From odos.fanourios at gmail.com Tue Aug 28 12:50:47 2007 From: odos.fanourios at gmail.com (James Gifford) Date: Tue, 28 Aug 2007 13:50:47 -0600 Subject: [ilds] ILDS in the news... Message-ID: <46D47C97.2040608@gmail.com> Hey everyone, Well, it looks like we got syndication! This is all drawn from the article in the Victoria Times Colonist by Malcolm Curtis, which some of you may recall from last summer. Best, James ----------------- Something Special The News : Esquimalt. Victoria, B.C.: Jul 5, 2006. pg. B.1 Oak Bay News. Victoria, B.C.: Jul 5, 2006. p. B.1 Goldstream Gazette. Langford, B.C.: Jul 5, 2006. p. B.1 Peninsula News Review. Sidney, B.C.: Jul 5, 2006. p. B.1 Saanich News. Victoria, B.C.: Jul 5, 2006. p. B.1 Victoria News. Victoria, B.C.: Jul 5, 2006. p. B.1 Presided over by Special Collections librarian Chris Petter, the area houses a treasure trove of original manuscripts, valuable books and odd bits and pieces of historical ephemera. The Collections house, among the works of other writers, a large collection of manuscripts and correspondence by and about British author Lawrence Durrell. These holdings were significant enough that the University hosted the International Lawrence Durrell Society's conference this past June (June 25-29). * * * UVic's Special Collections houses a treasure trove of ancient texts Down the stairs in the University of Victoria's MacPherson Library, away from the bright upper floors, lies the entrance to the Special Collections. Presided over by Special Collections librarian Chris Petter, the area houses a treasure trove of original manuscripts, valuable books and odd bits and pieces of historical ephemera. The mandate for the Special Collections, to quote from the official brochure, is to "collect, preserve, and make accessible rare books, manuscripts, architectural plans, photographs, and oral history tapes" The Collections house, among the works of other writers, a large collection of manuscripts and correspondence by and about British author Lawrence Durrell. These holdings were significant enough that the University hosted the International Lawrence Durrell Society's conference this past June (June 25-29). Other famed writers represented include the former British Poet Laureate John Betjeman. The collections house a watercolour painting with a poem written over top by the late poet. Robert Graves is represented with a diary and poems. Local writers include Robin Skelton, Marilyn Bowering and Brian Brett. The Special Collections is open to donations of books and manuscript material that would enhance the collection. Those interested in donating material should contact Petter. The collection is open to UVic students and faculty as well as to the public. The collection can be searched online as well at http://gateway.uvic.ca/spcoll/sc.html From slighcl at wfu.edu Wed Aug 29 10:57:09 2007 From: slighcl at wfu.edu (slighcl) Date: Wed, 29 Aug 2007 13:57:09 -0400 Subject: [ilds] ILDS Herald #25 Message-ID: <46D5B375.1040909@wfu.edu> Dear Durrellians: Greetings from Winston-Salem. I have just received my copy of the new ILDS /Herald/, and I want to thank Pamela for this exceptional piece of work. In content and form, the twenty-fifth number of the /Herald /shines. Thank you, Pamela. And thank you, Paul. Charles -- ********************** Charles L. Sligh Department of English Wake Forest University slighcl at wfu.edu ********************** -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.uvic.ca/pipermail/ilds/attachments/20070829/e8dfe74e/attachment.html From richardpin at eircom.net Wed Aug 29 11:40:03 2007 From: richardpin at eircom.net (Richard Pine) Date: Wed, 29 Aug 2007 19:40:03 +0100 Subject: [ilds] Fw: Lawrence Durrell Message-ID: <005101c7ea6c$0b1f32b0$3c98e9d5@rpinelaptop> I'd like to share a quite passionate missive from a former colleague in the Irish national broadcaster who just mailed me out of the blue - as a general reader coming, as he says, late to LD, and thru his 'travel' books, he sets a tone that I find very encourageing - and of course, the query about Sebald vis-a-vis LD. Richard ----- Original Message ----- From: Kehoe Paddy To: richardpin at eircom.net Sent: Wednesday, August 29, 2007 5:23 PM Subject: Lawrence Durrell Richard A colleague (or former colleague) of yours here, Paddy Kehoe at the RTE GUIDE. I have recently read three of the best books I have ever read (and I have been reading quite a bit since I was 17 or so - and I am now 51) namely, Prospero's Cell, Reflections in a Marine venus and