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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Ian M. Cook

One Nation: Ian's Road 2

One Nation: Ian's Road 2

Joseph Hansen

Independently Published
2019
nidottu
Ian and crew had reached the end of their road. Hundreds of enemy invaders expending all resources to seize the small sanctuary left to the crew. With hundreds of thousands of infected bearing down on the enemy forces from behind the situation had turned desperate. Their mission, to stop the invaders from taking the base, their survival... secondary. With more than half their numbers already killed or consumed they fought with a ferocity that only those who had survived this long could possess. Their world had gone from sunshine and rainbow unicorns to buckets of blood and mayhem in just a few short months and they had survived, but was it enough against what was now trying to destroy them?One Nation is the seventh installment in the bestselling Five Roads to Texas saga a Phalanx Press collaboration.
The Cambridge Companion to Ian McEwan

The Cambridge Companion to Ian McEwan

Cambridge University Press
2019
sidottu
This Companion showcases the best scholarship on Ian McEwan's work, and offers a comprehensive demonstration of his importance in the canon of international contemporary fiction. The whole career is covered, and the connections as well as the developments across the oeuvre are considered. The essays offer both an assessment of McEwan's technical accomplishments and a sense of the contextual factors that have provided him with inspiration. This volume has been structured to highlight the points of intersection between literary questions and evaluations, and the treatment of contemporary socio-cultural issues and topics. For the more complex novels - such as Atonement - this book offers complementary perspectives. In this respect, The Cambridge Companion to Ian McEwan serves as a prism of interpretation, revealing the various interpretive emphases each of McEwan's more complex works invite, and to show how his various recurring preoccupations run through his career.
The Cambridge Companion to Ian McEwan

The Cambridge Companion to Ian McEwan

Cambridge University Press
2019
pokkari
This Companion showcases the best scholarship on Ian McEwan's work, and offers a comprehensive demonstration of his importance in the canon of international contemporary fiction. The whole career is covered, and the connections as well as the developments across the oeuvre are considered. The essays offer both an assessment of McEwan's technical accomplishments and a sense of the contextual factors that have provided him with inspiration. This volume has been structured to highlight the points of intersection between literary questions and evaluations, and the treatment of contemporary socio-cultural issues and topics. For the more complex novels - such as Atonement - this book offers complementary perspectives. In this respect, The Cambridge Companion to Ian McEwan serves as a prism of interpretation, revealing the various interpretive emphases each of McEwan's more complex works invite, and to show how his various recurring preoccupations run through his career.
Creationist Literalism a "Genesis-Ian" Heresy
Genesis, the first book of the Bible, relates the "Creation Story". Some Creationists insist it's to be taken word-by-word literally. An examination of the actual words, as well as such factors as Noah's ark specs . . . reveal literalism as impossibile. To assert Genesis as actuality -- is heresy
Dirty Work: Ian Rankin and John Rebus Book-by-Book
The unauthorised and ambitiously defintive guide to Ian Rankin and John Rebus, now including EVEN DOGS IN THE WILD! In 1987 Ian Rankin published the first John Rebus book; even he didn't know what he was unleashing. Nearly thirty years later Rankin and Rebus are the kings of crime fiction, but they are more than that. The books are cultural history of Scotland too. This is the all-purpose handbook to the John Rebus universe. Contained in this volume is everything you could reasonably want to know about the books, their creation and the characters within them, from the birth of the character to the old man staring retirement in the face. The book will answer such questions as: why is Rankin obsessed with Saabs? Why doesn't Siobhan Clarke age but perhaps more importantly it will get to the heart of why we all love John Rebus so much.
Mortal Engines (Ian McQue boxset x4)
MORTAL ENGINES launched Philip Reeve's brilliantly-imagined creation,the world of the Traction Era, where mobile cities fight forsurvival in a post-apocalyptic future. Now, in time for the filmdebut, the critically acclaimed MORTAL ENGINES quartet is repackagedin a boxset with fantastic and eye-catching covers featuringnew artwork.
Here Lies Arthur (Ian McQue NE)

Here Lies Arthur (Ian McQue NE)

Philip Reeve

Scholastic
2019
nidottu
Gwyna is just a small girl, a mouse, when she is bound in service to Myrddin the bard - a traveller and spinner of tales. But Myrddin transfroms her - into a lady goddess, a boy warrior, and a spy. Without Gwyna, Myrddin will not be able to work the most glorious transformation of all - and turn the leader of a raggle-taggle war-band into King Arthur, the greatest hero of all time.
The Life of Ian Fleming

