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Books published by publisher New Directions, 1968

  • Trilogy: The Walls Do Not Fall, Tribute to the Angels, the Flowering of the Rod,

    Hilda Doolittle

    Hardcover (New Directions, Jan. 1, 1973)
    None
  • The Doctor and the Devils

    Dylan Thomas

    Hardcover (New Directions, Jan. 1, 1953)
    Worn and torn dust jacket has some loss and is in a protective sleeve, some foxing, page edges tanned, owner's inscription. Shipped from the U.K. All orders received before 3pm sent that weekday.
  • Confessions of a Mask

    Yukio Mishima

    Paperback (New Directions, 1968, March 15, 1968)
    None
  • Dreamers

    Knut Hamsun, Tom Geddes

    Paperback (New Directions, May 17, 1996)
    The midnight sun illumines more than fishing and fjords in this remote northern Norwegian village. In fact, half-baked schemes and hilarity abound. Big Ove Rolandsen, telegraph operator, mad scientist, and local Casanova, trades wits, fists, and kisses with a host of quirky neighbors. He serenades the curate's wife and fights a drunken giant, but taking on Trader Mack, the town's fish-glue magnate, is a more difficult matter. Knut Hamsun, author of the acclaimed Hunger and winner of the 1920 Nobel Prize for Literature, renders the dreams and dramas of these townsfolk with a delightfully light touch. Robert Bly has written that Hamsun "has a magnifying glass on his eye, like a jeweler's," and Dreamers gleams like a perfect, semi-precious stone.
  • The Member of the Wedding

    Carson McCullers

    Paperback (New Directions, Jan. 17, 1951)
    Winner of the New York Drama Critics Circle Award: At the suggestion of her friend Tennessee Williams, Southern writer Carson McCullers adapted her novella The Member of the Wedding into a touching and poignant play that was an enormous success when it opened on Broadway in 1950, and has long since become a classic of the American theater. With compassion, veracity and wit, in The Member of the Wedding Carson McCullers depicts the intrinsically enmeshed lives of whites and blacks in the American South. Julie Harris became a star playing the awkward, twelve-year-old tomboy Frankie Adams, who falls deeply in love with her older brother and his fiancé. Exhilarated by her naive conviction that being a member of their wedding means she will become what she calls the "we of me," Frankie is devastated when she learns she is not invited on the honeymoon. Bernice Sadie Brown, who has experienced a lifetime of love and loss, is a surrogate mother for Frankie. Portrayed on stage and in the film versions by the great Ethel Waters, Bernice is an epic character, fiercely loyal, down-to-earth, and centered by deep faith.
    W
  • Under Milkwood

    Dylan Thomas

    Paperback (New Directions, March 15, 1954)
    By Christopher Waldrop on October 22, 1997 Format: Audio Cassette On November 7th, Dylan Thomas collapsed in his hotel room. On the 9th, he died. This was only a few days after the final performance of "Under Milk Wood", a special play with no acting but voices, the sort of work Thomas believed would replace the poetic impulse he feared had dried up. Although believed by many to be unfinished, "Under Milk Wood" seems perfect as it is. A journey through the events of a single day in a small town, "Under Milk Wood" is a must for Dylan Thomas fans, but also would be appreciated by fans of Garrison Keillor and other radio-storytellers. The written text cannot compare with the lively, laughter-ridden performance. Listen to the real thing, and you will, as Dylan Thomas instructed his actors, "love the words." ( amazon customer review)
  • A Child's Christmas in Wales

    Dylan Thomas, Ellen Raskin

    Paperback (New Directions, Nov. 1, 2003)
    In print for over forty years, this gem of lyric prose has enchanted both young and old and is now a modern classic.The classic "little blue edition" with matching mailing envelope to send as a holiday gift. Dylan Thomas, one of the greatest poets and storytellers of the twentieth century, captures a child's-eye view, and an adult's fond remembrance, of a magical time of presents, aunts and uncles, the frozen sea, and, in the best of circumstances, newly fallen snow—its wonder, silence, and snowball mischief.This edition published by New Directions is the most popular format of A Child's Christmas in Wales—a booklet size that can be mailed in an accompanying envelope.
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  • Confessions of a mask

    Yukio Mishima

    Hardcover (New Directions, March 15, 1958)
    None
  • Not About Nightingales

    Tennessee WILLIAMS

    Hardcover (New Directions, March 15, 1998)
    Based on an actualnewspaper story, the play follows the events of a prison atrocity that shocked the nation. Convicts leading a hunger strike in a Pennsylvania prison were locked in a steam-heated cell and roasted to death. Its sympathetic treatment of black and homosexual characters may have kept the play unproduced in its own time.
  • The Beetle Leg

    John Hawkes

    Hardcover (New Directions (1951)., March 15, 1951)
    None
  • A Child's Christmas in Wales

    Dylan Thomas, Fritz Eichenberg

    Hardcover (New Directions, May 1, 2000)
    A holiday classic captures a child's-eye-view and adult's warm remembrances of the holiday season landscape, portraying a time of gift giving, good things to eat, and newly fallen snow. Reissue.
  • Cat On A Hot Tin Roof

    Tennessee Williams

    Hardcover (New Directions, March 15, 1955)
    This is a true first edition of the 1955 New Directions printing. There is no mention of the New York Times upon the copyright page. Additionally, there is no mention of Jo Mielzinger or of Luande Ballard upon xii. The book is terra cotta colour. The dust jacket is by Alvin Lustig and includes the original price ($3.00).