Bitter Lemons of Cyprus. As you can see, I have taken my time in discovering Durrell, but family holidays (twice) in Corfu over the past two summers have inevitably led me to him. I have yet to read the Alexandria Quartet but have just begun Tunc, which I believe I may find more challenging than the travel books(said he discreetly. Perhaps not the place to start?) Anyway, Durrelll's wonderful blend of lore, myth, literature sources and painterly almost magical depiction of character and landscape has really impressed me, and his ability to attain a kind of somnolent tranquility in prose. Forever he seems to be challenging ways of seeing and reading character and scene. He is like a good teacher or a journalist intent on making you see something differently, but doing it without any belaboured leaning on the reader. The final chapter in Bitter Lemons and the final chapter in Prospero's Cell really bring home his striking humanity too, akin in ways to that evoked in Forster's Passage to India. I do wonder too why if WG Sebald can be so fashionable (and so great too obviously) that Lawrence Durrell isn't mentioned as much in dispatches nowadays, not that this matters very much - there is kinship there in terms of approach between both writers, though probably unwitting. They do have shared interests though, they are similar reflective spirits, going their own joyous and melancholy road. Is there any film of Lawrencwe Durrell that can be seen on the web? I do believe there are two filmed documentaries in existence. Just thought I would check. Sometime too I do want to read Bowker's or McNieve's biography. Anyway, do understand that I am a novice - haven't even read Gerald yet. I suspect, perhaps wrongly, that in the three travel books I have probably already read what I will find the most appealing in the ouevre, (which may be a hasty thing to say before I get my hands on Justine.) All the best to you Richard Paddy -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- *********************************************************** The information in this e-mail is confidential and may be legally privileged. It is intended solely for the addressee. Access to this e-mail by anyone else is unauthorised. If you are not the intended recipient, any disclosure, copying, distribution, or any action taken or omitted to be taken in reliance on it, is prohibited and may be unlawful. Please note that emails to, from and within RT?? may be subject to the Freedom of Information Act 1997 and may be liable to disclosure. ************************************************************ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.uvic.ca/pipermail/ilds/attachments/20070829/895a2d45/attachment.html From slighcl at wfu.edu Wed Aug 29 12:32:14 2007 From: slighcl at wfu.edu (slighcl) Date: Wed, 29 Aug 2007 15:32:14 -0400 Subject: [ilds] Fw: Lawrence Durrell In-Reply-To: <005101c7ea6c$0b1f32b0$3c98e9d5@rpinelaptop> References: <005101c7ea6c$0b1f32b0$3c98e9d5@rpinelaptop> Message-ID: <46D5C9BE.3050505@wfu.edu> On 8/29/2007 2:40 PM, Richard Pine wrote: > I'd like to share a quite passionate missive from a former > colleague in the Irish national broadcaster who just mailed me out > of the blue - as a general reader coming, as he says, late to LD, > and thru his 'travel' books, he sets a tone that I find very > encourageing - and of course, the query about Sebald vis-a-vis LD. > ----- Original Message ----- > *From:* Kehoe Paddy > *To:* richardpin at eircom.net > *Sent:* Wednesday, August 29, 2007 5:23 PM > *Subject:* Lawrence Durrell > I do wonder too why if WG Sebald can be so fashionable > (and so great too obviously) that Lawrence Durrell isn't > mentioned as much in dispatches nowadays, not that this > matters very much -- there is kinship there in terms of > approach between both writers, though probably unwitting. > They do have shared interests though, they are similar > reflective spirits, going their own joyous and melancholy > road. > Thanks for sharing Kehoe Paddy's reflections on these three Durrell books, Richard. Last year I gave /Prospero's Cell/ to a colleague here at Wake Forest. As I had hoped, he came back from reading it with much excitement, and as we tried to pin down more precisely the nature of the magic or the charm, we decided that /Rings of Saturn/ was not a bad contemporary point of comparison. Both books slip past the confines of category. Both writers, in their different ways, dream their way along through various topics. You might say that both books are /Books of Place/ written in a sort of ruminative prose that plumbs so much more. For my own part and my own purposes, I find that I keep Pater's /Studies in the History of the Renaissance/ within the same company. That is, like /Prospero's Cell/, /The Renaissance/ evokes something far beyond its avowed subject. The experience is one in which you start out reading about one declared topic--say, Da Vinci's women, Michelangelo's Sonnets, or Winckelmann's final journey--only to have the floor gradually shift out from under, leaving you somewhere much different. Perhaps Pater, Durrell, and Sebald have a facility for helping to define aspects of a larger culture and moment via surprising and obscure instances and experiences? Prose that transports. Charles -- ********************** Charles L. Sligh Department of English Wake Forest University slighcl at wfu.edu ********************** -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.uvic.ca/pipermail/ilds/attachments/20070829/df633caa/attachment.html From godshawl at email.uc.edu Wed Aug 29 13:25:17 2007 From: godshawl at email.uc.edu (william godshalk) Date: Wed, 29 Aug 2007 16:25:17 -0400 Subject: [ilds] Fw: Lawrence Durrell In-Reply-To: <46D5C9BE.3050505@wfu.edu> References: <005101c7ea6c$0b1f32b0$3c98e9d5@rpinelaptop> <46D5C9BE.3050505@wfu.edu> Message-ID: An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.uvic.ca/pipermail/ilds/attachments/20070829/9da77355/attachment.html From minakakisl at gmail.com Wed Aug 29 19:00:40 2007 From: minakakisl at gmail.com (Lou Minakakis) Date: Wed, 29 Aug 2007 22:00:40 -0400 Subject: [ilds] Fw: Lawrence Durrell In-Reply-To: References: <005101c7ea6c$0b1f32b0$3c98e9d5@rpinelaptop> <46D5C9BE.3050505@wfu.edu> Message-ID: <8fe1f68d0708291900y5772ecafo58e5bec88b2ea90c@mail.gmail.com> *Is there any film of Lawrencwe Durrell that can be seen on the web?* ** If interested, you can view the first 20 minutes of the 2006 BBC dramatization of Gerald's *My Family and Other Animals* on www.youtube.com. Here is the link to the program's first 10 minutes: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8KPwCD8IObY. The second 10 minute segment: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-407WdYB2go On 8/29/07, william godshalk wrote: > > > Perhaps Pater, Durrell, and Sebald have a facility for helping to define > aspects of a larger culture and moment via surprising and obscure instances > and experiences? > > > I think Durrell would have loved to read that. But my dear Charlie, can > you give us concrete examples? How does this work? > > *The experience is one in which you start out reading about one declared > topic--say, Da Vinci's women, Michelangelo's Sonnets, or Winckelmann's final > journey--only to have the floor gradually shift out from under, leaving you > somewhere much different. > > *As you know, the image of the floor gradually shifting is not one I like > to consider. I have been warned that the floor in my study may begin to > shift because of the weight of my book collection. > > Bill > > *************************************** > W. L. Godshalk * > Department of English * > University of Cincinnati Stellar disorder * > Cincinnati OH 45221-0069 * > 513-281-5927 > *************************************** > _______________________________________________ > ILDS mailing list > ILDS at lists.uvic.ca > https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/ilds > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.uvic.ca/pipermail/ilds/attachments/20070829/ab577643/attachment.html From wbier at comcast.net Thu Aug 30 15:46:36 2007 From: wbier at comcast.net (Willem Bier) Date: Thu, 30 Aug 2007 18:46:36 -0400 Subject: [ilds] Lawrence Durrell Message-ID: Hi all, I am looking for a quote by Lawrence Durrell where he described the city of Sommieres (in the south of France). Any suggestions are appreciated. Willem Bier From skybluepress at skybluepress.com Thu Aug 30 15:13:25 2007 From: skybluepress at skybluepress.com (Sky Blue Press) Date: Thu, 30 Aug 2007 18:13:25 -0400 Subject: [ilds] Last Villa Seurat Book Finally Published in America Message-ID: <006f01c7eb52$fcc40960$6401a8c0@DHKQ1971> Hello Durrellians... When Lawrence Durrell funded Anais Nin's 'The Winter of Artifice' in 1939, little did he know that within a few weeks of its publication war and the death of the publisher, Jack Kahane of the Obelisk Press, would destroy the book's future. Unlike Henry Miller, who waited for decades before his 'Tropics' could be published in America because of the so-called