¡Acompáñanos a viajar por el mundo de los libros!
Añadir este libro a la estantería
Grey
Escribe un nuevo comentario Default profile 50px
Grey
Suscríbete para leer el libro completo o lee las primeras páginas gratis.
All characters reduced
Navy boys to the rescue : or Answering the wireless call for help - cover

Navy boys to the rescue : or Answering the wireless call for help

Halsey Davidson

Editorial: Good Press

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Sinopsis

In "Navy Boys to the Rescue: or, Answering the Wireless Call for Help," Halsey Davidson crafts a thrilling narrative that intertwines adventure, bravery, and the nascent technology of wireless communication in naval warfare. Set against the backdrop of World War II, the story follows a band of young naval cadets who respond to a desperate distress signal, embarking on a perilous journey filled with camaraderie and heroism. Davidson's prose is characterized by vivid imagery and an engaging, accessible style, reflective of the populist literature of the time that sought to captivate a younger audience and instill values of duty and valor. Halsey Davidson, an author who himself experienced the tumultuous era of the early 20th century, draws inspiration from his background and the societal shifts brought about by the War. His works often highlight the impact of technology on human experiences, thus "Navy Boys to the Rescue" not only entertains but also reflects contemporary anxieties and aspirations as young men were called to defend their nations amid growing global conflicts. This book is highly recommended for readers who cherish tales of youthful bravery, technological innovation, and historical significance. It serves as an engaging entry point for those interested in the interplay of fiction and history in shaping the imagination of young minds, making it a valuable addition to both personal collections and educational settings.
Disponible desde: 02/03/2025.
Longitud de impresión: 140 páginas.

Otros libros que te pueden interesar

  • Sudden Traveler - Stories - cover

    Sudden Traveler - Stories

    Anónimo

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    “Sarah Hall is one of those rare writers whose short fiction has the same luminosity as her novels. But the short form allows her more room to probe and roam, to experiment with form, to sink her fingers into the earth.”—The Observer (London) 
    Featuring her signature themes of identity, eroticism, and existential quest, the stories in Sarah Hall’s third collection travel far afield in location and ambition—from Turkish forest and coastline to the rain-drenched villages of Cumbria. 
    The characters in Sudden Traveler walk, drive, dream, and fly, trying to reconcile themselves with their journeys through life, death, and love. Science fiction meets folktale and philosophy meets mortality. 
    A woman with a new generation of pacemaker chooses to shut it down in the Lakeland, the site of her strongest memories. A man repatriated in the near east hears the name of an old love called and must unpack history’s dark suitcase. From the new world-waves of female anger and resistance, a mythical creature evolves. And in the woods on the border between warring countries, an old well facilitates a dictator’s downfall, before he gains power. 
    A master of short fiction, Sarah Hall opens channels in the human mind and spirit and takes us to the very edge of our possible selves.
    Ver libro
  • A Middle-Sized Artist - From their pens to your ears genius in every story - cover

    A Middle-Sized Artist - From...

    Charlotte Perkins Gilman

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Charlotte Perkins Gilman was born on 3rd July 1860 in Hartford, Connecticut, to an unaffectionate mother and a father who abandoned her and her older brother to a life of poverty. 
    Inevitably her schooling was limited and by 15 she had attended seven different schools but received only four years education.  However Charlotte was resourceful and did spend time with her father’s aunts – the suffragist Isabella Beecher Hooker and the ‘Uncle Tom Cabin’s’ author, Harriet Beecher Stowe as well as many hours at the public library studying ancient civilisations. 
    In 1878, she enrolled in classes at the Rhode Island School of Design where she met Martha Luther and they developed a close relationship until Luther married in 1881. Charlotte was devastated and detested romance and love until she met and married the artist Charles Walter Stetson.  
    Their only child, Katharine Beecher Stetson, was born in 1885 but left Charlotte with post-natal depression, then often dismissed as a case of hysteria or nerves.  Unsuited to domestic life she ruptured her life and moved to California with Katherine.  She divorced in 1894 and then sent Katharine east to live with her father and his second wife confirming that his paternal rights be acknowledged and that Katherine establish a relationship with her father. 
    After her mother died in 1893, Charlotte moved back east and became involved with her first cousin, Wall Street attorney, Houghton Gilman who she married in 1900. After his death she moved back to California, where Katherine now lived.   
    Her most popular story is ‘The Yellow Wallpaper’ which touched on her own post-partum depression and underlined the need for women to be responsible for their mental and physical well-being, as the narrator is ordered by her husband/doctor to take compete rest in her room where she is isolated and becomes obsessed with the revolting yellow wallpaper.   
    She wrote other notable short stories the best of which we also include.   
    Charlotte lectured widely for social reform, wrote important non-fiction works that questioned our patriarchal system and left a legacy as a leading and positive spokesperson for feminism.  
    She was diagnosed with incurable breast cancer in 1932 and, as she wrote in her suicide note and autobiography, she ‘chose chloroform over cancer’    
    Charlotte Perkins Gilman took her own life on 17th August 1935, aged 75, in Pasadena, California.
    Ver libro
  • Home Life Relayed - BBC presents a live show from a family house with disastrous consequences - cover

