Monday, October 25, 2010

Velveeta Ro-tel Pasta Chicken

...


... 'm In Love.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Where Can I Buy Soluble Starch

Poetry and Fiction in Italy

A B C E G I L Poetry S T V W

A

American Academy in Rome
.
Anthology (fragmented) literature Italian
Romanzieri.com is a large collection of e-books formatted to be read with Microsoft Reader.

.
Authors, poets.

.
Authors. A list of Italian writers.
Wikipedia entries.
.
B

Library of Italian Classics
Joseph Bong Lucera
.
BUBLE Link
Adventures of Pinnochio, armarium Labyrinth: Labyrinth Latin Bookcase, Decameron Web, Italian Language and Literature, Renaissance Dante in Print (1472-1629).

.
C

Centre for Contemporary Poetry, University of Bologna

.
D

Decameron Web Boccacio biography and etexts,
with background information on Renaissance society, religion and politics.

.
thirteenth century. An archive .
old Italian poetry, in the period from its origins to Dante.

.
E

Essayists. Italian essayists, Wikipedia entries.
.
Fondazione Ezio Galiano

G

Genovese
An anthology of literature in the Genoese origin (thirteenth century) to today.

.
Guido Mazzoni Collection
Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library, Duke University.

.
I

Italian American Writers
Contemporary Italian American writers.

.
Italian literature internet links. New York University
.
Italianistica Online
Italian Literature, Language and Culture on the Web A digital library.

.
Italian Literature. Italian literary texts (in Italian).
An Anthology.

.
Italian Newspapers. The niche of the Invisible City.
Novelty, regular. Periodicals, political journals, periodicals. An Extensive web index.

.
Italian poetry etexts.
.
Italian Witers Index from The Free Dictionary.
.
J

L

Literature. The portal Italian literature.
the classics, authors of the twentieth century, writers of today.
.
Liber Liber: Biblioteca (Project Manutius)
Large collection of texts in RTF or ASCII (txt) format.

. Libraries

index OPAC SBN (National Library Service)
Union catalog of over 2.000 Italian libraries.

Lietocollelibri. Little Book for Collectors
.
Literature Online, a directory of Italian literature websites and ezines ..
. N

The Narratore.com
Audiobooks in Italian literature and audio.
.
New York Public Library Collection Italian literature. Bobst Library
.
Novelists. Wikipedia entries on Italian Novelists.
. O

Literature Italian Open Directory Project Web Directory

P

Poetry Center of Contemporary Poetry, University of Bologna.
Italian poets.
.
The Early Italian Poets From Ciullo D'Alcamo to Dante Alighieri.
Dante Gabriel Roseetti
.
Italian poetry etexts.
.
Modern Italian Poets by WD Howells.
Full Text Free Book
.
Poetry. Italian Poetry. Italian poetry of the late twentieth century
Italian Poetry of the Second half of the 20th Century
.
Poetry. Italian Poetry.
A website for contemporary Italian poetry.
.
Wikipedia list of Italian language poets.

top

S

Writers. Scrittorincorso
A window on the world of Italian writers and their works.

.
Italian writers, Wikipedia.
.
T


V

Vico Acitillo124 - Poetry Wave.
A magazine of poetry (and art). Electronic Arts Center of Small and directed by Emilio Antonio Spagnuolo.

.
Vos. Voice of the Shuttle Italian Literature Web Diirectory
. W

Wikipedia entry on Italian literature.
.
Wikipedia: Literature
.
Italian Women Writers.
.
Writers. Italian writers.
Wikipedia entries.

Italian Writers. Writers Italian
AB C D E F G L M P R S U

B

Boccacio, John

Boccacio, John. John Boccacio. Decameron Web
Boccacio biography and etexts, with background information on Renaissance society, religion, politics.
Giovanni Boccaccio. Wikipedia entry.
Works of Giovanni Boccaccio. The Decamaron, text, concordances and frequency lists.

C

Calvino, Italo

Italo Calvino. Outside the Town of Malbork.
Calvin reviews, news, selections. bio.

Italo Calvino. In Calvino Veritas: A Critical Calvin Page.
Works by Calvin, essays on Calvino.

Italo Calvino, Wikipedia entry

Caproni, Giorgio

Caproni, Giorgio. Georgio Caproni

Casanova, Giacomo

Casanova, Giacomo Casanova
Magazine. News, articles, pictures, diaries, music, Casanova's travels, Casanova in Venice, literature.

