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Jim Paul (1) (1950–)

Auteur de Catapult: Harry and I Build a Siege Weapon

Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Jim Paul, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

5+ oeuvres 500 utilisateurs 11 critiques 1 Favoris

Œuvres de Jim Paul

Rune Poem (1996) 96 exemplaires
Medieval in LA (Harvest Book) (1996) 89 exemplaires
Elsewhere in the Land of Parrots (2003) 66 exemplaires
What's Called Love: A Real Romance (1993) 13 exemplaires

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This little book contains a smooth modern English version of the Old English rune poem (short verses about each of the traditional Germanic runes) . It also includes a few notes about the different (usually grimmer) associations of the runes in Norse poetry.
 
Signalé
antiquary | May 26, 2017 |
A solemn romantic comedy that is both charming and educational. _The Parrots of Telegraph Hill_ meet Anne Tyler with parrots at center stage and the humans flocking around them in San Francisco and Ecuador. An engaging if improbable tale of redemption.
 
Signalé
dbsovereign | 3 autres critiques | Jan 26, 2016 |
Here's a book I gave a second chance. I've lived in San Francisco and seen those parrots (cherry-headed conures) in the park. A novel featuring them really intrigued me. The book is about two individuals fascinated by the parrots: a graduate student struggling to locate wild parrots in the mangrove swamps of Ecuador for research, who unwittingly gets tangled up with some illegal wildlife trafficking, and a self-isolated eccentric poet in San Francisco who doesn't like the parrot his father gave him and ends up releasing it from his apartment window. Eventually feeling guilty at letting the parrot go, he explores the city to find dozens of parrots living on Telegraph Hill, reads up about them in the public library, and finally travels to South America in search of the wild flock they must have originated from. While this book got off to a slow start with me- I was at first put off by the frequent use of the past perfect tense, and felt distanced from the characters- I liked reading the details about the city-living parrots. I knew the two people would end up together- the researcher enthralled with parrots from the beginning and frustrated in her efforts to get close to them, and the reluctant poet gradually drawn out of his isolation by a desire to know more about them. Their two stories wove together in a surprising fashion to the final meeting point. The further I read the more I was drawn into this book, until by the end I had difficulty putting it down.

from the Dogear Diary
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
jeane | 3 autres critiques | Feb 23, 2015 |
read this while visiting Paris
 
Signalé
FKarr | May 25, 2013 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
5
Aussi par
1
Membres
500
Popularité
#49,493
Évaluation
½ 3.4
Critiques
11
ISBN
22
Langues
2
Favoris
1

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