Quantcast
Channel: WN.com - Articles related to Caitriona Lally on Madame Bovary, Beryl the Peril and other heroines
Browsing all 1762 articles
Browse latest View live

The Stacks: William Styron was Lit’s Big Game Hunter

A white southerner by birth, Styron scorned the label of regional author—the world was his territory and the bigger the subject the better, from American slavery to the Holocaust. When Philip Caputo...

View Article


Madame Bovary's malaise and the feminine mystique

Click to play video Return to video Video settings Please Log in to update your video settings Video will begin in 5 seconds. Don't play Play now More video Recommended Replay video Return to video...

View Article


Eggshells by Caitriona Lally review – a daring debut

An eccentric outsider roams around Dublin in an inventive and moving debut...

View Article

Gemma Bovary presents a new recipe for Madame Bovary

Audiences may know Gemma Arterton as the Bond girl in Quantum of Solace or Gretel in Hansel and Gretel: Witch Hunters but the British actress’s repertoire expands past action films to the classics. In...

View Article

David Bowie's list of 100 favorite books reveal his true inner nerd

We all know David Bowie as a music and pop culture icon. But if you are hoping looking for a crash course in must-read literature, look no further than Bowie's 100 favorite books. Bowie's list is as...

View Article


'Madame Bovary' returns to speak to modern condition in two distinct films

It would seem unlikely that a story about a 19th century young French woman escaping her marriage and tedious provincial life by embarking on scandalous affairs would have much appeal to 21st century...

View Article

Writers pick the best books of 2014: part 2

From Britain’s brilliantly inventive Ali Smith to America’s master storyteller Richard Ford, from Michael Lewis’s cautionary tale of Wall Street renegades to Henry Marsh’s candid account of...

View Article

Mia Wasikowska's ‘Madame Bovary’ Seduces U.S. Distributor Millennium...

Millennium Entertainment has�acquired U.S. distribution rights to�Sophie Barthes’ drama “Madame�Bovary,” which stars Mia Wasikowska, Paul Giamatti, Rhys Ifans,�Ezra Miller and Logan Marshall-Green. The...

View Article


Madame Bovary is Half of a Haunted, Remarkably Empathetic Film

On its surface, Sophie Barthes’s film of Gustave Flaubert’s Madame Bovary comes at us like a musty blast of Quality – what...

View Article


Remembering David Bowie through his 100 favorite books

Although David Bowie was best known for his music, he also made countless contributions to the worlds of art, fashion and film. But the singer, who died Sunday, was also devoted to literature. In 2013,...

View Article

‘Based on a true story’: the fine line between fact and fiction

From Kapuscinski to Knausgaard, from Mantel to Macfarlane, more and more writers are challenging the border between fiction and nonfiction. Here Geoff Dyer – longtime master of the space between, in...

View Article

'Bovery' or 'Bovary,' story still works

When in 1857, Gustav Flaubert published his now-classic novel, "Emma Bovary," about a wife's infidelity, the writer was brought to trial (and acquitted) for immorality, overlooking the work's profound...

View Article

Review: Uninspired And Disengaged 'Madame Bovary' Starring Mia Wasikowska

By Rodrigo Perez | The Playlist Tue Jun 09 18:04:00 EDT 2015 0 It is not prerequisite that the period costume drama needs a hook, but it certainly doesn’t hurt. Joe Wright’s stylish “Anna Karenina”...

View Article


100 novels everyone should read

...

View Article

Ketil Bjornstad: ‘The novel is the best weapon against multi-tasking’

Ketil Bjornstad is a Norwegian pianist, composer and author. ketilbjornstad.com What was the first book to make an impression on you? It must have been Saint Exupéry, The little Prince. My father read...

View Article


Madame Bovary at 160: a bourgeois sex revolutionary

Flaubert’s anti-heroine, the original Desperate Housewife lost in the dreams of romantic fiction, was a scandal on publication and still challenges our morality...

View Article

The 100 best novels in English? Irish writers and critics have their say

Fair play to Robert McCrum. Compiling a list over two years entitled The 100 best novels written in English for the Observer and guardian.com is not simply sticking your head over the literary parapet,...

View Article


Gavin McCrea: ‘when I finished John McGahern’s Memoir, I wept for an entire day’

What was the first book to make an impression on you? The one that I watched my mother read in her chair in the corner of the kitchen. What was your favourite book as a child? Roald Dahl’s Matilda....

View Article

Ragnar Jónasson Q&A: ‘The Murder of Roger Ackroyd had a great impact on me’

Ragnar Jónasson is the Icelandic author of the Dark Iceland crime series set in the northernmost town in Iceland, Siglufjordur. Snowblind (Orenda Books) is the first book in the Dark Iceland series....

View Article

Michael Grothaus Q&A: ‘Don’t worry about the first draft. It’s always going...

What was the first book to make an impression on you? The very first book to make an impression on me was the novel Shibumi by Trevanian. It’s a philosophical exploration about democracy, consumerism,...

View Article
Browsing all 1762 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>