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Oferta Especial



REWARDS AND FAIRIES de KIPLING, RUDYARD
REWARDS AND FAIRIES

Autore
KIPLING, RUDYARD
Editor
HOUSE OF STRATUS
Isbn
9781842329541
Clasificación
Literatura anglosajona
Precio
€ 13,81

Rewards and Fairies is a delightful selection of stories and poems from the creator of The Jungle Book. Tales of witches, looking-glasses and square toes come together with all the old favourites including The Way Through the Woods to make a thoroughly enchanting book. And perhaps most famous of all, included in this collection is Kiplings well-loved poem, If - words that have spoken to the hearts of many a generation. Rudyard Joseph Kipling was born in the then named Bombay, India on 30th December 1865. Aged six, he was sent to England to be educated, firstly in Southsea, where he was cared for in a foster home, and later at Westward Ho, a United Services College in Devon. A life of misery at the former was described in his story Baa Baa Black Sheep, whilst Westward Ho was used as a basis for his questioning the public school ethic in Stalky and Co. Kipling returned to India in 1882 to work as an assistant editor for the Civil and Military Gazette of Lahore. His reputation as a writer was established with stories of English life in India, published there in 1888/9. The Phantom Rickshaw, Soldiers Three and Under the Deodars are amongst these early works. Returning to England in 1889, Kipling settled in London and continued to earn a living as a writer. In 1892 he married Caroline Balestier, an American. They travelled extensively in the following four years, including a spell living in America, and it was in this time most of his enduring work was written, not least The Jungle Book and The Second Jungle Book. Kipling once again returned to England in 1896 and continued his writing career, although tragedy hit the family when his eldest daughter, Josephine, died in 1899. Nonetheless, in 1901 he completed Kim, often considered to be his best work. The following year, having settled in Sussex, he published Just So Stories, a book he had planned to write for Josephine. Having refused the position of Poet Laureate, which was offered in 1895, he did accept the Nobel Prize for Literature, becoming the first English author to be so honoured. By 1910, however, Kiplings appeal was waning. His poems and stories were based on values that were perceived as outdated. There was widespre


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