Join Airam F. on Amplify
The Web's Social News Network.

Curate, connect & build relationships you'll learn from.

The Beatles Illustrated Lyrics

Amplifyd from www.flickr.com
 

When comic book heroes and villains get old: Superheroes Decadence by Donald Soffritti

More at the source.

Amplifyd from www.telegraph.co.uk

Italian cartoonist Donald Soffritti imagines the later years of superheroes, with hilarious results. His brilliant cartoons have been collected into a book, available here

Wonder Woman
See more at www.telegraph.co.uk
Amplifyd from www.telegraph.co.uk
Captain America
See more at www.telegraph.co.uk
Amplifyd from www.telegraph.co.uk
Batman and Robin
See more at www.telegraph.co.uk
Amplifyd from www.telegraph.co.uk
Catwoman
See more at www.telegraph.co.uk
Amplifyd from www.telegraph.co.uk
The Penguin
See more at www.telegraph.co.uk
 

The snub of the century

“It was T.S. Eliot himself who rejected George Orwell’s Animal Farm for publication by Faber and Faber…”

When Orwell submitted his novel, an allegory on Stalin’s dictatorship, Eliot praised its “good writing” and “fundamental integrity”.

However, the book’s politics, at a time when Britain was allied with the Soviet Union against Hitler, were another matter.

“We have no conviction that this is the right point of view from which to criticise the political situation at the current time,” wrote Eliot, adding that he thought its “view, which I take to be generally Trotskyite, is not convincing”.

Eliot wrote: “After all, your pigs are far more intelligent than the other animals, and therefore the best qualified to run the farm – in fact there couldn’t have been an Animal Farm at all without them: so that what was needed (someone might argue) was not more communism but more public-spirited pigs.”

Read more at entertainment.timesonline.co.uk
 

10 Literary one-hit wonders

Wondering what other books we can add to the list.

Harper Lee - To Kill a Mockingbird

To Kill a Mockingbird - The original Times review
Margaret Mitchell - Gone With the Wind
Gone with the Wind - The original Times review
Emily Bronte - Wuthering Heights
See the very first Wuthering Heights advertisment in The Times
J.D.Salinger - Catcher in the Rye

Salinger is a member of the one-hit-wonder club only if you consider Franny and Zooey, published in 1961, as a novella. Salinger’s last published work, a short story, appeared in The New Yorker in 1965.

Oscar Wilde - The Picture of Dorian Gray

John Kennedy Toole - A Confederacy of Dunces

Sylvia Plath - The Bell Jar

The Bell Jar - The original Times review

Anna Sewell - Black Beauty

Boris Pasternak - Dr Zhivago

Arundhati Roy - The God of Small Things

Read an extract from The God of Small ThingsRead more at entertainment.timesonline.co.uk