Gratis Versand ab € 16,99. Mehr Infos.
Bookbot

Lawrence Lee

    Jack's Book
    Stained Glass
    The Louder I Will Sing
    Die Welt der Glasfenster
    • Die Welt der Glasfenster Zwölf Jahrhunderte westlicher Glasmalerei in über 500 Farbbildern. Illustriert, indiziert.

      Die Welt der Glasfenster
    • The Louder I Will Sing

      • 272 Seiten
      • 10 Lesestunden

      A snapshot of Britain's relationship with race and racism in recent history, THE LOUDER I WILL SING is the story of Lee Lawrence's fight for justice for his mother Cherry Groce, who was paralysed as a result of police shooting her in her home in front of her children - the catalyst to the 1985 Brixton riots.

      The Louder I Will Sing
      4,5
    • Stained Glass

      • 207 Seiten
      • 8 Lesestunden

      For hundreds of years, the makers of stained glass windows have enriched and beautified cathedrals and churches across Europe. This magnificent heritage, a feast of glorious colour, lives on as an inspiration to both admirers and craftsmen.

      Stained Glass
      3,7
    • Jack's Book

      • 304 Seiten
      • 11 Lesestunden

      Here, in what has become a classic of its kind since its publication in 1978, is the fascinating story of Jack Kerouac, "King of the Beats" and American literary legend, recorded through the voices of his friends and lovers. Authors Barry Gifford and Lawrence Lee retraced Kerouac's life at home and on the road and talked with the prophets, musicians, poets, socialites, and working people who knew Jack Kerouac. Some are famous like Allen Ginsberg, Gore Vidal, William Burroughs, Gary Snyder, among others; and some are not like Jack's boyhood buddies, his lovers, and his barroom companions. All, however, have contributed to a remarkably vibrant, riveting portrait of a life. We see Jack at Columbia University and on the scene of Greenwich Village; speeding across the tarmac of America with Neal Cassidy ("Dan Moriarty" in Kerouac's classic novel, On the Road); at home with his possessive mother; in California, drinking wine and talking Buddhism; and finally, in Florida, where his life ends tragically at forty-seven years old. Jack's Book, like Kerouac's novels, makes a unique contribution to our understanding of a man and a generation that shaped the dreams and visions of those who followed.

      Jack's Book
      4,1