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Stanley Appelbaum

Author of English Romantic Poetry: An Anthology

50+ Works 2,642 Members 17 Reviews

About the Author

Series

Works by Stanley Appelbaum

English Romantic Poetry: An Anthology (1996) — Editor — 659 copies, 4 reviews
Essay on Man and Other Poems (Dover Thrift Edition) (1994) — Editor — 417 copies, 2 reviews
Introduction to French Poetry (1969) 255 copies, 1 review
Great German Poems of the Romantic Era (1995) 92 copies, 1 review
Silent Movies (1974) 16 copies
Death in Venice 2 copies

Associated Works

Siddhartha (1922) — Translator, some editions — 31,265 copies, 419 reviews
A Christmas Carol (1843) — Editor, some editions — 29,233 copies, 597 reviews
Walden; or, Life in the Woods (1854) — Editor, some editions — 16,123 copies, 205 reviews
The Metamorphosis [novella] (1915) — Translator, some editions — 15,094 copies, 274 reviews
Notes from Underground (1864) — Editor, some editions — 14,766 copies, 188 reviews
Ethan Frome (1911) — Editor, some editions — 10,610 copies, 239 reviews
William Shakespeare: The Sonnets (1609) — Editor, some editions — 10,022 copies, 79 reviews
Demian (1919) — Translator, some editions — 8,388 copies, 123 reviews
The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin (1791) — Editor, some editions — 8,290 copies, 126 reviews
The Analects (0070) — Editor, some editions — 6,927 copies, 66 reviews
Common Sense (1776) — Editor, some editions — 6,042 copies, 71 reviews
The Life of Lazarillo de Tormes (1554) — Translator, some editions — 3,025 copies, 79 reviews
The Poem of the Cid (1140) — Editor, some editions — 2,838 copies, 46 reviews
La Vita Nuova (1292) — Translator, some editions — 2,570 copies, 28 reviews
The Metamorphosis and Other Stories [Dover] (1915) — Translator, some editions — 1,843 copies, 11 reviews
Platero and I: An Andalusian Elegy (1914) — Translator, some editions — 1,757 copies, 32 reviews
She Stoops to Conquer (1771) — Editor, some editions — 1,677 copies, 21 reviews
Mountain Interval (1916) — Editor, some editions — 1,441 copies, 13 reviews
Emily Dickinson : Selected Poems [Gramercy Library of Classic Poets] (1990) — Editor, some editions — 1,294 copies, 8 reviews
Rimas y Leyendas (1863) — Editor, some editions — 1,090 copies, 29 reviews
The Subjection of Women (1869) — Editor, some editions — 1,087 copies, 14 reviews
The Vagabond (1910) — Translator, some editions — 1,033 copies, 24 reviews
Great Speeches (1991) — General Editor — 1,015 copies, 6 reviews
Fuenteovejuna (1619) — Translator, some editions — 1,010 copies, 22 reviews
The Heptameron (1984) — Editor, some editions — 986 copies, 9 reviews
Le Banquet ; Phèdre (1992) — Editor, some editions — 728 copies, 5 reviews
The Way of the World (1700) — Editor, some editions — 721 copies, 12 reviews
Perrault's Complete Fairy Tales (1697) — Editor, some editions — 704 copies, 8 reviews
Aunt Tula (1921) — Translator, some editions — 647 copies, 17 reviews
Selected Poems [ed. Appelbaum] (1991) — Editor — 535 copies, 2 reviews
The Charge of the Light Brigade and Other Poems (1992) — Editor, some editions — 416 copies, 1 review
History of Philosophy (1967) — Translator, some editions — 364 copies, 3 reviews
Life in Ancient Egypt Coloring Book (1989) — Author — 286 copies
Short Stories (1994) — General editor — 251 copies, 3 reviews
Renaissance Patterns for Lace, Embroidery and Needlepoint (1587) — Translator, some editions — 207 copies, 2 reviews
Eleven Short Stories: A Dual-Language Book (1994) — Translator — 128 copies
Posada's Popular Mexican Prints (Dover Fine Art, History of Art) (1972) — Editor — 128 copies, 2 reviews
Drawings of Albrecht Dürer (1914) — Translator, some editions — 120 copies
Perspective (1604) — Translator, some editions — 96 copies
Three Exemplary Novels (1613) — Editor, some editions — 96 copies, 4 reviews
103 Great Poems: A Dual-Language Book (1999) — Editor — 56 copies
Bach : Eleven great cantatas [score : full] (1976) — Editor, some editions — 46 copies, 1 review
Stories and Poems/Cuentos y Poesias: A Dual-Language Book (Dual-Language Books) (2002) — Editor, some editions — 44 copies, 3 reviews
Pattern Book of Renaissance Lace (1591) — some editions — 43 copies
Death in Venice / A Man and His Dog (2001) — Translator, some editions — 35 copies
Techniques for Marbleizing Paper (1992) — Translator — 30 copies
Treasury of Calligraphy: 219 Great Examples, 1522-1840 (1984) — Translator, some editions — 23 copies
The triumph of Maximilian I; 137 woodcuts by Hans Burgkmair and others (1964) — Editor, some editions — 20 copies
Die Fledermaus [music scores] (1985) — Translator, some editions — 18 copies
Madrigals, Books IV & V (Dover Song Collections) (1927) — Translator, some editions — 17 copies
My Uncle Jules and Other Stories (2007) — Translator, some editions — 14 copies
Madama Butterfly [libretto] (1983) — Translator, some editions — 13 copies
Four Stories / Vier Erzählungen (2003) — Translator, some editions — 12 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Appelbaum, Stanley
Birthdate
1953
Gender
male
Occupations
translator
Organizations
Dover Publications
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Discussions

