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Kevin Jackson's versions (rather than literal translations) of the
sonnet sequence written in exile between 1824 and 1829 by Poland's
greatest poet, Adam Mickiewicz, are both urgent and memorable. The
originals are poems of intense patriotism and nostalgia; Jackson's
versions capture this and much more, including what he terms in his
new companion essay, 'Mickiewicz's aching sense of loneliness and
loss'. Jackson wrote in his introduction to Anthony Burgess's
'Revolutionary Sonnets' that 'pleasures both demotic and recondite
abound in the pages': the same might be applied to this striking
sequence. In the spirit of Robert Lowell's 'Imitations' he
deliberately plays fast and loose with the literal sense of the
poems, memorably revivifying diction and tone. In so doing, he
shows himself to be an unassuming and masterful guide and host to
Mickiewicz's original works.
Arm yourself with garlic, stake and crucifix, for the vampires are
back in force - at the top of the best-seller lists, on your TV, on
the web and lurking in darkened cinemas. But where did they come
from?Why have they come back now? And how can you tell if you are
one? Beginning with the first sightings of bats and blood-sucking
in the Romantic period, Bite follows the undead's progress through
the ages, right up to the present. Alongside mini-essays,
anecdotes, facts and figures, each section will be punctuated with
lists, such as the best places around the world for vamp tourism;
rock songs with vampire allusions; box-office revenue for vamp
movies; the Top 10 Vampire clubs, video-games, vampire brides, as
well as reliable and unreliable methods of killing a vampire ...
On Easter, 2014, Britain's best-loved vicar, the Rev. Richard
Coles, led a pilgrimage to all the major historic sites of the Holy
Land: from Nazareth and the Sea of Galilee in the North, via
Jericho and the Jordan River, to Bethlehem and, finally, Jerusalem.
All of the pilgrims in his care were practising Christians, except
one: the writer Kevin Jackson, a diffident and sympathetic atheist
intrigued by the chance to take part in this modern-day version of
an ancient act of piety, and to learn some more about his old
friend, the media clergyman. Coles to Jerusalem is Kevin Jackson's
light-hearted diary of that pilgrimage, and a close-up portrait of
Richard Coles both as priest and as man. As the journey proceeds,
Coles reminisces at length about his past life as a rock star and
radical gay agitator, his new life as a spiritual leader and a
popular broadcaster on BBC radio and television, and the strange,
unpredictable path that led him from self-destructive debauchery to
faith and vocation. With a lively supporting cast of fellow
pilgrims, Coles to Jerusalem ranges among the magnificence of
ancient monuments and the banalities of the guided tour, the grim
political background of contemporary Israel and the comedy of a
group of idiosyncratic English folk abroad, the intensity of
worship and the lightness of banter. It will be irresistible to all
admirers of Richard Coles, who has contributed a foreword; and a
revelation to those who have never encountered his wisdom and
warmth.
Withnail and I sank almost without a trace when it was first
released in 1987. Financed by HandMade Films, the late George
Harrison's production company, and drawing heavily on first-time
writer-director Bruce Robinson's experiences, this virtually
plot-free story follows two out-of-work actors (Withnail, played by
Richard E. Grant, and 'I', played by Paul McGann), eking out a
living in a run-down London of the late 1960s, and embarking on a
booze-fuelled weekend in the country which takes various unexpected
turns. Although it initially failed to find an audience, it did not
take long for the film to attract a dedicated cult following which
still persists today. Lines from the film such as 'we've gone on
holiday by mistake!' and 'Bring me the finest wines known to
humanity!' have become popular favourites and the subject of
countless internet memes. Kevin Jackson's in-depth study gives a
full account of the film's origins and production history. But his
main focus is the mood and magic of the film, its aesthetics and
sensibility, seeking to show, without ever detracting from the
film's comic brilliance, just how much more there is to Withnail
and I than drunkenness and swearing. 'It is an outstandingly
touching yet witheringly unsentimental drama of male friendship,'
Jackson writes, 'a bleak up-ending of the English pastoral dream, a
piece of ferocious verbal inventiveness' - and, without question,
one of the greatest of all British films. In his new foreword to
this edition, writer Bharat Tandon pays tribute to to both
Withnail's peculiar genius and enduring appeal, and to his close
friend Kevin Jackson.
