Inicio > Artes > Drift
Drift

Drift

Drift

Ronald Means

17,56 €
IVA incluido
Disponible
Editorial:
Xlibris
Año de edición:
2008
Materia
Artes
ISBN:
9781425790806
17,56 €
IVA incluido
Disponible

Selecciona una librería:

  • Librería Samer Atenea
  • Librería Aciertas (Toledo)
  • Kálamo Books
  • Librería Perelló (Valencia)
  • Librería Elías (Asturias)
  • Donde los libros
  • Librería Kolima (Madrid)
  • Librería Proteo (Málaga)

James Smith, complex, energetic, and ambitious, has been shaped by his upbringing in a tightly knit, culturally rich, lower middle class family on Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. He meets Ann Price, his future First Lady, at Michigan State. She helps him reconcile his love of the humanities, particularly history, with his determination to become a successful corporate manager. They marry and raise a family. In spite of his physical limitations and idiosyncrasies James Smith proves to be an exceptionally capable and creative executive. He becomes a CEO. He turns two companies around. Meanwhile, Ann teaches English in a public high school; earns her Ph.D.; becomes a teacher of teachers, a writer, and a controversial leader in education.James Smith is drafted by a newly elected President to turn around a cabinet department in hopeless disarray. An ingenious domestic nutcase plants explosives that destroy the President and everyone in the line of succession down to little James Smith. He is propelled into the Presidency and into the national hysteria precipitated by that murderous event.Determined not to turn the country over to the newly chosen, unscrupulous, and autocratic Speaker of the House, the Little President refuses to resign in spite of excruciating pressures from the Speaker, a generally hostile Media, and a badly frightened publicDeeply shaken, depressed, and plagued by uncertainties, the Little President forges ahead to put his administration in place. After awhile, in a strange epiphany, he recognizes his independence, his freedom to be himself, his extraordinary opportunity, freed as he now is from the political parties and their operatives. He moves ahead with energy and determination to develop and fight for a visionary agenda that addresses the diseased political culture which surrounds him, and is intended to move his country away from forbidding trends onto more promising pathways. Meanwhile, he does his best to act Presidential in spite of his lack of charisma, his high squeaky voice, his peculiar mannerisms, and other limitations.Woven through and around his proposals for change, his State of the Union Addresses, various other speeches and public statements, is the living context of his Presidency: the Speaker’s nefarious plotting to get rid of him; the many writers, commentators, historians, cartoonists, and ordinary citizens whose reactions to and/or interpretations of the Little President and/or his times are quoted or described.The 22nd Century historian-narrator, Professor David R. Robinson, an Oxford don, and a self involved enthusiast, brings to the story of the Little President an empathetic and scholarly point of view, but he learns that if he is to tell this story at all he must violate the highest standards of his craft and accept the fact that the 21st Century subject matter with which he must deal forces him to tolerate the 'satirical deviance' in his work.EXCERPTS A concentrated critique of 21st Century American culture is provided by Sir Evelyn Wilson, a 22nd Century British historian, an older contemporary of the historian-narrator Oxford professor, David R. Robinson. The thesis of Wilson’s book:Like the Venice of those years, that proud Italian city, which fought its long but losing battle against the rising tides and which, when viewed from far above, appeared to cling to its magnificence even after its forced abandonment, the United States as it slid down towards its engulfment in the Time of Troubles, appeared to be the proud world power on its surfaces, while from underneath, its economic preponderance, its social cohesion, its democratic political institutions, its leverage in international affairs, and above all, the cultural, educational, and civic values needed to support these imposing edifices were rotting away. Ann Price Smith, the spirited Fi

Artículos relacionados

  • The Eagle Returns
    C. Paul Burnham / CPaul Burnham
    The Gospel of John was long assumed to be the work of an eyewitness, usually identified as John, son of Zebedee. More recently, many have judged it the unhistorical product of a ''Johannine community.'' Reconsideration by Richard Bauckham has suggested that the author was a Jerusalem disciple who housed the ''Last Supper.'' This book explores the possibility that he was present...
    Disponible

    11,04 €

  • The Old Testament in Theology and Teaching
    APTS Press is privileged to offer this festschrift honoring Dr. Kay Fountain, who for more than twenty years has served the Lord at the Asia Pacific Theological Seminary (APTS), in Baguio City, Philippines, first as a student, then as a faculty member and finally as the Academic Dean. Our hope is that this book will reflect her passion for teaching and understanding the Old Tes...
    Disponible

    22,13 €

  • MEL4414 - Roberto Grela, La guitarra del tango
    Julián Graciano
    del mayor guitarrista de la historia del tango. Con solo percibir el empleo del plectro (la llamada púa de guitarra en nuestro canyengue) descubrimos un sonido y estilo tan particular que terminó por deslumbrar a todos. Pero si decimos “bastaría”, en potencial, es que nos debemos mucho más: suele decirse del gran Aníbal Troilo que su música y sus orquestas son la gran marca de ...
    Disponible

    29,64 €

  • Through the years with prince charming
    Paul du Quenoy
    The past decade has overflowed in a raging stream of contradictions. Old certainties have yielded to relentless insecurity over a time when much of the human experience got immeasurably better even as many things only ever seemed to get worse. As Paul du Quenoy’s globetrotting criticism reveals, the arts were in a ferment that matched profound and yet totally unpredicted social...
  • Tommaso Traetta and the Fusion of Italian and French Opera in Parma
    George W. Loomis
    In 1759, the court of the Italian Duchy of Parma adopted the inspiration of cultural creators who recommended a reform of Italian opera along French lines. These writers favored combining Italian-style music with the wider range of musical genres and scenic variety of French opera. As the music critic and commentator George W. Loomis shows in this groundbreaking volume, the you...
  • Somerset Maugham and the Cinema
    Robert Calder
    William Somerset Maugham (1874-1965) was one of the most prominent and productive authors of the twentieth century-and his works have been among the most cinematically transformed in history. For more than five decades, adaptations of his plays, stories, and novels dominated movie theaters and, later, television screens. More than ninety individual works were filmed, and for ma...