    Home Life Relayed - BBC presents...

    E M Delafield

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Edmée Elizabeth Monica Dashwood, née de la Pasture, and more commonly known as E M Delafield, was born in Steyning, Sussex on 9th June 1890.   
     
    Raised in the fading years of the Victorian era with its Empire and strict moral codes Delafield, not yet married at twenty-one, joined a French religious order, in Belgium, but soon decided that this was a totally wrong choice for her.   
     
    Her next challenge was her work during the horror of the First World War.  Delafield decided to take up a position as a nurse in a Voluntary Aid Detachment in Exeter.  It was whilst here that she managed to write her first novel, ‘Zella Sees Herself’.   
     
    With the end of the war new opportunities were sought and she now took up a position for the South-West Region of the Ministry of National Service in Bristol.  With it came enough time to write two more novels: ‘The War Workers’ (1918) and ‘The Pelicans’ (1918).   
     
    On 17th July 1919, she married Colonel Arthur Paul Dashwood, OBE, an engineer responsible for building the massive docks at Hong Kong Harbour.  The marriage produced two children; Lionel and Rosamund.  That same year her fourth novel, ‘Consequences’, was published.   
     
    The couple spent their early years in Malaya but returned to England to live in Croyle, an old house in Kentisbeare, Devon.  Delafield continued to collect responsibilities and organise whatever she could.  At the initial meeting of the Kentisbeare Women's Institute, Delafield was unanimously elected president, and also became a Justice of the Peace, raised the children and, of course, continued to write her best-selling novels.   
     
    Her greatest work is undoubtedly the largely autobiographical ‘Diary of a Provincial Lady’, which is a simply structured journal of the life of an upper-middle class Englishwoman, living mostly in a Devon village of the 1930s.  It spawned several best-selling sequels.  Her works also includes stage and radio plays, film scripts and short stories.  
     
    After the death of her son in 1940, her health began to markedly decline.    
     
    E M Delafield died on 2nd December 1943 after collapsing whilst giving a lecture in Oxford.  She was 53.
    Ver libro
  • Cree - The Rhys Davies Short Story Award Anthology - cover

    Cree - The Rhys Davies Short...

    Elaine Canning

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A collection of new contemporary short stories by Welsh writers, representing the winners of the 2022 Rhys Davies Short Story Competition.
    Family connections, unconventional friendships, love and loss: the twelve stories in this collection of new contemporary fiction by the winners of the 2022 Rhys Davies Short Story Competition present characters seeking solace, self-discovery and self-fulfilment as they navigate familiar and unfamiliar territory.
    Two sisters search for the last available Christmas tree while coming to terms with their mother's death; a stammering teen hitches a lift with a Welsh Elvis; a man participates in his 'endgame'; and a teacher and pupil create their very own time machine. From hillside encounters to conversations in homes, shops and on the street, these are stories about people and place, about relationships and revelations, peppered with memories and re-imaginings. These are stories where some voices are silenced and others get to sing.
    The Rhys Davies Short Story Competition recognises the very best unpublished short stories in English in any style by writers aged 18 or over who were born in Wales, have lived in Wales for two years or more, or are currently living in Wales. Originally established in 1991, Parthian is delighted to publish the 2022 winning stories on behalf of the Rhys Davies Trust and in association with Swansea University's Cultural Institute.
    Previous winners of the prize have included Leonora Brito, Lewis Davies, Tristan Hughes and Kate Hamer.
    Authors in this anthology: Lindsay Gillespie, Bethan James, Meredith Miller, Laura Morris, Jonathan Page, Matthew G. Rees, Eryl Samuel, Matthew David Scott, Carys Shannon, Anthony Shapland, Satterday Shaw, and Daniel Patrick Luke Strogen.
    Ver libro
  • Canon Alberic's Scrap Book - From their pens to your ears genius in every story - cover

