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Next
— published 2010 — 5 editions |
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Kings of Infinite Space: A Novel
— published 2004 — 5 editions |
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The Lecturer's Tale
— published 1997 — 5 editions |
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Publish and Perish: Three Tales of Tenure and Terror
by James Hynes, James Hynes, Ma — published 1998 — 5 editions |
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The Wild Colonial Boy: A Novel
— 4 editions |
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Talks with Shorthand Students; A Series of Chatty Explanations of the Principles of Pitman's Shorthand
— published 2010 — 2 editions |
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Pygmalion
by George Bernard Shaw, James Hynes — published 1913 — 122 editions |
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Parnassus on Wheels
by Christopher Morley, James Hynes — published 1917 — 64 editions |
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The Haunted Bookshop (Barnes & Noble Library of Essential Reading)
by Christopher Morley, James Hynes — published 1918 — 60 editions |
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Heart of the West (Barnes & Noble Library of Essential Reading)
by O. Henry, James Hynes — published 1919 — 40 editions |
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“A Michigander can be every bit as prickly as a New Yorker, just not out loud. The Midwesterner’s credo: keep it to yourself.”
― James Hynes, Next
― James Hynes, Next
“An advertising man understands even more viscerally than an academic that the world is made of discourse, Pescecane argued; he understands in his bones that true power resides in the infinite manipulability of signs.”
― James Hynes, The Lecturer's Tale
― James Hynes, The Lecturer's Tale
“The only distinguishing characteristic of a literature professor at the millennium was that he or she wrote about other people's writing. Apart from that, the writing he wrote about didn't even need to be literature, or writing about literature, or even writing about writing about literature. He needed theory...In the unflickering glare, at the center of a severe perspective, Nelson suddenly felt the visceral truth of the world as text; he apperceived the fundamentally linguistic nature of reality. Everything was text, at every level of existence, all the way up from quarks to queer theory. Words arranged in lines; lines arrayed on pages; pages pressed together, bound, and trimmed in books; books arranged cover to cover along a shelf like the words in a line of text; shelves stacked one atop the other like lines of text on a page; rows of shelves pressed together, with just the barest passage for the reader, like the pages of a book.”
― James Hynes, The Lecturer's Tale
― James Hynes, The Lecturer's Tale
Topics Mentioning This Author
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reading with Style: RwS Completed Tasks - Winter | 715 | 275 | Mar 01, 2011 09:19am | |
| Beyond Reality: Favorite reads of 2011 | 19 | 51 | Jan 05, 2012 09:58am | |
| Reading with Style: Reading w/Style Completed Tasks - Winter 2011/12 | 1114 | 282 | Feb 29, 2012 08:44pm | |
| The Next Best Boo...: * Your Latest Splurge | 9827 | 13598 | Jun 01, 2012 03:11pm | |
| The Next Best Boo...: * What are you reading? | 28619 | 26817 | 1 hour, 30 min ago |
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