Kate Simon
Born
in Warsaw, Poland
December 12, 1912
Died
February 04, 1990
Genre
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Bronx Primitive: Portraits in a Childhood
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published
1982
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13 editions
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Absinthe Cocktails
by
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published
2010
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3 editions
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A Renaissance Tapestry: The Gonzaga of Mantua
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published
1988
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7 editions
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A Wider World: Portraits in an Adolescence
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published
1986
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4 editions
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Fifth Avenue: A Very Social History
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published
1978
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5 editions
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Etchings in an Hourglass: A Sequel to Bronx Primitive and a Wider World
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published
1990
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3 editions
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Italy: The Places in Between
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New York places & pleasures;: An uncommon guidebook
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published
1959
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8 editions
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Rebel Music: Bob Marley & Roots Reggae
by |
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Tiny Bubbles
by
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published
2008
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“Remember that a little learning can be a pleasant thing. Italy gives much, in beauty, gaiety, diversity of arts and landscapes, good humor and energy—willingly, without having to be coaxed or courted. Paradoxically, she requires (as do other countries, probably more so) and deserves some preparation as background to enhance her pleasures. It is almost impossible to read a total history of Italy; there was no united country until a hundred years ago, no single line of power, no concerted developments. It is useful, however, to know something about what made Siena run and stop, to become acquainted with the Estes and the Gonzagas, the Medicis and the Borgias, the names that were the local history. It helps to know something about the conflicts of the medieval church with the Holy Roman Empire, of the French, Spanish and early German kings who marked out large chunks of Italy for themselves or were invited to invade by a nervous Italian power. Above all, it helps to turn the pages of a few art and architecture books to become reacquainted with names other those of the luminous giants.
The informed visitors will not allow himself to be cowed by the deluge of art. See what interests or attracts you; there is no Italian Secret Service that reports on whether you have seen everything. If you try to see it all except as a possible professional task, you may come to resist it all. Relax, know what you like and don’t like—not the worst of measures—and let the rest go.”
― Italy: The Places in Between
The informed visitors will not allow himself to be cowed by the deluge of art. See what interests or attracts you; there is no Italian Secret Service that reports on whether you have seen everything. If you try to see it all except as a possible professional task, you may come to resist it all. Relax, know what you like and don’t like—not the worst of measures—and let the rest go.”
― Italy: The Places in Between
“Not the most beautiful, or artistic, or intellectual of cities in Italy, Ascoli Piceno is certainly one of the most easy going and affable, good to look at without being awesome. It is energetic and worldly, and it eats well.”
― Italy: The Places in Between
― Italy: The Places in Between
“The volatile politics of Italy acquired additional complications at the end of the fifteenth century. Charles VIII had died in the spring of 1498, leaving as his successor Louis XII, formerly the duke of Valois and Orleans and, through his descent from Valentino Visconti, a claimant to the duchy of Milan. Old treaties were exhumed and new theatres penned, their ultimate effect being to cut Italy to bits.”
― A Renaissance Tapestry: The Gonzaga of Mantua
― A Renaissance Tapestry: The Gonzaga of Mantua




