Sport e tempo libero

Love Went A-Riding: [A Novel] Richard Blaker First World War

Prezzo
6 Offerte disponibili
Prezzo
Girls Youth New Era Light Houston Astros Flip Sequin Team T-Shirt

Disponibilità

Academy - cj product feed
PayPal

Let your young Houston Astros fan shine when the team takes the field with this New Era Flip Sequin…

Prezzo
29,99$
Nike Detroit Tigers Legend Fuse Wordmark T-Shirt

Disponibilità

Academy - cj product feed
PayPal

Upgrade your usual Detroit Tigers tee with this Legend Fuse Wordmark T-Shirt by Nike Sweat-wicking …

Prezzo
39,99$
Nike Baltimore Orioles Woven Victory Performance Shorts

Disponibilità

Academy - cj product feed
PayPal

Rep the Baltimore Orioles on and off the field in these Woven Victory Performance Shorts by Nike Th…

Prezzo
54,99$
Love Went A-Riding: [A Novel] Richard Blaker First World War

Disponibilità

Abebooks

Covers a little marked, edges a little spotted. With the marginal pencillings and numerous manuscri…

Prezzo
64,58$
Nike Baltimore Orioles Cooperstown Collection Logo Club Pullover Hoodie

Disponibilità

Academy - cj product feed
PayPal

Share a part of Baltimore Orioles history with this Cooperstown Collection Logo Club Pullover Hoodi…

Prezzo
79,99$
Birkenstock Women's Florida Soft Footbed 3 Strap Sandals

Disponibilità

Academy - cj product feed
PayPal

Take your next steps in the Birkenstock Women's Florida Soft Footbed 3 Strap Sandals. Their Birko-F…

Prezzo
123,99$
6 Offerte disponibili

Love Went A-Riding: [A Novel] Richard Blaker First World War

Covers a little marked, edges a little spotted. With the marginal pencillings and numerous manuscript notes on the prelims of Hugh Cecil, who devotes a chapter of his book The Flower of Battle: British fiction writers of the First World War (1995) to Richard Blaker (1893-1940) - author of the Great War classic Medal Without Bar (1930). Sales of Love Went a-Riding, his last novel (published in the US under its original title On Pegasus He Rode), disappointed the author. "The main character," writes Cecil, "was a dashing forty-year-old ex-artillery officer with a glorious war career and a leftover life to kill. Blaker drew Kenneth Creswell (not unlike an older version of Kenneth Chacey, in Oliver Onions' Peace in Our Time [1923]) as one of 'the generation of the brokenhearted', who found it impossible to engage with anyone at a serious emotional level, and went on occasional, terrifying alcoholic jags - drawn from Blaker's personal experience at the time. The book was an excellent realistic study of alcoholism and its consequences."