- Sons, ISBN 0-471-2023-2 Parameter
error in {{ISBN}}: length Foias, C.
Mainley, O. Rosa, R. and Temam, R. (2004) Navier–Stokes
Equations and Turbulence...
- tale [in which] the 'ghost' is not that of a person, but of a room." Jane
Mainley-Piddock
notes that "Number 13"
reflects "...a
change in James's style,...
- as "the most gruesome, and one of the most funny, of his tales." Jane
Mainley-Piddock
writes "The
killing of the
protagonist Stanley Judkins is redolent...
- "firmly
rooted in the
experience of the long
eighteenth century". Jane
Mainley-Piddock
writes "the
feeling of
Unheimleich [sic]
reaches its apex, as his...
-
Cerne Abbas Giant and the
character "Beelzebub" in the Mummers' play. Jane
Mainley-Piddock
writes "The
protagonists in 'An Evening's Entertainment' offer...
- an
admixture of
antiquarian excess and
occupational degradation". Jane
Mainley-Piddock
notes "The
Jamesian object, like the s****book in 'Canon Alberic's...
- main characters'
names are a
reference to Cain and Abel. Similarly, Jane
Mainley-Piddock
describes the
story as "...an
allegorical reworking of the Biblical...
-
describing it as a more
sinister "companion tale" to The Five Jars. Jane
Mainley-Piddock
notes "This tale is
exceptional in that the
narrator is none other...
-
Rosemary Pardoe describes the
story as one of James' "lesser tales". Jane
Mainley-Piddock
writes "The
story is
striking with its
undertones of
hidden ****ual...
-
Ghost Stories of M. R. James. It has
since been
collected many times. Jane
Mainley-Piddock
writes "This
story features three concurrently running aspects:...