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| A great piece of literature obviously ignored by English publishers. |
Alexander L. Kielland (18 February 1849 – 6 April 1906)
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| A great piece of literature obviously ignored by English publishers. |
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| Letters from the Great Blasket is the only book in English by any Blascadian author |
Eibhlís ní Shúilleabháin (1911 – 12 September 1971)
If counted well the Germans today can/could watch Dinner for One (The 90th Birthday) 20 times at different times on various TV-channels, and apart from the original in various German dialects, inclusive Schwiizerdütsch (Swiss German). Very strange folks, the Germans. Well, judge for yourself.
Tiny tip-off: Be absolutely determined not to laugh.
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| ... and peace on earth. |
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| . . . and don't blame the vulture. |
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| . . . |
Friedrich Hölderlin (20 March 1770 – 7 June 1843)
Across the street from Seanhenge, a Christmas elf named Wolfram moved in at the beginning of December.
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| He has not yet been seen, but he writes regularly, and often traces of his highly varied nocturnal activities are unmistakable. |
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| The other day he was told in a letter that the writer's grandfather had cooked him a portion of rice, and ... |
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| . . . that she, the letter writer, hoped Wolfram would relish it. |
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| And yes, it did taste, Wolfram wrote, but asked for indulgence that unfortunately he did not quite manage to entirely eat the huge portion. |