Cavalcanti, Guido

Cavalcanti, Guido. Guido Cavalcanti
This electronic edition of the Poems of Guido Cavalcanti reproduces the text established by Gianfranco Contini in Poets of the thirteenth century, vol. II, Milan, Naples, 1960 where he founded, with no major changes, stop the lesson in the critical edition of Guido Favati Milan, Naples, 1957.

top  

D

Dante Alighieri

Alighieri Dante. Dante Online
Dante Alighieri. Centro Dantesco di Ravenna
Dante Alighieri. Digital Dante
A long-term effort of the Institute for Learning Technologies at Columbia University to prototype and develop an online, multimedia Dante-related academic resource combining traditional elements of scholarly research with new communication and presentation possibilities enabled by networked digital technology.
Dante Alighieri. The World of Dante. University of Virginia
Dante Alighieri on the Web
Dante, Wikipedia entry.
Dante Alighieri. The Princeton Dante Project.
The PDP combines a traditional approach to the study of Dante's Comedy with new techniques of compiling and consulting data, images, and sound.

d'Annunzio, Gabriele

d'Annunzio, Gabriele. Gabriele d'Annunzio. Wikipedia entry.
Gabriele d'Annunzio, a website. Life, works, deeds and loves of the poet.
Gabriele D'Annunzio. Biography.
Annunzio, Gabriele. Gabriel D'Annuzio etexts.
Gabriel D'Anunziata. Gabriele d'Annunzio. net
To return to D'Annunzio, the role that competes in the history and art, for better or for worse.

Gabriel D'Annunzio. Gabriel D'Annunzio

de Céspedes, Alba

de Céspedes, Alba. Alba de Cespedes
An introduction to the works of Alba de Cespedes.

E

Eco, Umberto

Eco, Umberto. Umberto Eco official website.
Umberto Eco, Wikipedia entry
Umberto Eco on microcomputers and their differing religious affiliations.
 

Erba, Luciano

Erba, Luciano. Luciano Erba. A Luciano Erba homepage.  

F

Ferrarese, Pieroni

Ferrarese Pieroni, Paola. Paola Pieroni Ferrarese

Foscolo, Ugo

Foscolo, Ugo. Ugo Foscolo, introduction and etexts in Italian.
Ugo Foscolo Project
IntraText Digital Library
Ugo Foscolo's prose works.
Texts of Foscolo and chronology

G

Galileo Galalei

Galileo Galalei

Gozzano, Guido

Gozzano, Guido. Guido Gozzano
All Poems: Guido Gozzano GozzanoGiudo. The way of shelter, talks butterflies, poems scattered.

Guido Gozzani. Biography.

L

Lampedusa, Giuseppe

Lampedusa, Giuseppe Tomasi di. Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa
Wikipedia entry.
Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa. Background information.

Leopardi, Giacomo

Leopardi, Giocomo. Giocomo Leopardi.
Wikipedia entry.
Giocomo Leopardi. A site dedicated to the works of Giocomo Leopardi.
Project Giacomo Leopardi
Giocomo Leopardi. The poems of Leopardi Giocomo. Project Gutenberg
Giacomo Leopardi and Italian Poetry

Levi, Primo

Levi, Primo. Primo Levi. Wikipedia entry.
Primo Levi
A page by the Operatist who Composed in honor of Levi.
Primo Levi, background information, bibliography.

Luzi, Mario

Luzi, Mario. Amario Luzi homepage.
Mario Luzi: L'opera poetica.
Mario Luzi. Texts online, short biography.


top  

M

Machiavelli, Nicolò

Machiavelli, Nicolò. Nicolo Machiavelli. The Prince, by Nicolò Machiavelli.
Translated into English by W. K. Marriott.

Nicolo Machiavelli forum.
Nicolo Machiavelli. Overview and introduction.
Nicolo Machiavelli, biography and searchable works.
Online Literature.com

Nicolo Machiavelli web links. Epistemelinks.

Manzoni, Alessandro

Manzoni, Alessandro. Alessandro Manzoni
etext of The Betrothed.
Alessandro Manzoni, Wikipedia entry.
Poems by Alessandro Manzoni.

Manzoni Gian Ruggero

Manzoni Gian Ruggero. Gian Ruggero Manzoni

Montale, Eugenio

Montale, Eugenio. A poet's notebook.
Eugenio Montale. Poets.org
Eugenio Montale. Noble Prize Archive
Eugenio Montale, Wikipedia entry.

P

Pasolini, Pier Paolo

Pier Paolo Pasolini poems Original Italian text

Pier Paolo Pasolini
Pasolini.net, a website dedicated Pasolini.
Pasolini Wikipedia entry.

Pascoli, Giovanni

Pascoli, Giovanni. Giovanni Pascoli
Giovanni Pascoli Wikiepedia entry.
Giovanni Pascoli
Free site dedicated to Giovanni Pascoli.

Pavese, Cesare

Pavese, Cesare. Cesare Pavese, Wikipedia entry.

Pirandello, Luigi

Pirandello, Luigi. Luigi Prandelli

Petrarch, Francesco

Petrarch, Francesco. Francesco Petrarch
Inglese Petrarch poems in translation.
Petrarch. Letters, c 1372.

