Photo de l'auteur

Paul Scheuring

Auteur de Prison Break - Season One

11 oeuvres 211 utilisateurs 4 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Comprend les noms: Paul Scheuring, Paul T. Scheuring

Œuvres de Paul Scheuring

Prison Break - Season One (2005) 71 exemplaires
Prison Break: The Complete Third Season (2014) — Writer — 25 exemplaires
The Far Shore (2017) 21 exemplaires
The Experiment (2010) 12 exemplaires
Prison Break: The Final Break (2014) 10 exemplaires
The Resurrectionist 3 exemplaires
The Resurrectionist (2022) 2 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1968
Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA

Membres

Critiques

I'm glad I stuck with it. The writing style turned me off at first and was almost going to put it down but I stuck with it until Lily got started on her journey. Good story line, liked the characters.
 
Signalé
AngiCox | 1 autre critique | Mar 20, 2023 |
Een groep van 26 mannen doen mee aan een psychologisch spel waar ze verdeeld worden in bewakers en gevangenen. In het begin lijkt alles goed te gaan, maar de verstandhouding tussen beide groepen neemt steeds drastischere vormen aan.
 
Signalé
pwrtt | Nov 26, 2020 |
Een groep van 26 mannen doen mee aan een psychologisch spel waar ze verdeeld worden in bewakers en gevangenen. In het begin lijkt alles goed te gaan, maar de verstandhouding tussen beide groepen neemt steeds drastischere vormen aan.
 
Signalé
pwrtt | Jan 22, 2018 |
**This book was reviewed for the San Francisco Book Review**

**Warning: graphic description of war situations, including torture.

With The Far Shore, Scheuring has woven a tale that traverses time itself. It is the slow stitching together of a person's life, quilted from memories of the distant past, giving shape, form, substance to a soul long departed this mortal coil, and in doing so, regaining ancestral inheritance. Money’s just a bonus. The past has no price.

Lily is stuck in a dead-end job, working for the same company her father did. The same company that killed her father. Asbestos inhalation. One day, Lily gets a visit from a man named Bruce, an heir finder, who claims she is the heir to a multi-million fortune belonging to her grandfather. There's a catch, though. She needs proof he’s deceased. Gray Allen was reported killed in action during World War II, and no body was ever returned to the US. Thus begins the adventure of a lifetime for Lily, as she sets out to find what really happened to her grandfather. Her travels take her to an abandoned corner of America, to Hawaii, Japan, Myanmar. Nothing prepares Lily for learning the truth of her grandfather.

I quite enjoyed reading Gray’s letters, and hearing the stories of his life, as shared by others, though they made me wish I had asked my grandfather more about his time in the Pacific theatre during World War II. This story was solid narration, which threw me off til I figured what was ‘wrong’. The flow of the story is different than dialogue based stories. Much is told through letters, emails, stream of consciousness thinking, and stories related by others. More than once, I was given pause and needed to stop and ponder things for a little

🎻🎻🎻🎻🎻 Highly recommended, especially if you enjoy historical fiction centres on World War II.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
PardaMustang | 1 autre critique | Apr 3, 2017 |

Listes

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi

Auteurs associés

Statistiques

Œuvres
11
Membres
211
Popularité
#105,256
Évaluation
½ 3.4
Critiques
4
ISBN
11
Langues
1

Tableaux et graphiques