Knihobot

John Gardner

    20. listopad 1926 – 3. srpen 2007

    John Gardner byl americký romanopisec a univerzitní profesor, jehož díla jsou známá pro své originální zpracování mýtů a legend. Jeho tvorba často zkoumá témata viny, vykoupení a lidské zkušenosti. Gardnerův jedinečný styl a hluboké filozofické zamyšlení z něj činí významnou postavu americké literatury.

    October Light
    The King's Indian
    The Return of Moriarty
    Assessment and learning
    Budování komunity
    Muž z Barbarossy
    • Muž z Barbarossy

      • 191 stránek
      • 7 hodin čtení
      3,0(11)Ohodnotit

      Příběh, v němž hlavním hrdinou je nepřemožitelný detektiv James Bond, vypráví o kumunistickém a vojenském puči, který má zajistit sovětskou světovládu na zemi. Autor nastiňuje situaci, kdy v Rusku se vzbouří generálové, pobouření rozpadem impéria a Amerika je současně vázána v Iráku operací Pouštní bouře a zkonstruuje příběh, kterak Irák atomovou bombu zničí nejobávanějšího irského nepřítele a tak obnoví slávu sovětského imperia. Neprůstřelný James Bond tyto rejdy ovšem překazí. Celé to má ovšem docela přijatelný začátek: v Americe se od války ukrývá ukrajinský zločinec, který napomáhal při akci Babí Jar a policie všech států po něm pátrá.

      Muž z Barbarossy
    • Assessment and learning

      • 240 stránek
      • 9 hodin čtení
      4,0(1)Ohodnotit

      The only book of its kind to provide a comprehensive overview of assessment used to support learning, Assessment and Learning makes this area accessible and understandable for a wise range of users. This unique text is a major source of practice-based theory on assessment for learning, a formative assessment to support individual development and motivate learners. Key areas covered in the book include the practice of learning for assessment in the classroom, developing motivation for learning, professional learning and assessment for learning, and assessment and theories of learning.

      Assessment and learning
    • In this exceptional book, author John Gardner explores the literary form as a vehicle of vision, and creates heroes that personify his tremendous artistic ideals: A Boston schoolmaster abandons his dreams of owning a farmhouse in rural Illinois only to be taken on a voyage across the seas and into self-discovery, faith, and love; an artist’s rapturous enthusiasm inspires an aging university professor to approach life’s chaotic moments as opportunities for creation. Each of these stories is wonderful in its own right, and provides valuable insight into the author’s literary beliefs.      Written just prior to his critical masterwork, On Moral Fiction, The King’s Indian is a must-read for those interested in learning more about Gardner’s highly controversial artistic philosophies.   This ebook features a new illustrated biography of John Gardner, including original letters, rare photos, and never-before-seen documents from the Gardner family and the University of Rochester Archives.

      The King's Indian
    • James Page is a crusty old Vermonter who blasts his TV with a shotgun and locks his 80-year old sister, Sally, in her bedroom. While imprisoned there, she finds and reads a cheap paperback thriller about marijuana smugglers in Mexico (actually written by Gardner and his first wife, Joan). The two stories are then woven together with considerable leaps of time and missing pages in the thriller. At times, Gardner wanders around in philosophy la-la land, while at other times he can write the most surreal and beautiful poetic prose about nature, and at still other times he can portray the emotional torture endured by James and eventual redemption of his humane spirit

      October Light
    • On Writers and Writing

      • 304 stránek
      • 11 hodin čtení
      3,9(7)Ohodnotit

      This compilation of essays and reviews, gathered posthumously from the New York Times Book Review and other publications, solidifies John Gardner's legacy as a consummate teacher and controversial critic with a provocative sense of humor. Writing about his fellow craftsmen, John Gardner offers piercing insights into those whose works he admired and those whose works he didn't. In exacting unapologetic evaluations upon such writers as Saul Bellow, Vladimir Nabokov, Philip Roth, John Cheever, Larry Woiwode, Joyce Carol Oates, and John Updike, Gardner separates genuine fiction from fakery, careful not to spare his own writings in the process, and in doing so, he displays his influences and wide–reaching observations of the literary life. Refreshingly unpredictable and self–aware, this collection lays bare the core qualities of lasting fiction and is essential reading for anyone interested in American literature.

      On Writers and Writing
    • The critically acclaimed final masterwork of John Gardner: an American novel haunted with macabre and cerebral elements. The final novel by Gardner, Mickelsson's Ghosts, originally published in 1982 just months before his untimely death in a motorcycle accident, is a tour de force. The protagonist Peter Mickelsson, a former star philosophy professor at Brown, relocates to Binghamton University. On the verge of bankruptcy, separated from his wife, in questionable mental health, and drinking heavily, Mickelsson decides to buy a country house in northeastern Pennsylvania. What he encounters there are impassioned and shameless love affairs (one of which results in a regrettable pregnancy), a Mormon extremist cult, small town mythologies, the robbery of a robber, multiple murders, the ghosts of an incestuous family, Plato, and our hero's own possible insanity

      Mickelsson's Ghosts
    • The dead body of a young girl found floating in the Thames leads Bond into the haunts of a secret sect which is connected with Scorpius, the biggest arms dealer to terrorists worldwide; Bond soon finds himself in the middle of a deadly game of terrorism and arms supplies.

      JamesBond in John Gardner's Scorpius.