obscenity laws, Nin went to work after coming to New York, surgically removing the story 'Djuna' (the first treatment of the Henry-June-Anais love triangle), and severely cutting the other two novellas, 'Lilith' and 'The Voice'. On the first page of this doctored copy, she wrote: "I have removed all of the scabreux passages--everything difficult and what shocks here." In 1942 she published, on her own press, the new version of the book, and the original was never published again anywhere. It became Villa Seurat's "lost book". Two years ago, Benjamin Franklin V, the foremost Nin bibliographer in the country, lent me a copy of the original Paris edition, and together we made a plan to create from it a facsimile in a limited edition of 500 copies. It took more than a year to scan each page and digitally erase the ravage of time. It was our goal to create a duplicate of what rolled off the press in 1939, and I'm happy to say we've achieved this. So, finally, after 68 years, the final book of the Villa Seurat Series is being published in America, uncut, and an important gap in the bibliography of Nin, Durrell and Miller is now closed. The book is available at www.skybluepress.com. Paul Herron -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.uvic.ca/pipermail/ilds/attachments/20070830/b83d65b7/attachment.html From skybluepress at skybluepress.com Fri Aug 31 07:01:26 2007 From: skybluepress at skybluepress.com (Sky Blue Press) Date: Fri, 31 Aug 2007 10:01:26 -0400 Subject: [ilds] Non-USA readers for Last Villa Seurat Book Finally Published in America Message-ID: <003101c7ebd7$6e3e6f70$6401a8c0@DHKQ1971> Hello, Just an addendum to previous message regarding 'The Winter of Artifice.' Non-USA readers can query me for postal rates at orders at skybluepress.com. I will then get back with you and let you know total cost and purchase method, etc. Thanks, Paul Herron -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.uvic.ca/pipermail/ilds/attachments/20070831/ce36108b/attachment.html From Smithchamberlin at aol.com Fri Aug 31 12:10:40 2007 From: Smithchamberlin at aol.com (Smithchamberlin at aol.com) Date: Fri, 31 Aug 2007 15:10:40 EDT Subject: [ilds] ILDS Digest, Vol 5, Issue 18 Message-ID: I believe it was Nancy Durrell's money that financed part of the Villa Surat series; Larry had little funds on his own. Didn't Nin or her husband also in part fund the series? Brewster In a message dated 8/31/2007 3:00:32 PM Eastern Daylight Time, ilds-request at lists.uvic.ca writes: Message: 2 Date: Thu, 30 Aug 2007 18:13:25 -0400 From: "Sky Blue Press" Subject: [ilds] Last Villa Seurat Book Finally Published in America To: Message-ID: <006f01c7eb52$fcc40960$6401a8c0 at DHKQ1971> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Hello Durrellians... When Lawrence Durrell funded Anais Nin's 'The Winter of Artifice' in 1939, little did he know that within a few weeks of its publication war and the death of the publisher, Jack Kahane of the Obelisk Press, would destroy the book's future. Unlike Henry Miller, who waited for decades before his 'Tropics' could be published in America because of the so-called obscenity laws, Nin went to work after coming to New York, surgically removing the story 'Djuna' (the first treatment of the Henry-June-Anais love triangle), and severely cutting the other two novellas, 'Lilith' and 'The Voice'. On the first page of this doctored copy, she wrote: "I have removed all of the scabreux passages--everything difficult and what shocks here." In 1942 she published, on her own press, the new version of the book, and the original was never published again anywhere. It became Villa Seurat's "lost book". Two years ago, Benjamin Franklin V, the foremost Nin bibliographer in the country, lent me a copy of the original Paris edition, and together we made a plan to create from it a facsimile in a limited edition of 500 copies. It took more than a year to scan each page and digitally erase the ravage of time. It was our goal to create a duplicate of what rolled off the press in 1939, and I'm happy to say we've achieved this. So, finally, after 68 years, the final book of the Villa Seurat Series is being published in America, uncut, and an important gap in the bibliography of Nin, Durrell and Miller is now closed. The book is available at www.skybluepress.com. Paul Herron -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.uvic.ca/pipermail/ilds/attachments/20070830/b83d65b7/attachment-0001.html ------------------------------ Message: 3 Date: Fri, 31 Aug 2007 