The Life of Ian Fleming

John Pearson

Bloomsbury Reader
2013
pokkari
It is now over fifty years since the premiere of Dr No, the very first Bond film, with Sean Connery introducing 007 as the glamorous secret agent who would become the single most profitable movie character in the history of cinema. But James Bond was invented by one man, Ian Fleming, a wartime intelligence officer and Sunday Times newspaper man who lived to see only the very beginning of the Bond cult.Pearson, who worked with Fleming at the Sunday Times, based this biography on his own memories of Fleming, on Fleming’s private papers, and on a series of interviews with an extraordinary collection of Fleming’s contemporaries – family, friends, enemies, teachers, colleagues, mistresses, and former spies from around the world. First published in 1966, John Pearson's famous biography remains the definitive account of how only Ian Fleming could have dreamed up James Bond, for he led a life as colourful as anything in his fiction, which in turn became a covert autobiography. Charming, debonair and a ruthless womaniser, globetrotting from wartime Algiers to beachside Jamaica, Fleming was as elusive and opaque as his imaginary creation.In his new introduction to this edition, Pearson examines the extent to which Fleming's character informs the movie portrayals of Bond, from Sean Connery through to Daniel Craig, and how Bond himself has achieved immortality beyond Fleming's wildest dreams.
Chase the Shadows: An Ian Richardson Thriller

Chase the Shadows: An Ian Richardson Thriller

Brian Reaves

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2011
nidottu
A monster from hell...A champion from God...And one man caught between them.There is nowhere left to run.The sequel to "Stolen Lives" is here Ian Richardson fears he has lost his brother forever in a car wreck, but after remaining dead for almost four minutes, paramedics revive Thomas. His story is too horrifying to imagine: he visited hell...and something has followed to take him back. Suddenly Ian finds himself immersed in a world of terrors real and imagined in the very shadows around him. The life of his brother and those he loves depend upon his protection from a demoniac. But how can he fight something he cannot believe in?Ian must face the most terrifying enemy of all......one that cannot die."Brian Reaves writes with fearless gusto. He tackles tough subjects, shows believable characters who get scraped and bruised--or even worse--and yet his storytelling has an underlying purpose that is undeniably biblical. If you were to mix the action of James Byron Huggins with the spiritual insight of Frank Peretti, you might find yourself reading a Reaves thriller."--Eric Wilson, NY Times bestselling author of Expiration Date and Field of Blood"A white-knuckled rollercoaster ride from start to finish. This book should come with a warning: Don't read if you are home alone " - Kathryn Cushman, author of "Leaving Yesterday"
Degree of Difficulty: An Ian Connors Mystery

Degree of Difficulty: An Ian Connors Mystery

Tom O'Grady

Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
2011
nidottu
Ian Connors, a young professional with a desire to succeed in the business world, sets off on a vacation to fulfill his childhood dream; to dive the cliffs of Acapulco. A trained diver, Ian knows the risks, but little does he know that the most dangerous part of his trip won't be the Dive.Led by Manny Arroyo, a smiling twelve year old tour guide with a heart of gold, Ian and his friend Spook take in the beauty of Acapulco Bay and its surroundings, including sexy Robyn Baldwin and her girlfriends. But ever-present behind the beauty lurks the ugly reality of greed, and a cast of devious characters who will do anything necessary to get what they want.In the world of competition diving every dive has an assigned Degree of Difficulty. Standing eighty five feet above the churning waters of the canyon at La Quebrada and the corrupt world he's stumbled into, Ian must make the most difficult decision of his life; step to the edge and make a leap of faith, or run away.Set in Acapulco in the seventies, a hot spot for the rich and famous, Degree of Difficulty sweeps the reader along like a Hitchcock movie, from the downtown canyons of Philadelphia to the blue water canyon of La Quebrada, twisting and turning like the treacherous mountain roads of Mexico.
Family and Relationships in Ian McEwan's Fiction

Family and Relationships in Ian McEwan's Fiction

Tomasz Dobrogoszcz

Lexington Books
2018
sidottu
The book provides a lucid analysis of all Ian McEwan fiction published to date, from his 1975 debut short stories up to the 2016 novel Nutshell, spanning forty years of his literary career. Apart from a general discussion of McEwan’s works, the study offers a uniform focal point: it concentrates on one of the key issues taken up by the writer – the aspect of relationships between partners and between family members. As the book demonstrates, the novelist employs interpersonal relations to establish a pertinent context in which he can dramatically portray the process of identity formation in his characters. Throughout his fiction, McEwan consistently uses references to psychoanalysis, either veiled or direct. The proposed book investigates the novelist’s oeuvre through the lens of the psychoanalytic theory developed by Jacques Lacan. The approach used makes the book useful both for readers well familiar with this apparatus, and for those who need introduction to Lacanian psychoanalysis and such of his concepts as “desire,” “fantasy,” “the symbolic order” or “ the Name-of-the-Father.”