Canzoniere and other works.
Petrarch and Laura
Multi-lingual site including many translated works (letters, poems, books) in the public domain and biography, pictures, music
Excerpts from Petrarch's works and letters.
Sonnets by Francesco Petrarca (Petrarch) (1304-1374)
Works by Petrarch. P roject Gutenberg
Petrarch biography and overview.

Q

Quasimodo, Salvatore

Salvatore Quasimodo
Official website (Italian)
Quasimodo page at the Nobel Prize website.
Road Agrigento , in Inglese translation
Salvatore Quasimodo poems (Italian).

R

Rossi, Massimo

Rossi, Massimo. Massimo Rossi

S

Svevo, Italo (Ettore Schmitz)

Svevo, Italo. Works by Svevo:
text with Concordances.
Italo Svevo. Wikipedia entry.
Italo Svevo. An introduction and list of works.

T

rate, Joseph

Tasso, Torquato. Torquato Tasso. Etexts, introduction.

U

Ungaretti, Giuseppe

Ungaretti, Giuseppe. Giuseppe Ungaretti. Poems
Giuseppe Ungaretti
Giuseppe Ungaretti. A portal dedicated to Giuseppe Ungaretti.

Vassalli, Sebastiano

Vassalli, Sebastiano. Sebastiano Vassalli homepage.

ITALIC, LATIN, ROMANIAN,
Rhaetia-Romanic LITERATURE
See also: Classical Literature, Latin Literature
.
Bibliotheca Latina . Latin writer index.
.
Latin etexts (in Latin with English translations).

Authors

Aesop. Aesop's Fables online.
.
Ovid
.
Virgil







http://www.zeroland.co.nz/literature_italy.html

Sunday, October 17, 2010

What Is The Best Soap For Women

My World

My world is made up of pieces, as in a kaleidoscope

images of time, stretching into oblivion with every movement.

My world gathered from the present, becoming someone else's past ...

Gone events, people and things.

I'm not trying to keep them in his memory

In the hope of meeting there, where other time and space.

My world consists of changing mosaics.

Images crumbling and heard, as broken glass.

My World needs at the beginning and end.

beginning was the word.

I'm trying to recall the stories told by old doctor,

After spending 25 years in Soviet concentration camps.

Yes, it is was in the beginning is now.

adult male as well as the fifteen-year-boy

can not understand why he should be a piece of land

Calling своей родиной.




Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Christopher Columbus Labeled Boats

Writer's Guide

The University of Victoria Writer's Guide

 



 
http://www.fbi.gov/++resource++plonetheme.fbi.images/logo.png

Working with the FBI:
A Guide for Writers , Authors, and Producers


"The Ultimate Guide to Modern Writers of Science Fiction & Fantasy: 1990-2009" ->


Making sense out of the current boom in fantastic literature

It is no secret that we live in the Golden Age of Fantastic Literature. With more books published in the genre than ever, plus an ever-increasing availability of obscure titles on the internet, a dedicated fan of science fiction and fantasy literature might think he died and went to heaven.

Not only are the pulp masterpieces of the 30's and 40's easily acquired (for the most part), but the whole history of the genre can be sampled and read in any order, and enjoyed as thoroughly as one likes - and on top of that more than 3,000 new books are published every year, with at least a hundred of utmost quality by new and promising writers. So, speaking of new writers...


(art courtesy Christophe Vacher )

A Guide to Becoming a Better Writer: 15 Practical Tips

Typewriter

 

If you’ve always dreamed of being the next Hemingway or Vonnegut (or even Grisham), or perhaps if you just want to write better essays for school or posts for your blog … you need to sharpen those writing skills.

Becoming the best writer you can be isn’t easy, I won’t lie to you.

It takes hard work. But it’s worth the effort. And if it seems like an insurmountable task, there are some concrete things you can do today that will get you on the road to improvement.

Personally, I’ve been a fiction, newspaper, magazine and blog writer for 17 years now, writing for a variety of publications … and I’m still trying to improve. Every writer can get better, and no writer is perfect. I think I’ve grown tremendously as a writer over the last couple of decades, but it has been a painful journey. Let me share some of what I’ve learned.

No matter what level of writer you are, there should be a suggestion or twelve here that will help.

1. Read great writers . This may sound obvious, but it has to be said. This is the place to start. If you don’t read great writing, you won’t know how to do it. Everyone starts by learning from the masters, by emulating them, and then through them, you find your own voice. Read a lot. As much as possible. Pay close attention to style and mechanics in addition to content.

2. Write a lot . Try to write every day, or multiple times a day if possible. The more you write, the better you’ll get. Writing is a skill, and like any other skill, you have to practice it to get better. Write stuff for yourself, write for a blog, write for other publications. Write just to write, and have a blast doing it. It gets easier after awhile if you practice a lot.

