Knihobot

Ralph Thompson

    View from Mount Diabolo
    Human Anatomy for art Students
    Moving on
    Take My Word for It
    Šeptající země
    A zoo in my luggage
    • The true and hilarious story of how Gerald Durrell and his wife set up their own zoo. Journeying to the Cameroons, he and his wife, helped by the renowned Fon of Bafut, managed to collect 'plenty beef.' Their difficulties began when they found themselves back at home, with Cholmondely the chimpanzee, Bug-Eye the bush-baby, and other founder members... and nowhere to put them

      A zoo in my luggage
    • Knížka humorně laděných příběhů známého anglického přírodovědce a spisovatele z výprav za zvěří do Argentiny a Patagonie.

      Šeptající země
    • Take My Word for It

      • 216 stránek
      • 8 hodin čtení

      Ralph Thompson's memoir is a fascinating record of a long and full life lived jointly in the worlds of art, literature and business. From a pre-war childhood in colonial Jamaica, Take My Word For It is full of rich insights into both the personal and Jamaica emerging into difficult modernity.

      Take My Word for It
    • Moving on

      • 104 stránek
      • 4 hodiny čtení

      The poems in Moving On recreate moments of change, loss and epiphany. The long sequence, 'Goodbye Aristotle, So Long America' explores the years of study as a Jesuit university in America and the making both of a lifetime's values and of the sense of irony which has made it possible to live them. The author is a Jamaican who, as well as being a painter and poet, is the Senior Executive of one of his country's biggest companies.

      Moving on
    • View from Mount Diabolo

      • 84 stránek
      • 3 hodiny čtení

      Set against the backdrop of Jamaica's transition from a tranquil rural society to a troubled postcolonial urban landscape, this novel in verse captures both personal and national tragedies. Through meticulously crafted rhyming quatrains, it conveys a sense of prophetic urgency, reflecting on lost romantic ideals and the stark realities of modern life. Winning the 2001 Jamaican National Literary Award, the work resonates with themes of exasperated love and societal change.

      View from Mount Diabolo