Books by "William K. Blake"

9 books found

Pennsylvania Superior Court Reports

Pennsylvania Superior Court Reports

by Pennsylvania. Superior Court, Wilson Conrad Kress, Edward Pease Allinson, William Irwin Schaffer, Albert Barnes Weimer, Spencer Gilbert Nauman

1917

Containing cases decided by the Superior Court of Pennsylvania.

The Peterson Family of Duxbury, Mass

The Peterson Family of Duxbury, Mass

by William Bradford Browne

1916

Ancient Landmarks of Plymouth

Ancient Landmarks of Plymouth

by William Thomas Davis

1883

Dark Figures in the Desired Country

Dark Figures in the Desired Country

by Gerda S. Norvig, William Blake

1993 · Univ of California Press

"Gerda Norvig has written a book on Blake's Bunyan illustrations that is much more than that: it revises our sense of Blake, of the relationship of illustrator to illustrated text, and the assumptions of Romantic and Romanticist writing. Blake, certainly, will not be the same after Norvig's vigorous analysis, and it is arguable that the same may be true of Romanticism."--Ronald Paulson, author of "Figure and Abstraction in Contemporary Painting" "Specialists in both Blake studies and English Romanticism will find this book extremely interesting and useful. Norvig carefully analyzes for the first time a set of Blake's most accomplished illustrations, a set that (as she points out) has very rarely been reproduced or exhibited. These designs certainly deserve to be better known, and Norvig's insightful and stimulating interpretation of them makes their importance to Blake's thought and career amply clear. This is certainly a book that all Blake specialists will have to know."--Anne K. Mellor, author of "Mary Shelley: Her Life, Her Fiction, Her Monsters"

The Early Illuminated Books

The Early Illuminated Books

by William Blake

1993 · Princeton University Press

"The nature of William Blake's genius and of his art is most completely expressed in his Illuminated Books. In order to give full and free expression to his vision Blake invented a method of printing that enabled him to created works in which words and images combine to form pages uniquely rich in content and beautiful in form. It is only through the pages as originally conceived and published by the poet himself that Blake's meaning can be fully experienced."--Publisher's description.