3. Write down ideas, all the time . Keep a little notebook handy (Nabokov carried around index cards) and write down ideas for stories or articles or novels or characters. Write down snippets of conversation that you hear. Write down plot twists and visual details and fragments of song lyrics or poems that move you. Having these ideas written down helps, because they can inspire you or actually go directly into your writing. I like to keep a list of post ideas for my blog , and I continually add to it.

4. Create a writing ritual . Find a certain time of day when you can write without interruptions, and make it a routine. For me, mornings work best, but others might find lunch or evenings or midnight hours the best. Whatever works for you, make it a must-do thing every single day. Write for at least 30 minutes, but an hour is even better. If you’re a full-time writer, you’ll need to write for several hours a day, as I do. But don’t worry! It helps you get better.

5. Just write . If you’ve got blank paper or a blank screen staring at you, it can be intimidating. You might be tempted to go check your email or get a snack. Well, don’t even think about it, mister. Just start writing. Start typing away — it doesn’t matter what you write — and get the fingers moving. Once you get going, you get in the flow of things, and it gets easier. I like to start out by typing things like my name or a headline or something easy like that, and then the juices start flowing and stuff just pours out of me. But the key is to just get going.

6. Eliminate distractions . Writing does not work well with multi-tasking or background noise. It’s best done in quiet, or with some mellow music playing. Do your writing with a minimal writer like WriteRoom or DarkRoom or Writer , and do it in full-screen. Turn off email or IM notifications, turn off the phone and your cell phone, turn off the TV, and clear off your desk … you can stuff everything in a drawer for now until you have time to sort everything out later … but don’t get into sorting mode now, because it’s writing time! Clear away distractions so you can work without interruption.

7. Plan, then write . This may sound contradictory to the above “just write” tip, but it’s not really. I find it useful to do my planning or pre-writing thinking before I sit down to write. I’ll think about it during my daily run, or walk around for a bit to brainstorm, then write things down and do an outline if necessary. Then, when I’m ready, I can sit down and just crank out the text. The thinking’s already been done. For a great method for planning out a novel, see the Snowflake Method .

8. Experiment . Just because you want to emulate the great writers doesn’t mean you have to be exactly like them. Try out new things. Steal bits from other people. Experiment with your style, your voice, your mechanics, your themes. Try out new words. Invent new words. Experimentalize everything. And see what works, and toss out what doesn’t.

9. Revise . If you really crank out the text, and experiment, and just let things flow, you’ll need to go back over it. Yes, that means you. Many writers hate revising, because it seems like so much work when they’ve already done the writing. But if you want to be a good writer, you need to learn to revise. Because revision is where good writing really is. It separates the mediocre from the great. Go back over everything, looking not only for grammar and spelling mistakes, but for unnecessary words and awkward structures and confusing sentences. Aim for clarity, for strength, for freshness.

10. Be concise . This is best done during the revision process, but you need to edit every sentence and paragraph and remove everything but the essential. A short sentence is preferred over a longer one, and a clear word is preferred over two in jargonese. Compact is powerful.

11. Use powerful sentences . Aim for shorter sentences with strong verbs. Of course, not every sentence should be the same — you need variation — but try to create sentences with oomph. You might find this easier to do in the revision stage, as it might not be something you’re thinking about when you’re pumping out that first draft.

12. Get feedback . You can’t get better in a vacuum. Get someone to read over your stuff — preferably a good writer or editor. Someone who reads a lot, and can give you honest and intelligent feedback. And then listen. Really try to understand the criticism and accept it and use it to improve. Instead of being hurt, thank your editor for helping you get better.

13. Put yourself out there . At some point, you’ll need to let others read your writing. Not just the person who you’re allowing to read it, but the general public. You’ll need to publish your book or short story or poem, or write for a publication. If you’re already doing a blog, that’s good, but if no one reads it, then you need to find a bigger blog and try to submit a guest post. Putting your writing out in the public can be nerve-wracking, but it is a crucial (if painful) part of every writer’s growth. Just do it.

14. Learn to be conversational . Many people write too stiffly. I find that it’s so much better to write like you talk (without all the umms and uhhs). People relate to it better. It’s not an easy task at first, but it’s something to strive for. And that brings up another point — it’s better to break the rules of grammar in order to sound conversational (as I did in the last sentence) than to sound stilted just so you can follow the proper rules. But don’t break the rules of grammar without good reason — know that you’re doing it, and why.

15. Start and end strong . The most important parts of your writing are the beginning and end. Especially the beginning. If you don’t hook your reader in the beginning, they won’t read the rest of your writing. So when you’ve written your first draft, spend some extra time crafting a good beginning. Get them interested and wanting to know more. And when you’re done with that, write a good ending … that will leave them wanting more of your writing.