George R. Stewart (1895–1980)
Autor(a) de Só a Terra Permanece
About the Author
George R. Stewart (1895-1980) was a professor of English at the University of California, Berkeley
Obras por George R. Stewart
American place-names; a concise and selective dictionary for the continental United States of America (1970) 71 exemplares
American Given Names: Their Origin and History in the Context of the English Language (1986) 55 exemplares
Donner Pass and those who crossed it; the story of the country made notable by the Stevens Party, the Donner Party, the… (1960) 16 exemplares
The year of the oath; the fight for academic freedom at the University of California (1950) 12 exemplares
Take your Bible in one hand; the life of William Henry Thomes, author of A whaleman's adventures on land and sea,… (1939) 8 exemplares
John Phoenix, Esq., the veritable Squibob : a life of Captain George H. Derby, U.S.A., (1937) 5 exemplares
Doctor's oral 5 exemplares
N.A.1 Looking North: From the Canadian Border to Circle, Alaska [First Printing] (1957) 4 exemplares
The technique of English verse 2 exemplares
Good lives 2 exemplares
La bianca dama della California 1 exemplar
A bibliography of the writings of Bret Harte in the magazines and newspapers of California, 1857-1871 (1977) 1 exemplar
A Little of Myself: oral history 1 exemplar
Diary of Patrick Breen 1 exemplar
To California by Covered Wagon 1 exemplar
Associated Works
A Sense of History: The Best Writing from the Pages of American Heritage (1985) — Contribuidor — 463 exemplares
Reader's Digest Best of the West: A Treasury of Western Adventure Volumes 1 & 2 (1976) — Contribuidor — 34 exemplares
Reader's Digest Best of the West: A Treasury of Western Adventure Volume 1 (1976) — Contribuidor — 11 exemplares
Recollections of Old Times in California or, California Life in 1843 (1974) — Introdução — 3 exemplares
Etiquetado
Conhecimento Comum
- Nome canónico
- Stewart, George R.
- Nome legal
- Stewart, George Rippey, Jr.
- Data de nascimento
- 1895-05-31
- Data de falecimento
- 1980-08-22
- Sexo
- male
- Nacionalidade
- USA
- Local de nascimento
- Sewickley, Pennsylvania, USA
- Local de falecimento
- San Francisco, California, USA
- Locais de residência
- Berkeley, California, USA
- Educação
- Princeton University (BA|1917)
University of California, Berkeley (MA|1920)
Columbia University (PhD|English literature|1922) - Ocupações
- historian
toponymist
novelist
Professor of English - Organizações
- University of California, Berkeley
American Name Society - Prémios e menções honrosas
- International Fantasy Award (1951)
Membros
Discussions
George R Stewart's Earth Abides em Post-apocalyptic Literature (Julho 2010)
Críticas
Listas
Prémios
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Estatísticas
- Obras
- 44
- Also by
- 7
- Membros
- 6,279
- Popularidade
- #3,908
- Avaliação
- 3.9
- Críticas
- 157
- ISBN
- 111
- Línguas
- 7
- Marcado como favorito
- 11
Those human characters are, by traditional literary standards, given only slightly more development. They have character traits and motivations, both limited in number and very sparely drawn, but not personalities. Over the course of the story, we see them almost exclusively in the context of doing their jobs, and learn virtually nothing about their larger lives or inner thoughts and emotions.
All of this serves the central theme of Stewart's novel, which is the collision of natural systems (the storm) and the human systems that it touches: the weather bureau, the airlines and railroads, the power and telephone companies, the flood-control works that regulate the flow of the rivers, and the highway department charged with keeping the mountain roads over the Sierra Nevada open and passable. The drama in the story lies in the humans who operate these systems straining their minds, bodies, and spirits to the breaking point to keep them operating in spite of the storm . . . or at least to keep its disruption of them, and thus its effect on people's lives, to an absolute minimum.
Stewart's writing about atmospheric phenomena, though it occasionally tips into the self-consciously grandiose, remains surprisingly gripping, and his juggling of multiple plot lines and sets of characters is masterful. It's a thoughtful reflection on the way that fragility and resilience coexist in the technological systems that make modern life possible. It's also a look into the minds of the workers whose unseen labor (both physical and mental) keeps those systems operating.
[Storm] not an easy sell to someone you don't know well, but if anything I wrote above intrigues you, it's well worth tracking down.… (mais)