000 01118cam a2200289 4500
001 057128454X
008 131022s2014 en kW 0000 p eng
016 0 0 _a100=NOTNACO
_a600=NOTNACO
020 0 0 _a9780571284542
_bm
020 0 0 _a057128454X
_bv
040 0 0 _aBDS
072 0 0 _aLIT
_bLiterature
_weflch
072 0 0 _aLIT
_bLiterature
_wukslc
082 0 0 _a821.92 GRE
_c23
100 1 0 _aGreenlaw, Lavinia
_c1962-
245 1 0 _aA double sorrow:
_bTroilus and Criseyde
260 0 0 _bFaber & Faber
_c2014
306 0 0 _a217 pages
_c21 cm
_ehbk
358 0 0 _b20140306
365 0 0 _a16.99
520 0 0 _aWhen Chaucer composed 'Troilus and Criseyde' he gave us, some say, his finest poem, and with it one of the most captivating love stories ever written. 'A Double Sorrow' takes its title from the opening line of that poem in a fresh telling of this most tortured of love affairs.
600 1 0 _aChaucer
_hGeoffrey
_c-1400
_tTroilus and Criseyde
_vPoetry
650 0 0 _aTroilus (Legendary character)
_vPoetry
650 0 0 _aCressida (Fictitious character)
_vPoetry
651 0 0 _aTroy (Extinct city)
_vPoetry
942 0 0 _03
999 _c43026
_d43026