Browse by author

Parker Dorothy

The Portable Dorothy Parker (Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition)

Penguin Classics

List Price: $20.00
Price: $10.40
You Save: $9.60 (48%)

Description

The second revision in sixty years, this sublime collection ranges over the verse, stories, essays, and journalism of one of the twentieth century’s most quotable authors.
Complete Stories

Penguin Classics

List Price: $17.00
Price: $8.96
You Save: $8.04 (47%)

Description

As this complete collection of her short stories demonstrates, Dorothy Parker’s talents extended far beyond brash one-liners and clever rhymes. Her stories not only bring to life the urban milieu that was her bailiwick but lay bare the uncertainties and disappointments of ordinary people living ordinary lives.


Dorothy Parker: What Fresh Hell Is This?

Penguin (Non-Classics)

List Price: $22.00
Price: $9.50
You Save: $12.50 (57%)

Description

This edition features a new afterword by Marion Meade.

Complete Poems (Penguin Classics)

Penguin Classics

List Price: $18.00
Price: $10.22
You Save: $7.78 (43%)

Description

The firecracker verse of a true American original

Best remembered as a member of the Algonquin Round Table, the fabled Jazz Age literary coterie, Dorothy Parker built a reputation as one of the era's most beloved poets. Parker's satirical wit and sharp-edged humor earned her a reputation as the wittiest woman in America. This Penguin Classics edition of her poetry-the companion to Parker's Complete Stories and introduced by her noted biographer, Marion Meade-is the only complete collection available, showcasing the dry quips and piercingly introspective verse of a writer whose legend continues to fascinate.


Bon Bons, Bourbon and Bon Mots: Stories from the Algonquin Round Table

Traveling Press

List Price: $16.95
Price: $13.30
You Save: $3.65 (22%)

Description

The Algonquin Round Table, or "The Vicious Circle" as it was commonly known, came about much like so many social gatherings. A few friends get together, have a good time, and decide it would be fun to do it on a regular basis. Now, give them all literary or theatrical pedigrees and larger than life personalities. Then put them in a time and place that encourages artistic creativity, excessive drinking and some rather outrageous behavior. Lastly, give them national exposure. What emerges is a group that not only sets the standard for contemporary literary style and wit, but helps change forever the face of American culture. This collection contains the early poems, stories and anecdotes from seven of the Algonquin Round Table writers: Dorothy Parker, Robert Benchley, Franklin Pierce Adams, Heywood Broun, Edna Ferber, Ruth Hale, and Donald Ogden Stewart.
Not Much Fun: The Lost Poems of Dorothy Parker

Scribner

List Price: $17.00
Price: $3.29
You Save: $13.71 (81%)

Description

During the early years of her career, while struggling to "keep body and soul apart" (as she ruefully put it later), Dorothy Parker wrote more than three hundred poems and verses for a variety of popular magazines and newspapers. Between 1926 and 1933 she collected most of these pieces in three volumes of poetry: Enough Rope, Sunset Gun, and Death and Taxes. The remaining poems and verses from America's most renowned cynic make up this volume. Eclectic and exuberant, these 122 once-forgotten gems display Parker's distinctive wit, irony, and precision, as she dissects early-twentieth-century American urban life and gleefully skewers a rich array of targets that range from personal foible to popular culture. With an authoritative, immensely entertaining, and critically acclaimed introduction by Stuart Y. Silverstein, Not Much Fun is an essential addition to the Dorothy Parker library and a welcome gift to her many admirers and devoted fans.
A succinct, yet enlightening introduction and footnotes with quintessential Dorothy Parker anecdotes and quotes serve as brilliant foundation for this collection of "lost" poems. In fact, they are pieces that Parker discarded as not fit for publication, and Parker enthusiasts will notice that many foreshadow more-polished later versions. Though Parker once described her verse as "horribly outdated--anything once fashionable is dreadful now," it's clear that even her "unfit" works are far from dreadful.

Parker Dorothy News




East Texas Bridge Results - Tyler Morning Telegraph
East Texas Bridge ResultsNorth-South: Fraulien Gresham and Betty Kirkwood, 1st; Carl Witt and Ennis Dyess, 2nd; Jackie Kimberley and Vermell Boucher, 3rd; Alta Peck and Dorothy Parker, 4th; Carolyn Chapman and Richard Bryant, 5th. East-West: Mary Bartley and Emily Leake, 1st;

Events calendar - Monterey County Herald
Events calendarTom Parks' "What Fresh Hell Is This: The Wit and Wisdom of Dorothy Parker." Final performances at 7p.m. today and 2p.m. Sunday at the Carl Cherry Center for the Arts, Fourth and Guadalupe, Carmel. A new play by Tom Parks about writer,

The Poetry Corner at the Planet Connections Gets To Know Dickenson ... - Broadway World
The Poetry Corner at the Planet Connections Gets To Know Dickenson The Poetry and Short Stories of Dorothy Parker; and HER KIND: The Life & Poetry of Anne Sexton. All three shows make extensive use of the women's actual writings, offering detailed insights into the mystiques of these very complex and unforgettable

What they're reading - Guelph Mercury
What they're reading"The stories are by those extra-ordinarily talented people: Ring Lardner, Dorothy Parker, Alexand- er Woollcott, and more; these are the minds famous for such iconic barbs as: "What is so rare as a Woollcott first edition? A Woollcott second edition!

ROWE: Six degrees of separation to Hannah Montana - Lufkin Daily News
ROWE: Six degrees of separation to Hannah MontanaBy JANICE ANN ROWE Dorothy Temple clued me in on Sue Dietz's niece, Margo Martindale, in "Hannah Montana: The Movie" with Miley Cyrus. She plays the grandmother Ruby. Some of Margo's other credits are the mother of Hilary Swank in "Million Dollar Baby"