10:01:26 -0400 From: "Sky Blue Press" Subject: Re: [ilds] Non-USA readers for Last Villa Seurat Book Finally Published in America To: Message-ID: <003101c7ebd7$6e3e6f70$6401a8c0 at DHKQ1971> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Hello, Just an addendum to previous message regarding 'The Winter of Artifice.' Non-USA readers can query me for postal rates at orders at skybluepress.com. I will then get back with you and let you know total cost and purchase method, etc. Thanks, Paul Herron ************************************** Get a sneak peek of the all-new AOL at http://discover.aol.com/memed/aolcom30tour -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.uvic.ca/pipermail/ilds/attachments/20070831/c5c05790/attachment.html From dtart at bigpond.net.au Sat Sep 1 16:49:26 2007 From: dtart at bigpond.net.au (Denise Tart & David Green) Date: Sun, 2 Sep 2007 09:49:26 +1000 Subject: [ilds] Paddy Kehoe and LDs Island Books Message-ID: <003601c7ecf2$bb502120$ce90bc7c@MumandDad> Richard, thanks for sharing Paddy's letter with us. I was delighted to read of another who came to LD the way I did - through the island books. They were magical when I first read them at university in my 20s and they still are 20 odd years later. It is very hard to put a finger on their unique quality except to say the personality of this wise, witty, vivacious man inhabits each page along with the colour, sound, taste and mood of the Greek Islands and their suggested, half told histories - enough though to exite the reader to further studies. I have probably read Prospero's Cell, Reflections on a Marine Venus and Bitter Lemons more than any books in my possession - and that is saying something. My original copies were so well thumbed that they fell apart and had to be replaced. Does anyone know if decently made hard back editions may be bought? David Green Denise Tart & David Green 16 William Street, Marrickville NSW 2204 +61 2 9564 6165 0412 707 625 dtart at bigpond.net.au -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.uvic.ca/pipermail/ilds/attachments/20070902/27cb1943/attachment.html From skybluepress at skybluepress.com Sat Sep 1 17:00:47 2007 From: skybluepress at skybluepress.com (Sky Blue Press) Date: Sat, 1 Sep 2007 20:00:47 -0400 Subject: [ilds] Who funded 'The Winter of Artifice'? Message-ID: <002e01c7ecf4$50e50470$6401a8c0@DHKQ1971> In the introduction to 'The Winter of Artifice: a facsimile of the original 1939 Paris edition,' Benjamin Franklin V states: Maurice Girodias, son and successor of Jack Kahane, owner of the Obelisk Press, relates the understanding between publisher and authors about the payment of printing costs for the three books that Obelisk published in the Villa Seurat series, a series named after Miller's Paris residence, 18 Villa Seurat. According to Girodias, his father would pay the costs for the first volume, Miller's Max and the White Phagocytes ; Nin, for Durrell's The Black Book ; Durrell, for Nin's The Winter of Artifice. Girodias also records that, at Durrell's suggestion, Nin and Durrell would pay for the printing of each other's book rather than their own in order to avoid the sense of defeat that vanity publication might have created. (However, Gunther Stuhlmann and Jay Martin claim that Nancy Durrell, wife of Lawrence, paid the printing costs for all three books. Martin also notes that the Villa Seurat series ceased publication (with The Winter of Artifice) when she could no longer support it. Commenting about underwriting Nin's "Chaotica" (a working title for The Winter of Artifice) in a letter to Lawrence Durrell (5 November 1938), Henry Miller writes, "Let us know, will you, if the money is still available for this book? Hope you are not bankrupt yet". Lawrence Durrell's biographer (Ian MacNiven) observes that "the 150 pounds it cost to print the three titles came from Nancy's capital". In a diary entry dated 1 November 1937, Nin states that "Larry is putting up the money [to Kahane] for three books". In an entry dated 13 December 1938, she notes that "Durrell is bringing [The Winter of Artifice ] out in February [1939]," implying that Durrell published this book. In an entry dated January 1943, Nin records that "Lawrence Durrell backed the publication of Winter of Artifice ". Nin dedicates The Winter of Artifice to the Durrells: "To/NANCY and LARRY/with love." Paul Herron -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.uvic.ca/pipermail/ilds/attachments/20070901/2c1a48b3/attachment.html From richardpin at eircom.net Sun