Gør som tusindvis af andre bogelskere
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Ekspressen buldrer gennem natten op til Canadas nordligste distrikter, velbevogtet af talrige betjente mod sabotage. Men en blind passager har sneget sig med... Huskyen King bliver hovedpersonen i kampen om at uskadeliggøre banditterne.Jack O‘Brien (1898-1938) er pseudonymet for den canadiske forfatter John Sherman O‘Brien, som var kendt for sine bøger og fortællinger om menneskets bedste ven – især serien om Silver King, en helt særlig husky, gjorde ham populær.
Peter Thorne fra Det ridende politi hører i sin hytte i Canadas ødemark et radionødsignal fra en pilot, som bliver tvunget til nødlanding af flykidnappere, Han begiver sig af sted sammen med sin trofaste hund, Silver King, og sammen optager de forfølgelsen af 3 mystiske personer, som har stjålet en kasse med uvurderligt metal til atomforsøg fra den nødlandede maskine.Jack O‘Brien (1898-1938) er pseudonymet for den canadiske forfatter John Sherman O‘Brien, som var kendt for sine bøger og fortællinger om menneskets bedste ven – især bøgerne om Silver King, en helt særlig husky, gjorde ham populær.
Prince er en schæferhund, der uddannet til at vogte får på en ranch. Ingen kan vide, at han kommer til at spille en afgørende rolle i kampen mellem sin herre og kvægavlerne på nabogrundenJack O‘Brien (1898-1938) er pseudonymet for den canadiske forfatter John Sherman O‘Brien, som var kendt for sine bøger og fortællinger om menneskets bedste ven – især serien om Silver King, en helt særlig husky, gjorde ham populær.
Ecclesiastical muralist jack O'Brien began a 3 year torrent of writing in 1970 using his artist's pallet of colors, textures and compositions to make you 'feel' like you are there on the battlefield, in the bedroom or in his mind.
"Well, boy, how did you do it?" "What are the prison camps like?" "Are the Germans as cruel as they are painted?" These are the questions that I have been asked thousands of times since coming home. I have answered them from scores of platforms, for all kinds of Red Cross organizations; and now I have been persuaded to try and put my answer on paper-and if when I have finished, there are a few points cleared up that you have been wondering, and perhaps worrying about, I shall feel repaid for the writing. They say that "the pen is mightier than the sword," but my experiences of the last ten years have given me much more practice with the latter than with the former. I shall not attempt a flowery story, nor exaggerate anything to make it sound big, but I shall, as they say in the Court, tell "the truth, and nothing but the truth."
The Tony Award-winning director gathers memories of people, productions, and problems surmounted from his fifty-year career in this one-of-a-kind how-to handbook. What do directors do? Jack O'Brien, the winner of Tony and Drama Desk Awards and the former artistic director of San Diego's historic Old Globe theatre, describes it like this: "You stand before a situation in which something is presented to you. You're afforded a challenge. Like catching an enormous ball. And you respond. You come up with a vision of some kind. That is, if you respond to the material at all, and one must, or it's doomed. You sort of feel that since you relate to the material at hand, you might as well try to be helpful."In Jack in the Box, O'Brien's follow-up to his memoir Jack Be Nimble, the director collects stories from the many productions he has worked on, the great talents he encountered and collaborated with (including Tom Stoppard, Mike Nichols, Jerry Lewis, Marsha Mason, and many others), and the choices he made, on the stage and off, that have come to define his career. With humor, warmth, and contagious excitement, O'Brien takes the reader by the shoulder, pulls them in, and tells them how to become a director-or, at the very least, relates an unfailingly honest story of how he did.
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The Tony Award-winning director gathers memories of people, productions, and problems surmounted from his fifty-year career in this one-of-a-kind how-to handbook. What do directors do? Jack O'Brien, the winner of Tony and Drama Desk Awards and the former artistic director of San Diego's historic Old Globe theatre, describes it like this: "You stand before a situation in which something is presented to you. You're afforded a challenge. Like catching an enormous ball. And you respond. You come up with a vision of some kind. That is, if you respond to the material at all, and one must, or it's doomed. You sort of feel that since you relate to the material at hand, you might as well try to be helpful."In Jack in the Box, O'Brien's follow-up to his memoir Jack Be Nimble, the director collects stories from the many productions he has worked on, the great talents he encountered and collaborated with (including Tom Stoppard, Mike Nichols, Jerry Lewis, Marsha Mason, and many others), and the choices he made, on the stage and off, that have come to define his career. With humor, warmth, and contagious excitement, O'Brien takes the reader by the shoulder, pulls them in, and tells them how to become a director-or, at the very least, relates an unfailingly honest story of how he did.
A warm, witty tell-all and history of American regional theater, from one of our best-loved directorsFor Jack O'Brien, there's nothing like a first encounter with a great performer, nothing like the sound of an audience bursting into applause. In short, there's nothing like the theater. Following a fairly normal Midwestern childhood, O'Brien hoped to make his mark by writing lyrics for Broadway but was instead pulled into the growing American regional theater movement by the likes of John Houseman, Helen Hayes, Ellis Rabb, and Eva Le Gallienne. He didn't intend to become a director, or to direct some of the most brilliant-and sometimes maddening-personalities of the age, but in a charming, hilarious, and unexpected way, that's what happened. O'Brien has had a long, successful career on Broadway and as artistic director of San Diego's Old Globe Theatre, but the history of the movement that shaped him has been overlooked. In the middle of the last century, some extraordinary people forged a link in the chain connecting European influences such as the Moscow Art Theatre and Great Britain's National Theatre with the flourishing American theater of today. O'Brien was there to see and record it all, in beautifully vivid detail. Funny, exuberant, unfailingly honest, Jack Be Nimble is the tale of those missing heroes, performances, and cultural battles. It is also the irresistible story of one of our best-loved theater directors, growing into his passion and discovering what he is capable of.
"The Faithful Remnant on Earth, in Purgatory, in Heaven" Six lifelong friends, now in their 60's, meet in the basement of Mulcahy's Funeral Parlor in the Savin Hill section of Dorchester, an inner city suburb of Boston. They have just attended the wake upstairs of their boyhood friend, Arthur "AW" O'Malley. "AW" had cerebral palsy all his life. The six men are: Peter "Quarter To Two" Fignatti - a retired "bookie" or numerologist. Mike "Mucka" Lydon - a retired line worker from Boston Edison. Charles "Three Balls" Cahill - a state senator, still active. George "Giraffe" Geoghan - a retired world-class jockey. Steve "Inkwell" Jablonski - owner of a public relations firm. Father Frank "Farts" Fahey - a retired priest still serving part-time. Each has his own guardian angel. Peter Fignatti - Richard aka "Parley" Mike Lydon - Bartholemew Charles Cahill - William George Geoghan - John aka "Seabiscuit" Steve Jablonski - Murphy Father Frank Fahey - Max Unknown to the men the supervisor of guardian angels Malchus is sent by God to listen to their stories because how they lived their lives will determine the destruction of salvation of the world. At the conclusion of their stories, Malchus makes his report to God with no clear recommendation to save or destroy the world. God calls AW before him and their conversation decides the fate of mankind. When they die all but "AW" go to purgatory he goes straight to heaven as most disabled people do. The six eventually all meet again in heaven and "AW" wants to know of each one's purgatory experience.
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