Stanley Appelbaum in In Translation (June 2014)

Reviews

19 reviews
Just the thought of a poster subscription series makes me wonder why no one does this today. At the turn of the previous century, with Art Nouveau in full bloom, Victorian still prominent, and Art Deco hinted as the future, posters blossomed. They were most decidedly worth receiving in the mail – four a month, for a full series of 240. Mucha, Toulouse-Lautrec, Grasset and countless others, made their living in advertising.

And here they are, in order, numbered, with stats about the artists, show more and an overview. The artists were breaking out of the stifling Victorian mould. They were no longer restricted to geometric frameworks. Their subjects could be facing away, playing with the text, woven into the title, or have nothing whatever to do with the product being advertised. The artists made up new fonts like there was no tomorrow. For centuries, there had been only a handful of fonts outside the decorous initial letters of religious text chapters. Here, now, for all to see, was open competition to attract the eye of the passer-by. And in as ultra-modern a fashion as possible.

It was an exuberant era, beautifully assembled in this Dover collection for all to see in outsized pages.

David Wineberg
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I always find it difficult to review an anthology because I tend to see them as collections of individual stories rather than collections of individual stories. I never like all the stories in an anthology, and to be honest, would it be a good thing if I did? Would that mean all the stories are fantastic? Or would it mean that the anthology lacked a certain scope and never ventured beyond my taste or comfort zone.

That said, I didn't hate any of these stories, and found myself engaged by show more them more often than not. I read them in the Spanish, while occasionally checking my understanding or finding new vocabulary in the translations. This anthology suited that purpose fairly well. There is no glossary, and the stories have not been simplified for a beginner/intermediate reader. I'm grateful that they haven't been simplified! The layout of the book was carefully planned so cross-checking the languages against each other was easy, although the translation was by no means slavish to the original. As a matter of fact, Appelbaum added some delightful humor to the cancion in Portillo's "Unclaimed Watch." The stories date back to the 1800s and the first three or even four stories were definitely outside of my comfort zone! The vocabulary, and I suspect even sentence structure, of the modern Mexican short story has changed since then. Once I got to the latter stories, the language switched to a style I was better able to manage.

The first two stories, despite the language difficulty, were okay. Jose Maria Boa Barcena's "Lanchitas" is a well-told version of a ghost story I've heard a few too many times. Perhaps this story is the origin. Once I got to Altamirano's "Antonia" though, I read these stories voraciously. "Antonia" convincingly describes the ridiculous emotional turmoil of first love, and also describes a tumultuous time in Mexican history. Portillo's "Unclaimed Watch" is brilliant, and the final work, de Compo's "El fusilado" is as chilling as anything Shirley Jackson ever wrote. Skip Gutierrez Najera's "Juan el Organista" though, unless you are into Gothic with a capital G. It's beautifully written, but the plot is a bit heavy handed for my tastes.

On the whole, quite a good read for anyone interested in Mexican literature. The translations too are well enough done to satisfy if you aren't able to navigate the Spanish.
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Pope has a fascinating way of describing the human mindset as well as tackling those things as well as people, culture, society, our education, how we interact with others, religion, as well as lots of other things and 'attacks' them in a satirical way that makes one truly think about these subjects. And on top of these, Pope does it through poem (with occasional rhyming), rather than through prose like Orwell or Vonnegut (or like through visual media like modern satirists - South Park, Rick show more and Morty, BoJack Horseman, Futurama, Simpsons, etc, etc, etc.).

Worth the educational read for everyone, and something to come back to multiple times in one's life for different perspectives of/at the text.
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This is the kind of book I'm always currently reading, and one I never get tired of; yes, you can find these poems in beaucoups of textbook anthologies, but I like how this one edition focuses on, what I believe to be, the single most influential and greatest period of poetry. Wordsworth, Coleridge, Shelley, Byron, and Keats are all there, and presented in such a way, that you don't feel like you're looking for an express way exit when you're three lanes away during the 4 o'clock rush hour. show more This is a good edition, and the poems are certainly accessible, and the book doesn't weigh heavier than the chasis on a 57 Chevy. God, I love "Tintern Abbey" ! show less

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Works
50
Also by
58
Members
2,642
Popularity
#9,717
Rating
3.9
Reviews
17
ISBNs
70
Languages
3

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