    Canon Alberic's Scrap Book -...

    M R James

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Montague Rhodes James is cited as perhaps the greatest English writer of ghost stories, an opinion few would disagree with. 
    James was born on 1st August 1862 at Goodnestone Parsonage in Kent, where his father was Curate but at age 3 the family went to live at Livermere, near Bury St Edmunds in East Anglia.  
    From early childhood he had a passion for mediaeval books and antiques. He was educated initially as a boarder at Temple Grove School in East Sheen, west London, before gaining a scholarship to Eton and thence Cambridge where he gained a double first, becoming a distinguished linguist and mediaevalist.  
    Before the Great War vacations were usually spent touring Europe absorbing cultures and references for his later writing. 
    A man of enormous knowledge it was said he timed his breakfast egg whilst he completed the Times crossword.  
    Many of his elegant yet terrifying tales were created by discarding the prevailing gothic cliches and placing his characters and narrative in a realistic setting.  Thereby the stories gained atmosphere and menace on a grand scale and he was famed as the originator of the antiquarian ghost story. 
    Although story-telling and writing these 30 or so tales was a hobby, when published their effect transformed the genre and still chill the bones in our more modern times. 
    James was also a medievalist scholar and translator whose work remains highly respected. He was also Provost of Eton College between 1918 and 1936. 
    M R James died on 12th June 1936 at Eton in Buckinghamshire.  He was 73.
    Ver libro
  • Finding Family at Seabreeze Farm - A wonderfully uplifting heartwarming read from Jo Bartlett - cover

    Finding Family at Seabreeze Farm...

    Jo Bartlett

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Discover Jo Bartlett's wonderful Seabreeze Farm series! 
    Welcome to Seabreeze Farm. 
    Freya Halliwell is looking forward to marrying the man of her dreams and starting their new life together. After the death of both of her parents, Ollie, along with Freya’s aunt, are the only family she has, but they are all the family she needs. 
    Until Freya discovers a shocking secret that makes her question everything she thought she knew about her once happy family and especially the man she used to call Dad. Devastated, and feeling more alone than ever before, Freya needs time and space to come to terms with the news. But until then the wedding is off! 
    Seabreeze Farm is the perfect place for Freya to recover. But could this beautiful farm perched high on the cliffs, also hold the answer to Freya’s past and reunite her with the family she never even knew she’d been wishing for? 
    Another wonderful new series from the top 10 bestselling author of The Cornish Midwife, Jo Bartlett. Perfect for fans of Jessica Redland, Holly Martin and Heidi Swain. 
    Praise for Jo Bartlett: 
    'I love second chance stories. I love returning home stories. So a book combining both is an absolute winner for me. The Cornish Midwife is simply gorgeous. Stunning setting, wonderful characters, and oozing with warmth. A triumph from Jo Bartlett' Jessica Redland 
    'Perfectly written and set in the beating heart of a community, this story is a wonderful slice of Cornish escapism' Helen Rolfe 
    'Once again a lovely read. Characters were good and it felt like you were there with them. It's a book I couldn't put down. Can't wait for the next one' ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Reader Review 
    'A lovely story with big surprises. I was hooked from the start' ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Reader Review 
    'I am totally addicted to this series, the writing is fantastic, Jo really draws you into Kelsea Bay and the lives of the characters' ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Reader Review 
    This book was previously published as Finding Dad.
    Ver libro