The Feud

  • The Feud: Vladimir Nabokov, Edmund Wilson, and the End of a Beautiful Friendship
    By Alex Beam

    But early in his tenure with the magazine, “a man called Ross started to 'edit'” one of his stories, “and I wrote to Mrs. White telling her that I could not accept any of those ridiculous and exasperating alterations.”32 Harold Ross ...

  • The Feud: The Hatfields and McCoys: The True Story
    By Dean King

    Yet despite numerous articles, books, television shows, and feature films, until THE FEUD nobody has ever told the true story of this legendary clash in the heart of Appalachia.

  • The Feud
    By Thomas Berger

    Unable to see the incidents as unrelated, these two families enter a battle that’s as bitter as it is funny. With rich characters dotting every page, this is a Berger classic that can’t be put down.

  • The Feud: Vladimir Nabokov, Edmund Wilson, and the End of a Beautiful Friendship
    By Alex Beam

    Wilson attacked his friend's translation with hammer and tong in the New York Review of Books. Nabokov counterattacked in the same publication.

  • The Feud: The Hatfields and McCoys: The True Story
    By Dean King

    Filled with bitter quarrels, reckless affairs, treacherous betrayals, relentless mercenaries, and courageous detectives, The Feud is the riveting story of two frontier families struggling for survival within the narrow confines of an ...

  • The Feud
    By G. Elliott Nations

    While learning about the people involved in the feud, and the anguish it brought both families, he also learns a long held secret that could change his life forever.

  • The Feud
    By Giles A. Lutz

    A street fight between cattleman Grat Hagen and sheep rancher Jessie Kilmer threatens to revive old hatreds--and a greedy local banker is intent on seeing that it does.

  • The Feud
    By Thomas Berger

    During the late 1930s in small-town America, the Beeler family of Hornbeck experiences a series of encounters, ranging from conflict to romance, with members of the Bullard family of nearby Millville

  • The Feud
    By Catherine Hiller

    Despite the notion of female solidarity, almost every office has its feud--usually between two women. In The Feud, a work friendship goes bad. Very bad. During the mid-nineties, the Internet was new and cell phones were rare.