Background
Newlin, George Christian was born on February 14, 1931 in Brooklyn. Son of Albert Chauncey and Janet Bethell Newlin.
(Now for the first time all the fiction, nonfiction, and p...)
Now for the first time all the fiction, nonfiction, and poetry of popular Victorian author George Eliot is chronicled in one definitive reference. This exhaustive resource, by the editor of the award-winning "Everyone in Dickens", makes Eliot's complete works accessible to the general reader as well as the student and scholar. In addition to the seven Eliot novels, three novellas, and two short stories, all sixty-eight works of non-fiction are covered, and all poetry, long and short, is included. Using Eliot's own words, Newlin presents all the characters in the novels and other fiction, as well as useful plot and content summaries, and bibliographic data. All of Eliot's short poems are included complete, and her longer poetical pieces are extensively summarized and extracted. In addition, the set includes two short essays by Eliot which have been unknown to scholarship until now. There is also a chronology of the works set against a chronology of Eliot's life. This comprehensive reference includes a thematic concordance of every aspect of life written about by Eliot. Complete with more than 60 illustrations, many from the earliest editions of the Eliot works, it is the ultimate reference to the full body of George Eliot's literary output.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0765615894/?tag=2022091-20
( More than one hundred years after being written, Great ...)
More than one hundred years after being written, Great Expectations is still one of the most widely studied works of fiction. This casebook of historical documents, collateral readings and essays brings to life both Dickens' masterpiece and the social issues surrounding his work. The interdisciplinary approach offers students insight into the historically significant issues, such as child welfare, that ignited Dickens' creative and moral sensibilities. Newlin has unearthed significant documentation on the dilemma of Victorian women, supplying original social commentary such as Mary Wollstonecraft's 1792 A Vindication of the Rights of Women, and John Stuart Mill's 1861 The Subjection of Women. This work also addresses the transportation and deportation of convicts with first-hand accounts of the treatment of prisoners. Original materials describing the significance of class distinctions, with demographic data from 1834, point up the socio-economic gaps that stratified Victorian society. Other primary documents describe the physical settings such as the Marsh Country and the river, and Bow Street in London, that figure prominently in Great Expectations. This collection of sources will help broaden students' understanding of Great Expectations and places it within its historical context. A literary analysis chapter introduces students to the important themes and various writing techniques employed by Dickens. Each subsequent chapter offers original essays and explication of historical documents on significant issues. Each section concludes with thought-provoking study questions, topics for research, and lists of suggested readings. This volume will enhance students' reading of this classic and will facilitate further research for student and teacher alike.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0313299404/?tag=2022091-20
( A Tale of Two Cities, does not waste a word in telling ...)
A Tale of Two Cities, does not waste a word in telling a humanly touching, suspenseful tale against the background of one of the most bloody events in history, the French Revolution. This collection of historical documents, collateral readings, and commentary will promote interdisciplinary study of the novel and enrich the student's understanding of the French Revolution and the significant issues it raised. Newlin, the author of Everyone in Dickens and Every Thing in Dickens, has assembled a rich variety of materials. These include excerpts from Thomas Carlyle's work, The French Revolution (along with a discussion of Dickens's debt to that work), primary documents on mob behavior, the Fall of the Bastille, Thomas Paine and The Rights of Man, due process of law, capital punishment and the development of the guillotine, prison isolation, human dissection and grave robbing, voices from prison during the Terror, and colorful extracts from the writings of travelers, victims, and executioners. A detailed chronology of the French Revolution, interwoven with fictional events from A Tale of Two Cities, and sketches of major political, military, and financial figures of the Revolution, will help the student to place the novel in historical context. France's Declaration of the Rights of Man is compared in detail with the American Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. Each section of the casebook contains study questions, topics for research papers and class discussion, and lists of further reading for examining the events and issues of the novel. A glossary of terms unfamiliar to contemporary readers will help elucidate the text of A Tale of Two Cities. This is an ideal companion for teacher use and student research in interdisciplinary, English, and world history courses.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0313299390/?tag=2022091-20
Newlin, George Christian was born on February 14, 1931 in Brooklyn. Son of Albert Chauncey and Janet Bethell Newlin.
AB, Princeton University, 1952. Postgraduate, Salzburg Mozarteum, 1954. Postgraduate, Vienna Academy Music, 1955—1956.
Bachelor of Laws, Yale University, 1955. Master of Arts in History, Trinity University, 1958.
Legal associate Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy, New York City, 1958—1965. Vice president corporation finance Dominick & Dominick, Inc., 1965—1971, G. H. Walker & Company Incorporated, New York York City, 1971—1972. Vice president, general counsel Faxon Communications Inc., White Plains, 1972—1976.
President Braintree Management Ltd., New York City, 1976—1988, Windows into Fiction, Princeton, New Jersey, since 1988. Lecturer in field.
( A Tale of Two Cities, does not waste a word in telling ...)
(Now for the first time all the fiction, nonfiction, and p...)
( More than one hundred years after being written, Great ...)
Past member planning board, past chairman conservation board, New Castle, New York. Founder New Castle Glazier Arboretum. Treasurer, board directors Koussevitzky Foundation for Music, Robert Miller Fund for Music.
Past president, past chairman board directors Westchester Conservatory of Music. Trustee, member finance committee Bagby Foundation for Music. Founding president then chairman Council for Arts in Westchester (now Westchester Arts Council).
Past trustee, assistant treasurer Composers Conference Wellesley College. Panel chairman International Dickens Society, University Edinburgh, Scotland. Member The Century Association New York City.
Married Janine Jordan, December 23, 1967 (divorced April 1991). Children: Jennifer Williams, Pamela Bowen, Ian Williams, Elizabeth Gardo, Colin.