Eyre, looks like this:
- Title:
- Jane Eyre
- Author:
- Charlotte Bronte
- Summary:
- In early nineteenth-century England, an orphaned young woman accepts employment as a governess and soon finds herself in love with her employer who has a terrible secret.
- Related Information:
- Book Discussion Guides ; Author Biographies ; Recommended Reads
- Publication Information:
- New York: Modern Library 1997, c1847. 682 p.
- Notes:
- Originally published 1847.
- Reading Level:
- Adults
- Lexile:
- 780 [view chart]
- ISBN:
- 9780679602699
0679602690 - Fiction/Nonfiction:
- Fiction
- Author Information:
- All books by: Brontë, Charlotte, 1816-1855
Author Biographies - TopicsFind Similar Books
- Subject Headings:
- Governesses, English
Rochester, Edward Fairfax
Secrets
Men/women relations
Social classes
Nineteenth century
England -- Social life and customs -- 19th century
Gothic fiction, English
Love stories, English - Related Features
- Related Features:
- Book Discussion Guides - Jane Eyre
Author Biographies - Charlotte Brontë
Recommended Reads - If You Like . . . A Great and Terrible Beauty
Author Read-alikes - Jane Austen
Book Discussion Guides - Falling Slowly
Book Discussion Guides - Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress
Book Discussion Guides - Rebecca
Book Discussion Guides - We Were the Mulvaneys
Book Discussion Guides - Angle of Repose
Book Discussion Guides - Fair and Tender Ladies
Book Discussion Guides - The Awakening
BookTalks - The Eyre Affair
BookTalks - Crossing Jordan
Feature Articles - Gothic Fiction, Part I
Feature Articles - Sun, Surf and Sand? Bombs, Bullets and Blood! - ISBNs Associated With This Work
- ISBNs Associated With This Work:
- 9780679602699
- Credits
- Credits:
- Hennepin County Public Library
MetaMetrics, Inc.
Baker & Taylor
Magill Book Reviews, published by Salem Press
Copyright 2005, VNU Business Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved
Added to Novelist: 20010101
TID: 017377 - Database and Persistent link
- Persistent link to this record (Permalink):
- http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=neh&tg=UI&an=017377&site=novp-live
- Database:
- Novelist Plus
- View Links:
- Check the Library Catalog
Magill
Problems with credibility, however, recede into the background as
The second and third sections of the novel are dominated by male figures who symbolize opposing forms of love: Rochester, who stands for physical passion, and St. John, who stands for spiritual passion. At the end of the novel, Rochester, having passed through redemptive fires and having repented of his hubris, can embody the fully integrated masculine self, capable of both physical and spiritual passion.
Kirkus Reviews /* Starred Review */ This need not be limited to a juvenile sale. It is a beautiful gift
(Kirkus Reviews, October 1, 1937)
Happy Reading (and Happy Thanksgiving yesterday)
Carol
2 comments:
Like the new blog, Carol! Found out about it in the East Bay News article about you. Good article, too.
Thanks Prue. It's such a treat to get some feedback.
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