Written by Denis Diderot, Rameau’s Nephew was published in 1805. The work was written in French in the 1760s and 70s, but it was not published during Diderot’s lifetime. Von Goethe translated the text into Germany in 1805 and it was published...

Lemon Sky was first produced in 1970. Lanford Wilson had first developed it with Michael Douglas at the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center's National Playwright Conference in 1968. The play would be presented in a stage reading. It was well received by...

Streamers was first performed in 1976. The work is a play written by David Rabe that is set in an American army barracks. The men there are preparing to sail out to fight in southeast Asia. The play highlights the interactions between a group of...

Essentially a sentimental novel written by Henry Fielding, Amelia (1751) was the last and perhaps the most intense of his works. Amelia chronicles the life of the eponymous heroine and Captain William Booth post-wedlock.

Amelia weaves a tapestry...

Alternately titled The Double Life of Cassiel Roadnight, Double is the fourth novel published by British children's/YA novelist Jenny Valentine. Valentine is a previous winner of the Guardian Prize for Children's Fiction for her 2007 debut novel,...

George Brant's play comes out of the true story of Mary the elephant, hung in Erwin Tennessee on September 13, 1916. Erwin, Tennessee is the actual town where the events occured, included the young man being trampled to death by Mary and her...

Grounded is a full-length play written by George Brant. The premiere was mounted at the London’s Gate Theatre and proved so successful that it has since been translated into nearly a dozen languages for productions around the globe. Grounded won...

Written in 2003, this novel is about a set of different topics which are considered in detail. The book raises many questions, but there is no doubt that this story is rich in ambiguity. Since the author avoids discussing and explaining his works...

William Hill Brown’s The Power of Sympathy holds a distinctive place in American literature. With its publication by Isaiah Thomas and Company of Boston in 1789, The Power of Sympathy became the very first novel written by an American that was set...

Marie Lu wrote the dystopian and young adult novel, Prodigy, not long after her first book, Legend, was a success. Prodigy was published on January 29, 2013, and is the second book of the "Legend" trilogy. It was preceded by Legend and followed by...

Champion was written by Marie Lu in 2013 and was published by Putnam Juvenile. It is the third and final book of the Legend trilogy, which has received praise from Kirkus Review, The New York Times and USA Today, among other sources.

When asked...

Alexander Aleksandrovich Bogdanov was the co-founders of Russian Social Democratic Labor Party and one of the key rivals of Vladimir Lenin. He was very influential due to his Marxist ideology and played a significant role in the first decade of...

Written by Barbara Kingsolver and published in 2009, The Lacuna is Kingsolver’s sixth novel. The Lacuna traces the journey of Harrison William Shepherd from Mexico City, Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo to America, the Cold War, and the Red Scare....

“The Stone Boy” was originally published in 1957; nearly three decades later in 1984, the short story was adapted into a movie. “The Stone Boy” was written by Gina Berriault, a California native whose parents were Russian-Jewish. Berriault’s...

Michael Ondaatje's breakout novel Coming Through Slaughter is an interesting attempt to fill in the gaps of the life of Buddy Bolden. Inventing events and people to better explain the known details of Bolden's life, Ondaatje challenges some...

Set during the Civil War, the story begins with a six-year-old Southern boy who wanders away from his house and disappears into the nearby woods, all the while dreaming of military victories and heroic conquests. Feeling emboldened by the spirits...

Where Things come back is a novel published in the year 2011 by the American author John Corey Whaley. The novel is characterized as being a novel for young adults and it quickly became popular. The author even was awarded the Printz Award in 2012...

Drowning Is Inevitable is a young adult fiction novel by Shalanda Stanley. In the novel, Stanley chronicles the journey of Olivia, a young girl whose mother committed suicide at the tender age of 19. In her quest to break free from bondage to her...