Sep 2 02:58:44 2007 From: richardpin at eircom.net (Richard Pine) Date: Sun, 2 Sep 2007 10:58:44 +0100 Subject: [ilds] Paddy Kehoe and LDs Island Books References: <003601c7ecf2$bb502120$ce90bc7c@MumandDad> Message-ID: <008301c7ed47$e17af0a0$808ee9d5@rpinelaptop> Faber recently reprinted the original edition of P's Cell as part of its classic authors (a copycat of the Routledge series) and it's very handsome. ----- Original Message ----- From: Denise Tart & David Green To: Durrel Sent: Sunday, September 02, 2007 12:49 AM Subject: [ilds] Paddy Kehoe and LDs Island Books Richard, thanks for sharing Paddy's letter with us. I was delighted to read of another who came to LD the way I did - through the island books. They were magical when I first read them at university in my 20s and they still are 20 odd years later. It is very hard to put a finger on their unique quality except to say the personality of this wise, witty, vivacious man inhabits each page along with the colour, sound, taste and mood of the Greek Islands and their suggested, half told histories - enough though to exite the reader to further studies. I have probably read Prospero's Cell, Reflections on a Marine Venus and Bitter Lemons more than any books in my possession - and that is saying something. My original copies were so well thumbed that they fell apart and had to be replaced. Does anyone know if decently made hard back editions may be bought? David Green Denise Tart & David Green 16 William Street, Marrickville NSW 2204 +61 2 9564 6165 0412 707 625 dtart at bigpond.net.au ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ _______________________________________________ ILDS mailing list ILDS at lists.uvic.ca https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/ilds -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.uvic.ca/pipermail/ilds/attachments/20070902/6a3e38b6/attachment.html From richardpin at eircom.net Sun Sep 2 03:09:09 2007 From: richardpin at eircom.net (Richard Pine) Date: Sun, 2 Sep 2007 11:09:09 +0100 Subject: [ilds] Paddy Kehoe and LDs Island Books References: <003601c7ecf2$bb502120$ce90bc7c@MumandDad> Message-ID: <00a801c7ed49$51da8760$808ee9d5@rpinelaptop> PS - there are 46 secondhand hardback copies of Marine Venus on the internet, some of them the Dutton 1960 version which combines it with P's Cell; and 73 copies of Bitter Lemons, priced from as little as 5 USD for first editions. RP ----- Original Message ----- From: Denise Tart & David Green To: Durrel Sent: Sunday, September 02, 2007 12:49 AM Subject: [ilds] Paddy Kehoe and LDs Island Books Richard, thanks for sharing Paddy's letter with us. I was delighted to read of another who came to LD the way I did - through the island books. They were magical when I first read them at university in my 20s and they still are 20 odd years later. It is very hard to put a finger on their unique quality except to say the personality of this wise, witty, vivacious man inhabits each page along with the colour, sound, taste and mood of the Greek Islands and their suggested, half told histories - enough though to exite the reader to further studies. I have probably read Prospero's Cell, Reflections on a Marine Venus and Bitter Lemons more than any books in my possession - and that is saying something. My original copies were so well thumbed that they fell apart and had to be replaced. Does anyone know if decently made hard back editions may be bought? David Green Denise Tart & David Green 16 William Street, Marrickville NSW 2204 +61 2 9564 6165 0412 707 625 dtart at bigpond.net.au ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ _______________________________________________ ILDS mailing list ILDS at lists.uvic.ca https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/ilds -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.uvic.ca/pipermail/ilds/attachments/20070902/a952db2c/attachment.html From odos.fanourios at gmail.com Sun Sep 2 22:44:33 2007 From: odos.fanourios at gmail.com (James Gifford) Date: Sun, 02 Sep 2007 23:44:33 -0600 Subject: [ilds] copy of "Can Dreams Live On..." Message-ID: <46DB9F41.9010805@gmail.com> Hello all, I need to locate a copy of an article by Durrell from _The Listener_ entitled "Can Dreams Live on When Dreamers Die?" I know I transcribed it at one point and have sent it out to others who asked for it, but I can't locate my own copy at the moment and it's not in my library's collection. Could anyone who has a transcription or a copy let me know? I'd appreciate it very much. Best, James