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Ron Powers

    Ron Powers è un acclamato giornalista e scrittore, celebrato per le sue analisi approfondite della cultura e della letteratura americana. Il suo lavoro, spesso ispirato dalla città natale di Mark Twain, esplora temi di identità, memoria e le complessità della condizione umana. Powers fonde magistralmente il rigore giornalistico con la sensibilità letteraria, offrendo ai lettori uno sguardo profondo sull'esperienza americana. La sua scrittura è apprezzata per la profondità, l'empatia e la sua capacità unica di cogliere l'essenza dei suoi soggetti.

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    Mark Twain : a life
    Flags of our fathers
    • 2005

      Mark Twain : a life

      • 736pagine
      • 26 ore di lettura

      Ron Powers’s tour de force has been widely acclaimed as the best life and times, filled with Mark Twain’s voice, and as a great American story. Samuel Clemens, the man known as Mark Twain, invented the American voice and became one of our greatest celebrities. His life mirrored his country's, as he grew from a Mississippi River boyhood in the days of the frontier, to a Wild-West journalist during the Gold Rush, to become the king of the eastern establishment and a global celebrity as America became an international power. Along the way, Mark Twain keenly observed the characters and voices that filled the growing country, and left us our first authentically American literature. Ron Powers's magnificent biography offers the definitive life of the founding father of our culture.

      Mark Twain : a life
    • 2002
    • 2001

      Flags of our fathers

      • 384pagine
      • 14 ore di lettura

      In this remarkably powerful book, James Bradley takes as his starting point one of the most famous photographs of all time. In February 1945, American Marines plunged into the surf at Iwo Jima and into a hail of machine-gun and mortar fire from 22,000 Japanese. After climbing through a hellish landscape and on to the island's highest peak, six men were photographed raising the stars and stripes. One of those soldiers was the author's father, John Bradley. He never spoke to his family about the photograph or about the war, but after his death in 1994, they discovered closed boxes of letters and photos which James Bradley draws on to retrace the lives of his father and his five companions. Following these men's paths to Iwo Jima, Bradley has written a classic story of the heroic battle for the Pacific's most crucial island - an island riddled with sixteen miles of tunnels and defended by Japanese soldiers determined to fight to the death. In the thirty-six days of fighting, almost fifty-thousand men lost their lives. Above all a human - and personal - story, few books have captured so brilliantly or so movingly the complexity of war and its aftermath and the true meaning of heroism.

      Flags of our fathers