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Books with title The Purple Cow

  • The Purple Land

    W. H. Hudson

    Paperback (Forgotten Books, July 8, 2012)
    Cfte purple LanD PREFACE (HIS work was first issued in 1885, by Messrs. Sampson Low, in two slim volumes, with the longer, and to most persons, enigmatical title of The Purple Land That England Lost. A purple land may be found in almost any region of the globe, and tis of our gains, not our losses, we keep count. A few notices of the book appeared in the papers, one or two of the more serious literary journals reviewing it (not favourably) under the heading of Travels and Geography ;but the reading public cared not to buy, and it very shortly fell into oblivion. There it might have remained for a further period of nineteen years, or for ever, since the sleep of a book is apt to be of the unawakening kind, had not certain men of letters, who found it on a forgotten heap and liked it in spite of its faults, or because of them, concerned themselves to revive it. We are often told that an author never wholly loses his affection for a first book, and the feeling has been likened (more than once) to that of a parent towards a first-born. I have not said it, but in consenting to this reprint I considered that a writers early or unregarded work is apt to be raked up when he is not standing by to make remarks. He may be absent on a journey from which he is not expected to return. It accordingly seemed better that I should myself supervise a new edition, since this would enable me to remove a few of the numerous spots and pimples which decorate the ingenious countenance of the work before handing it on to posterity. Besides many small verbal corrections and changes, the deletion of some paragraphs and the insertion of a few new ones, I have omitted one entire chapter containing the Story of a Piebald Horse, recently reprinted in another book entitled El Ombu.(Typographical errors above are due to OCR software and don't occur in the book.)About the Publisher Forgotten Books is a publisher of historical writin
  • The Color Purple

    Alice Walker

    Hardcover (Perfection Learning Prebound, Sept. 16, 1986)
    None
  • The Color Purple

    Alice Walker

    Paperback
    None
  • The Purple Bush

    Bob Netzler, Carol Netzler, Rich Schierloh

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Nov. 28, 2016)
    A young boy, minding his own business, is walking along. When out of nowhere he hears a cow moo at him. He looks around and finds that the sound is coming from a purple bush That’s when his adventure truly begins.
  • The Color Purple

    Alice Walker

    Paperback (Perfection Learning Prebound, Aug. 31, 1983)
    None
  • The Purple Land

    William Henry Hudson

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, July 12, 2016)
    Being the Narrative of Richard Lamb's Adventures in South America, as Told by Himself. "'The Purple Land,' is, like 'Green Mansions,' a story of adventure in South America; unlike the latter, however, it partakes so little of fairyland and is, ostensibly, so thoroughgoing a chronicle of real life that when first published it was reviewed in several instances under the classification 'Books of travel and geography.'...The reader follows the ragged hero through one adventure after another with an interest that intensifies as the latter nears the utterly simple goal toward which he is traveling amid perils of wilderness, of lawless settlement, and the typical South American revolution that is here portrayed with an intimate truthfulness rare among writers essaying the subject." -The New York Times "One of his earliest books was a narrative of 'one Richard Lamb's adventures in the Banda Oriental, in South America, as told by himself,' and it was called 'The purple land that England lost,' this allusive title referring to the blood that had been shed on the soil of Uruguay and to the fact that it might easily at one time have become a part of the British empire." -Boston Transcript "It is full of action, full of life and color, full of strange, picturesque people, and it is written with artistic simplicity and great charm." -Independent "In the book is all the rare perception of natural life and beauty, so exquisitely recorded 'Green Mansions.' There is humor, too, which "Green Mansions' lacked....Crass realistic love encounters - seemingly inevitable in a wild country - Hudson treats with the most consummate tact." -The New Republic "It is one of the choicest things of our latter-day literature." -James M. Barrie, author of Peter Pan "He did not write for effect, but to tell what really interested him. "The Purple Land' and 'Far Away and Long Ago' are full of his knowledge of the horsemen of the plains and include even talks with old men who remembered the British expedition to Uruguay in 1807." -The Outlook "There are, undoubtedly, a number of actual travel experiences woven in the delicate web of Mr. Hudson's narrative; but it is no more a 'book of travel' for that reason than the adventures of 'Don Quixote' or 'Gil Blas.' This South American story, indeed, reveals a delightful kinship with both these chronicles of old Spain. As with them humor and wisdom are charmingly blended throughout its pages. There are episodes filled with simple pathos, others that rock with laughter." -The New York Times Book Review "Lamb himself is a most attractive and versatile personage; chivalrous, sympathetic, susceptible, and impulsive; a blend of the poet, the fighting man, and the humorist; a great lover of nature, and, learned (like Mr. Hudson) in all the lore of trees and birds, snakes and insects; just the sort of hero, in short, who is bound by the gypsy strain in his temperament to meet adventure half-way, and by his adaptability, resourcefulness, and tact to extricate himself from the most perilous and compromising situations....Extraordinary charm. A more romantic recital of adventure would be difficult to imagine." -Spectator
  • The Color Purple

