Bird Brain Productions
Dancing With The Daffodils
Dancing With The Daffodils
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Little masterpieces of rhetoric, these essays challenge our thinking about the art of reading and the fate of books. Scheer writes with gusto. When it comes to correcting stubbornly and erroneously held ideas, he takes no prisoners. He shines the light of unmistakable intelligence on the issues and texts he encounters in these remarkably well-written essays. They have a philosophical heft that makes them profound, but they also carry a light-hearted sense of what makes the world go round. Need I use the word "love"? What ultimately emerges from reading these fine and at times deftly elaborated essays is a sense of joy: the joy that may well bring to mind that old-fashioned aesthetic experience John Keats captured with two telling words: "truth" and "beauty."
- Thomas A. Rivers, professor of English at the University of Southern Indiana, author of many essays in such journals as College English and The Quarterly Journal of Speech
Steven C. Scheer, Ph. D., is a retired professor of English and the author of several previously published books. He has published works on literary criticism, film studies, short stories, and many articles and essays and book reviews.
"Hungarian by birth, American by citizenship, human being by choice," Steven C. Scheer came to the United States at the age of 18 in 1959. After graduating from John Carroll University with a B.A. in 1967 and an M.A. in 1968, he attended graduate school at the Johns Hopkins University, where he earned a Ph.D. in English in 1974.
His books include a monograph on the Hungarian novelist Kálmán Mikszáth published by the Twayne World Authors Series; Pious Impostures and Unproven Words, a study of the works of such classic American writers as Hawthorne, Melville, and Mark Twain; and Hollywood Values, a book reviewing many of the films of Hollywood that shows there is much more to a film than meets the eye; and The Heart Ages, But It Doesn't Grow Old, the love stories from impetuous youth to the quiet reflections of impending old age that metaphysically question life and death, time and eternity, and sex and love.
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