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Books published by publisher Metheun

  • Beastly Boys and Ghastly Girls

    William (Editor) COLE

    Paperback (Metheun, Jan. 1, 1975)
    None
  • King Solomons Ring

    K. Lorenz

    Hardcover (Metheun, March 15, 1953)
    None
  • Imperial Woman

    Pearl S Buck

    Hardcover (Metheun, March 15, 1956)
    Imperial Woman tells the story of Tzu-Hsi, the last Empress of China. It is well known that she was a formidable, fierce and cruelly efficient leader, but this story begins when she is a beautiful young teenager, vibrant, full of life, and deeply in love with her cousin, a handsome and stalwart guard at the Imperial Palace. As was the custom in the day (as I learned from this book), the Emperor yearly picked a new crop of concubines from the daughters of the wealthy of China. It was considered a great honor to send one's daughter into whoredom at the palace, and the shocking details of how they were chosen and used make up the first part of the book. Our heroine, who is still known by her childhood name, Yehonala, is sent, along with her cousin Sakota--both are picked. On one inevitable night, Yehonala is sent to the Emperor's bedroom, and there loses her innocence forever, in more ways than one. Swiftly becoming the Emperor's favorite, our heroine learns the intrigues of the palace, learning to trust nobody but to rely on only those closest to her. She consolidates her position by giving birth to the Emperor's only son, thus receiving the new name of "fortunate mother"--and a place of power higher than any woman in the palace. But was the Emperor's son really his son? Can the formerly innocent concubine, fast becoming a political player worthy of anybody in today's world, stay alive to see her son crowned? Or will she be murdered in the truly baroque but terribly dangerous palace in-wars? All is told in this fascinating book, written in Buck's simple but elegant style. This is one of her best, and well worth finding and reading.
  • Man meets dog

    Konrad Lorenz

    Hardcover (Metheun, March 15, 1954)
    None
  • the six bullerby children

    astrid lindren

    Hardcover (Metheun, Jan. 1, 1963)
    None
  • a book of mermaids

    ruth manning-sanders

    Hardcover (Metheun, Aug. 16, 1967)
    None
  • When We Were Very Young

    A. A. Milne

    Mass Market Paperback (Metheun, Jan. 1, 1971)
    When We Were Very Young
  • The Second Form at Malory Towers

    Enid Blyton, Stanley Lloyd

    Hardcover (Metheun, March 15, 1947)
    None
  • the magic squid

    ruth manning-sanders

    Hardcover (Metheun, March 15, 1968)
    None
  • Antigone

    Jean. Anouilh

    Hardcover (Metheun, Jan. 1, 1957)
    Antigone was originally produced in Paris in 1942, when France was occupied and part of Hitler's Europe. The play depicts an authoritarian regime which mirrors the predicament of the French people of the time. Based on Sophocles' ancient Greek tragedy, Antigone which was first performed in Athens in the 5th century BC, its theme was nevertheless topical. For in Antigone's faithfulness to her dead brother and his proper burial and her reiterated "No!" to the dictator Creon, the French audience saw its own resistance to the German occupation. The Germans allowed the play to be performed presumably because they found Creon's arguments for dictatorship so convincing. The play is regularly performed and studied around the world. "Anouilh is a poet, but not a poet of words: he is a poet of words-acted, of scenes-set, of players-performing" Peter Brook
  • 1066 and All That

    Robert Julian Sellar, Walter Carruthers; Yeatman, John Reynolds

    Paperback (Metheun, March 15, 1930)
    A comic satire upon textbook history squeezing in all the history you can remember from the Olden Days and dashing Queen Woadicea to the reigns of the Eggkings (Eggberd, Eggbreth and Eggforth, and their mysterious Eggdeath), from the dreadful story of Stephen and his aunt Matilda to the Magna Charter, from the six burglars of Calais to the disillusion of the monasteries and the life of Broody Mary, from William and Mary, when England was ruled by an orange, to the Boston Tea-Party and the annoying confusion between Napoleon and Nelson, to the Peace to end all Peace. This light-hearted look at England and history provides a colorful commentary for all those with a curiosity for the past.