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inauthor:"Stephen Fry" from books.google.com
Stephen Fry believes that if one can speak and read English, one can write poetry. In The Ode Less Travelled, he invites readers to discover the delights of writing poetry for pleasure and provides the tools and confidence to get started.
inauthor:"Stephen Fry" from books.google.com
Adrian Healy loves to lie, and already in his public school career, marked by privilege and pederasty, he had lost the ability to differentiate between simple truth and his elaborate fictions.
inauthor:"Stephen Fry" from books.google.com
Covering most of his twenties, this is the riotous and utterly compelling story of how the Stephen the world knows (or thinks it knows) took his first steps in theater, radio, television, and film.
inauthor:"Stephen Fry" from books.google.com
Filled with raw, electric extracts from his diaries of the time, More Fool Me is a brilliant, eloquent account by a man driven to create and to entertain—revealing a side to him he has long kept hidden. “Fry is an astonishingly charming ...
inauthor:"Stephen Fry" from books.google.com
In Stephen Fry in America, the beloved British comic turns his celebrated wit and insight to unearthing the real U.S. as he travels across the continent. Stephen Fry has always loved America. In fact, he came very close to being born here.
inauthor:"Stephen Fry" from books.google.com
Stephen Fry presents a 700-year history of classical music and the world as we know it.
inauthor:"Stephen Fry" from books.google.com
Discover the story of a gentleman's most distinguished accessory, the necktie, with the inimitable Stephen Fry as your guide.
inauthor:"Stephen Fry" from books.google.com
A number one bestseller in Britain, Stephen Fry's astonishingly frank, funny, wise memoir is the book that his fans everywhere have been waiting for.
inauthor:"Stephen Fry" from books.google.com
Discover the tales behind the ties in Stephen Fry's witty companion to our most distinguished accessory 'A well-tied tie is the first serious step in life' Oscar Wilde 'What do ties matter, Jeeves, at a time like this?
inauthor:"Stephen Fry" from books.google.com
Paris the Trojan has kidnapped Helen, the most beautiful woman of the ancien world. A thousand ships give chase and lay siege to Troy. Yet the city stands resolutely against Greek might.