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The Damned Don't Cry

The Damned Don't Cry
Author: Harry Hervey
Publisher: Cherokee Pub
Total Pages: 426
Release: 2007-03-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780877973065

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The Damned Don't Cry

The Damned Don't Cry
Author: Frank Edgar Chapman, Jr.
Publisher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 248
Release: 2019-06-03
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0359705715

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"Frank's Chapman's engaging life story, from his young years in St Louis on the streets, to being imprisoned, to writing and teaching Marxism with fellow inmates, to winning his freedom, to organizing with the Communist Party, to his current life as a fighter for community control of the police in Chicago. A powerful story that will open many eyes"--Amazon.com.


The Damned Don't Cry

The Damned Don't Cry
Author: Harry Hervey
Publisher:
Total Pages: 448
Release: 1939
Genre: Savannah (Ga.)
ISBN:

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Damned

Damned
Author: Chuck Palahniuk
Publisher: Doubleday Canada
Total Pages: 211
Release: 2011-10-18
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0385671113

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Think adolescence is hell? You have no idea... Welcome to Dante's Inferno, by way of The Breakfast Club, from the mind of American fiction's most brilliant troublemaker. "Death, like life, is what you make out of it." So says Madison, the whip-tongued 11-year-old narrator of Damned, Chuck Palahniuk's subversive homage to the young adult genre. Madison is abandoned at her Swiss boarding school over Christmas while her parents are off touting their new film projects and adopting more orphans. Over the holidays she dies of a marijuana overdose--and the next thing she knows, she's in Hell. This is the afterlife as only Chuck Palahniuk could imagine it: a twisted inferno inspired by both the most extreme and mundane of human evils, where The English Patient plays on repeat and roaming demons devour sinners limb by limb. However, underneath Madison's sad teenager affect there is still a child struggling to accept not only the events of her dysfunctional life, but also the truth about her death. For Madison, though, a more immediate source of comfort lies in the motley crew of young sinners she meets during her first days in Hell. With the help of Archer, Babette, Leonard, and Patterson, she learns to navigate Hell--and discovers that she'd rather be mortal and deluded and stupid with those she loves than perfect and alone.


The Damned Don't Drown

The Damned Don't Drown
Author: Arthur V. Sellwood
Publisher: US Naval Institute Press
Total Pages: 164
Release: 1996
Genre: History
ISBN:

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Once one of Nazi Germany's most vaunted cruise liners, the Wilhelm Gustloff packed her decks with some 6,500 refugees in January 1945 and made her way out of the Gulf of Danzig just before the Russian army swept in. Scores of SS officers, top-ranking Nazi officials, members of the German Women's Naval Service, and hundreds of wounded German soldiers, fragmented army units, and fleeing peasants were on board when the ship was hit by torpedoes twelve miles off shore. Panic broke out, and more than 6,000 passengers were lost - making it the greatest sea disaster ever recorded. The author of this book, Arthur V. Sellwood, a journalist known for his action-filled naval stories, draws on interviews with some of the survivors and official documents to assure the authenticity of his account.


The Damned Don't Die

The Damned Don't Die
Author: Jim Nisbet
Publisher: Abrams
Total Pages: 122
Release: 2010-11-30
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1468302965

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This is his first novel and it is a gruesome and dark novel set in suburbia.


The Damned Don't Cry!

The Damned Don't Cry!
Author: Vincent Sherman
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2005
Genre:
ISBN:

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"It's a man's world. And Ethel Whitehead learns there's only one way for a woman to survive in it : be as tempting as a cupcake and as tough as a 75-cent steak." [box cover note].


