 Photo credit: John D. Fellers (courtesy of the author)
| Stephen MitchellStephen Mitchell is composed of at least 4 distinct authors.Also known as: Stephen Mitchell, Mitchell Mitchell, Stephen, Ed. Mitchell, Stephen mitchell Translator, Stephen Mitchell translator | 1,651 | 33 | (4) | 1 | 0 |
Stephen Mitchell is composed of at least 4 distinct authors (edit assignments). LibraryThing has only recently introduced this feature. In the near future distinct authors will have their own pages. Stephen Mitchell (1)- Gilgamesh: A New English Version 604 copies, 11 reviews
- The Book of Job 212 copies, 3 reviews
- The Gospel According to Jesus: A New Translation and Guide to His… 167 copies, 3 reviews
- The Enlightened Heart 162 copies, 1 review
- The Enlightened Mind 123 copies, 4 reviews
- Genesis: New Translation of the Classic Bible Stories, A 70 copies
- Meetings with the Archangel 43 copies
- The Frog Prince: A Fairy Tale for Consenting Adults 42 copies, 4 reviews
- A Book of Psalms: Selected and Adapted from the Hebrew 39 copies, 1 review
- The Ugly Duckling 19 copies, 2 reviews
- Parables and Portraits 19 copies, 1 review
- Jesus: What He Really Said and Did 14 copies, 1 review
- The Essence of Wisdom 14 copies
Stephen Mitchell (2)Stephen Mitchell (3)Stephen Mitchell (4)Stephen Mitchell (unknown)
Top members (works)bodhisattva (7), kullfarr (6), vscarlett (5), bertilak (5), weisbardaj (5), LR_Friends (5), thnktfthbx (5), kondwani (4), silverbow (4), tbaltazar (4), Katalyst (4), alton (4), Luciana43 (4) — more Member favorites
1 members:
bodhisattva
Stephen Mitchell has 5 past events. (show)
Stephen Mitchell. Stephen Mitchell will speak and sign THE SECOND BOOK OF THE TAO.
Interested: GuyV Added by booksense.
Stephen Mitchell. Enhanced by Stephen Mitchell's illuminating commentary, the next volume of the classic manual on the art of living The most widely translated book in world literature after the Bible, Lao-tzuas Tao Te Ching, or Book of the Way, is the classic manual on the art of living. Following the phenomenal success ... (more)
A poet, writer, and translator who has read here many times from an extraordinary range of work, Stephen Mitchell is makes this welcome return for a return to old Chinese texts, as he is here with The Second Book of the Tao (Penguin). His Tao te Ching has long been among the most popular. This personally-created ... (more)
Enhanced by Stephen Mitchell's illuminating commentary, The Second Book of the Tao is the next volume of the classic manual on the art of living. A gift to contemporary readers, Mitchell's meditations and bold reimagining of the original texts make the ancient teachings at once modern, relevant, ... (more)
|
|
| Canonical name |
|
| Legal name |
|
| Other names |
|
| Date of birth |
|
| Date of death |
|
| Burial location |
|
| Gender |
|
| Nationality |
|
| Places of residence |
|
| Education |
|
| Occupations |
|
| Relationships |
|
| Organizations |
|
| Awards and honors |
|
| Agents |
|
| Short biography |
|
| Disambiguation notice |
Stephen Mitchell, 1943-, author of Gilgamesh: A New English Version; Stephen Mitchell, 1948-, author of A history of the later Roman Empire, AD 284-641; Stephen Mitchell, editor of the Seaby Standard Catalogue of British Coins; Stephen A. (Stephen Arthur) Mitchell, 1951-, author of Heroic sagas and ballads  | |
|
|
Related people/characters
Author DisambiguationHow many authors?Stephen Mitchell is currently considered a "single author." If one or more works are by a distinct, homonymous authors, go ahead and split the author.
This entry includes…
Combine with…
What?
Q: What is this feature for/why is it necessary?
A: Because LibraryThing draws from so many different libraries, it can't enforce a single name for a given author. "Also known as"
lets LibraryThing users combine author's names easily,
so collections match up and everything runs smoothly.
Q: Can I combine with an author not suggested above?
A: Yes you can.
Q: I know an author is separate, but mischievous gremlins keep combining them. Can I take a name off the combination list?
A: Yes you can.
Look up! Everything in the "Combine with..." section now has a link to "never combine." Use this feature wisely. "Marc Twain" may be idiotic, but misspelling should still be combined. "Mark Twain" and "Edward Gibbon" should not.
Q: What authors have already been slated to "never combine" with this author?
A: No authors.
Q: I am the gremlin and I'm right!
A: Take it to the Combiners group.
Q: What if the disambiguation notice is wrong?
A: Go ahead and edit it.
|