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Charles Dickens’s Letters to Charles Lever
Charles Dickens
Harvard University Press
These letters from the Harry Elkins Widener Collection in the Harvard College Library are now, with the permission of Sir Henry F. Dickens, published for the first time. They prove that, despite the assertions of Lever’s biographers, there was a very cordial and affectionate friendship between Lever and Dickens; and they furthermore correct the impression that might be gained from the omission of Lever's name in the Letters published by Georgina Hogarth and Mamie Dickens and from the fact that in Forster’s Life Lever’s name is mentioned only in discussing the failure of his story in All the Year Round.
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front cover of The Zoom
The Zoom
Drama at the Touch of a Lever
Hall, Nick
Rutgers University Press, 2018
From the queasy zooms in Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo to the avant-garde mystery of Michael Snow’s Wavelength, from the excitement of televised baseball to the drama of the political convention, the zoom shot is instantly recognizable and highly controversial. In The Zoom, Nick Hall traces the century-spanning history of the zoom lens in American film and television. From late 1920s silent features to the psychedelic experiments of the 1960s and beyond, the book describes how inventors battled to provide film and television studios with practical zoom lenses, and how cinematographers clashed over the right ways to use the new zooms. Hall demonstrates how the zoom brought life and energy to cinema decades before the zoom boom of the 1970s and reveals how the zoom continues to play a vital and often overlooked role in the production of contemporary film and television.  
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