The Damned Don't Cry - They Just Disappear

The Damned Don't Cry - They Just Disappear
Author: Harlan Greene
Publisher: Univ of South Carolina Press
Total Pages: 194
Release: 2017-12-29
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1611178126

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A biography of an unconventional Southern writer who illuminated gay life in the South In The Damned Don't Cry—They Just Disappear, literary historian and Lamba Award-winning novelist Harlan Greene has created a portrait of a nearly forgotten southern writer, unearthing information from archives, rare books, film libraries,and small-town newspapers. Greene brings Harry Hervey (1900-1951) to life and explicates his works to reveal him as a hardworking writer and master of many genres, bravely unwilling to conform to conventional values. As Greene illustrates, Hervey's novels, short stories, nonfiction books, and film scripts contain complex mixtures of history and thinly disguised homoerotic situations and themes. They blend local color, naturalism, melodrama, and psychological and sexual truths that provide a view to the circles in which he moved. Living openly with his male lover in Savannah, Georgia, and Charleston, South Carolina, Hervey set novels in these cities that scandalized the locals and critics as well. He challenged the sexual mores of his day, sometimes subtly and at other times brazenly presenting texts that told one story to gay male readers, while still courting a mainstream audience. His novels and nonfiction may have been coded and thus escaped detection in their day, but twenty-first century readers can decipher them easily. Greene also discusses Hervey's travel books and successful Hollywood scriptwriting, as well as his use of exotic elements from Asian cultures. The iconic film Shanghai Express, starring Marlene Dietrich, was based on one of his original stories. He also wrote some of the first travel books on Indochina, with descriptions of male and female prostitution and allusions to his own sexual adventures, which still make for sensational reading today. Despite Hervey's output and his perseverance in presenting gay characters and themes as openly as he could, he has not been included in any survey of twentieth-century gay writers. Greene now rectifies this omission, providing the first book-length study of Hervey's life and work and the first scholarly attention to him in more than fifty years. It furthers our understanding of gay life in the South, as well as the impact of gay artists on popular culture in the first half of the twentieth century.


The Damned Die Hard

The Damned Die Hard
Author: Hugh McLeave
Publisher: Bantam
Total Pages: 324
Release: 1992
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780553299601

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The vivid history of the French Foreign Legion--from the deserts of North Africa to the jungles of Vietnam. Created by King Louis Phillipe in 1831 to fight in conquest of Algeria, the Foreign Legion has been comprised ever since of society's misfits: refugees, criminals, and poets. Here is the story of the infamous fighting unit that has become the stuff of legends.


Voyage of the Damned

Voyage of the Damned
Author: Gordon Thomas
Publisher: Open Road Media
Total Pages: 395
Release: 2014-07-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 1497658950

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The “extraordinary” true story of the St. Louis, a German ship that, in 1939, carried Jews away from Hamburg—and into an unimaginable ordeal (The New York Times). On May 13, 1939, the luxury liner St. Louis sailed from Hamburg, one of the last ships to leave Nazi Germany before World War II erupted. Aboard were 937 Jews—some had already been in concentration camps—who believed they had bought visas to enter Cuba. The voyage of the damned had begun. Before the St. Louis was halfway across the Atlantic, a power struggle ensued between the corrupt Cuban immigration minister who issued the visas and his superior, President Bru. The outcome: The refugees would not be allowed to land in Cuba. In America, the Brown Shirts were holding Nazi rallies in Madison Square Garden; anti-Semitic Father Coughlin had an audience of fifteen million. Back in Germany, plans were being laid to implement the final solution. And aboard the St. Louis, 937 refugees awaited the decision that would determine their fate. Gordon Thomas and Max Morgan Witts have re-created history in this meticulous reconstruction of the voyage of the St. Louis. Every word of their account is true: the German High Command’s ulterior motive in granting permission for the “mission of mercy;” the confrontations between the refugees and the German crewmen; the suicide attempts among the passengers; and the attitudes of those who might have averted the catastrophe, but didn’t. In reviewing the work, the New York Times was unequivocal: “An extraordinary human document and a suspense story that is hard to put down. But it is more than that. It is a modern allegory, in which the SS St. Louis becomes a symbol of the SS Planet Earth. In this larger sense the book serves a greater purpose than mere drama.”