David Woodard
Mī-guók gì siŏh ciáh cáuk-ké̤ṳk-gă
David James Woodard (大卫·詹姆斯·伍达德, /ˈwʊdɑːrd/ Bŏng-cô/Séng-sék, Santa Barbara, California, 1964 nièng 4 nguŏk 6 hô̤ — ) sê Mī-guók gì siŏh ciáh cáuk-ké̤ṳk-gă.[1][2][3][4][5]
Ùng-hŏk (文學)
Siŭ-gāi- Kracht, C., & D. Woodard, Five Years (Hannover: Wehrhahn Verlag, 2011)
- Tenaglia, F., Momus—A Walking Interview (Milano: Noch Publishing, 2015)
- Allen, B., Pelican (Lùng-dŭng: Reaktion Books, 2019)
- Chandarlapaty, R., Seeing the Beat Generation (Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2019)
- Deaglio, E., Cose che voi umani (Venezia: Marsilio Editori, 2021)
- Horzon, R., The White Book (Báik-lìng: Suhrkamp, 2021)
Chăng-kō̤ cṳ̆-lâiu (參考資料)
Siŭ-gāi- ↑ Carpenter, S., "In Concert at a Killer's Death", Los Angeles Times, 2001 n. 5 ng. 9 h.
- ↑ Vloed, K. van der, "David Woodard", Requiem Survey, 2006 n. 2 ng. 5 h.
- ↑ Epstein, J., "Rebuilding a Home in the Jungle", San Francisco Chronicle, 2005 n. 3 ng. 13 h.
- ↑ Allen, M., "Décor by Timothy Leary", The New York Times, 2005 n. 1 ng. 20 h.
- ↑ Woodard, D., "Musica lætitiæ comes medicina dolorum", Der Freund, Nr. 7, 2006 n. 3 ng.
Ngiê-dāu lièng-ciék (外斗鏈接)
Siŭ-gāi- Wikiquote (Ĭng-ngṳ̄)
- Enciclopedia Kiddle para niños (Să̤-băng-ngà-ngṳ̄)
- Library of Congress (Ĭng-ngṳ̄)
- Uōng-câng
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