    Alice WALKER

    Hardcover (Washington Square, July 6, 1983)
    None
  • The purple land

    W. H. Hudson

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, June 11, 2017)
    The novel tells the story of Richard Lamb, a young Englishman who marries a teenage Argentinian girl, Paquita, without asking her father's permission, and is forced to flee to Montevideo, Uruguay with his bride. Lamb leaves his young wife with a relative while he sets off for eastern Uruguay to find work for himself. He soon becomes embroiled in adventures with the Uruguayan gauchos and romances with local women. Lamb unknowingly helps a rebel guerrilla general, Santa Coloma, escape from prison and joins his cause. However, the rebels are defeated in battle and Lamb has to flee in disguise. He helps Demetria, the daughter of an old rebel leader, escape from her persecutors and returns to Montevideo. Lamb, Paquita, Demetria and Santa Coloma evade their government pursuers by slipping away on a boat bound for Buenos Aires. Here the novel ends, but in the opening paragraphs, Lamb had already informed the reader that after the events of the story he was captured by Paquita's father and thrown into prison for three years, during which time Paquita herself died of grief.
  • The Purple Land

    W. H. Hudson, Ilan Stavans

    Paperback (University of Wisconsin Press, Sept. 1, 2002)
    First published in 1885, The Purple Land was the first novel of William Henry Hudson, author of Green Mansions. The Anglo-Argentine naturalist distinguished himself both as one of the finest craftsmen of prose in English literature and as a thinker on ecological matters far ahead of his time. The Purple Land is the exuberant, often wryly comic, first-person account of a young Englishman's imprudent adventures, set against a background of political strife in nineteenth-century Uruguay. Eloping with an Argentine girl, young Richard Lamb makes an implacable enemy of his teenage bride's father. Leaving her behind, he goes ignorantly forth into the interior of the country to seek his fortune and is eventually imprisoned and persecuted by the vengeful father. His narrative closes as he sets off on still another impetuous quest. This facsimile of the 1904 Three Sirens Press edition includes striking woodcuts by Keith Henderson illustrating the characters in the novel and the fauna of Uruguay. Ilan Stavans's introduction offers an opportunity to revisit The Purple Land as a "road novel" in which an outsider offers reflections on nationality and diasporic identity. The Americas, Stavans, series editor; with a new introduction by Ilan Stavans
  • The purple pickle

    Sandy Hirsche

    Unknown Binding (My Family Tales, March 15, 2001)
    None
  • The Purple Orb

    Cheryl DeVuono

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, July 17, 2015)
    An alien life form is accidentally pulled into Earth’s gravity and discovered by three witches. Believing that the life form is evil, they cast a spell on it and lock it away in a lead tomb, almost ending its existence. Two hundred years later it finds itself free and waits to be found. Billy, Seth and Katie have been best friends their entire lives. With the end of seventh grade and summer vacation only two months away, Seth and Katie are trying to help their friend through a very difficult time; the death of his father. After yet another detention, an angry and frustrated Billy runs off to be by himself, and discovers a strange purple stone lying on a ledge. After sharing his great find with his friends, they soon realize that the orb is not just a pretty stone, but an entity that has begun to negatively alter their lives. Their adventure brings them into contact with a witch, whose ancestors originally discovered the orb. Billy, Seth and Katie come to the conclusion that in order to save their own lives, they must do whatever is necessary to free themselves of The Purple Orb.
  • The Purple Land

    H. W. Hudson

    Paperback (IndyPublish, Nov. 12, 2008)
    Cfte purple LanD PREFACE (HIS work was first issued in 1885, by Messrs. Sampson Low, in two slim volumes, with the longer, and to most persons, enigmatical title of The Purple Land That England Lost. A purple land may be found in almost any region of the globe, and tis of our gains, not our losses, we keep count. A few notices of the book appeared in the papers, one or two of the more serious literary journals reviewing it (not favourably) under the heading of Travels and Geography ;but the reading public cared not to buy, and it very shortly fell into oblivion. There it might have remained for a further period of nineteen years, or for ever, since the sleep of a book is apt to be of the unawakening kind, had not certain men of letters, who found it on a forgotten heap and liked it in spite of its faults, or because of them, concerned themselves to revive it. We are often told that an author never wholly loses his affection for a first book, and the feeling has been likened (more than once) to that of a parent towards a first-born. I have not said it, but in consenting to this reprint I considered that a writers early or unregarded work is apt to be raked up when he is not standing by to make remarks. He may be absent on a journey from which he is not expected to return. It accordingly seemed better that I should myself supervise a new edition, since this would enable me to remove a few of the numerous spots and pimples which decorate the ingenious countenance of the work before handing it on to posterity. Besides many small verbal corrections and changes, the deletion of some paragraphs and the insertion of a few new ones, I have omitted one entire chapter containing the Story of a Piebald Horse, recently reprinted in another book entitled El Ombu.(Typographical errors above are due to OCR software and don't occur in the book.)About the Publisher Forgotten Books is a publisher of historical writin