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It s Tom Stoppard s World and We Don t Live in It

It’s Tom Stoppard’s World and We Don’t Live in It Tom Stoppard in New York in 1974, when “Jumpers” opened on Broadway.Credit.Jack Manning/The New York Times Buy Book ▾ By David Ives By Hermione Lee In his early 20s, Tom Stoppard — rather like young Aladdin and his lamp — told his mother, “I’d like to be famous!” The lad in this case played genie to himself and made his own wish come true by pouring out, over more than five decades, a glistening stream of gloriously articulate, brilliantly intricate plays. A fulfilling home and social life seems to have accompanied the wished-for fame. An early unhappy marriage gave way to two much jollier ones, there’ve been terrific children, grouse shooting and rare-book collecting, friendship with Mick Jagger and cricket with Harold Pinter, the whole unimaginable public and private sundae topped off in 1997 by a knighthood. Over the course of his extraordinary life — he’s

Pratilipi,a storytelling platformfor the homegrown writer

Updated: February 24, 2021 16:26 IST Find poems, short stories and novels on the platform, which has 3 lakh writers and more than 2.5 crore readers Share Article AAA The cover of ‘Tashree: Don’t look into her eyes’ by Sumit Menaria   | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement Find poems, short stories and novels on the platform, which has 3 lakh writers and more than 2.5 crore readers Ranjeet Pratap Singh (32), co-founder and CEO of Pratilipi, a homegrown storytelling platform, and Sumit Menaria, one of its star authors whose novel is scheduled to be published in the first week of March share few similarities. While Singh is an engineer who grew up in Fattepur, a small village in Uttar Pradesh, Menaria is a chartered accountant who hails from Udaipur in Rajasthan. What bonds the two, however, is a love of books and Pratilipi.

Memoir by Amos Oz s Daughter Divides Family and Shocks Israel

Memoir by Amos Oz’s Daughter Divides Family and Shocks Israel “He told me I was filth,” Galia Oz writes in her book, “Something Disguised as Love,” among other accusations of physical and emotional abuse. Her mother and siblings have defended their late father. Amos Oz in 1986. Family members have defended him after his daughter Galia accused him of abuse in her new book, “Something Disguised as Love.”Credit.Jack Manning/The New York Times JERUSALEM — Amos Oz was one of Israel’s most celebrated authors, a humanist who used his words to pursue peace in a region wracked by conflict.

Journalist turned novelist releases A Girl Like You

Journalist turned novelist releases A Girl Like You Jack Rightmyer FacebookTwitterEmail 1of3 2of3 3of3 Author Cari Scribner is one of those people who refuse to give up. She has wanted to be a writer since she was in third grade when her teacher at Blue Creek Elementary School, part of the North Colonie School District, told her she wrote the best essays in the class. “That teacher took me aside and said I was going to be a writer,” said Scribner. “I believed her. She was my teacher.” She eventually attended The College of Saint Rose where she majored in journalism and minored in creative writing. “While there I wrote everything, a screenplay, haikus, even advertising copy. The writing classes were very specific, but I found the conciseness of journalism to be my calling.”

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