"Lawrence of Arabia" is widely considered one of the ten greatest
films ever made--though more often by film goers and filmmakers
than by critics. This study argues that the film is a unique blend
of visionary image-making, narrative power, mythopoetic charm and
psychological acuteness; far from being a "Boy's Own Tale, "it is
one of popular cinema's greatest tragedies. This volume brings
together a critical analysis of the film and an account of its
tangled production history--combining these elements with the story
of attempts by Alexander Korda and others to bring Lawrence's story
to the screen.
Discover one of the world's most fascinating and historic cities
through 30 dramatic true stories spanning the rich history of
London. Author Kevin Jackson takes readers through more than 2,000
years of British history with exciting essays on topics such as
London's origins, Richard the Lion-Hearted, Geoffrey Chaucer, Henry
V, Shakespeare, Queen Victoria, Jack the Ripper, Charles Dickens,
Oscar Wilde, The Beatles and more. In addition, guided walking
tours of London's historic neighborhoods, illustrated with color
photographs and period maps, take readers to the places where
history really happened.
Schrader on Schrader is an essential set of dialogues with one of
the most genuinely fascinating and uncompromising writer-directors
in American film. Raised as a Calvinist and hence forbidden to
partake of 'worldly pleasures' such as movies, Paul Schrader
nevertheless defied his upbringing to become first a leading film
critic, then a star pupil among the US 'movie brat' generation of
the 1970s: writing the coruscating screenplays for Martin
Scorsese's Taxi Driver and Raging Bull and directing such
provocative pictures as Blue Collar, Hardcore and American Gigolo.
Maturity has never sated his appetite for attacking 'difficult'
material, from adapting Kazantzakis' The Last Temptation for
Scorsese, to filming the singular lives of Mishima and Patty
Hearst. Schrader on Schrader is a tour through this formidable body
of work, including some of Schrader's finest critical essays.
Withnail & I sank almost without a trace when it was first
released in 1987. This virtually plot-free story of two out-of-work
actors (played by Richard E. Grant and Paul McGann) whose
booze-fuelled weekend in the country takes various unexpected turns
failed to find an audience. But it did not take long for the film
to attract a dedicated cult following which was reinforced by
reverential coverage in the 'lad mag' Loaded and a theatrical
re-release in 1996. Financed by HandMade Films, the late George
Harrison's production company, Withnail & I was Bruce
Robinson's first outing as writer-director. The script draws
heavily on Robinson's own experiences in the 1960s. of the film's
production. But chiefly he analyses the mood and magic of the film,
its aesthetics and sensibility, seeking to show, without ever
detracting from the film's comic brilliance, just how much more
there is to Withnail & I than drunkenness and swearing. 'It is
an outstandingly touching yet witheringly unsentimental drama of
male friendship, ' Jackson writes, 'a bleak up-ending of the
English pastoral dream, a piece of ferocious verbal inventiveness'
- and, without question, one of the greatest of all British films
Ruskin is one of the most influential and exhilarating writers in
English. Art critic, architectural visionary, social reformer,
climate warner and incomparable teacher; Ruskin's words not only
transformed Victorian England but speak to us with increasing
urgency today. This, the first general introduction to Ruskin for
many years, places him in the social, economic and aesthetic world
of Victorian Britain that he transformed - and shows how this
transformation has much to teach us today. The extensive
illustrations range from private notes and lecture diagrams to
presentation drawings, including some of the most beautiful images
of the 19th century and many never before published. Published in
association with the Ruskin Foundation.
This title is an ingenious translation of classic verse into
knockabout farce. It is also an effortlessly readable introduction
to the poem for those too busy or too intimidated to tackle it
without a guide.
F. W. Murnau's "Nosferatu" (1922), the first screen adaptation of
Bram Stoker's "Dracula," remains a potent and disturbing horror
film. One of the outstanding documents of Weimar culture's dark
side, the film's prevailing themes of human destructiveness,
insanity, and moral and physical pollution had a stinging
topicality for contemporary audiences.
Kevin Jackson's illuminating study traces Nosferatu's production
and reception history, including attempts by Stoker's widow to
suppress the film's circulation. Exploring the evolution of the
vampire myth, both in the film and in wider culture, Jackson
exposes how and why this film of horror and death remains
enduringly beautiful and chilling today.
This special edition features original cover artwork by Julia
Soboleva.
In the aftermath of scandals such as those at Enron and WorldCom,
there is a growing suspicion of the corporate world. For this
reason it is more important than ever for firms to maintain a good
reputation. In Building Reputational Capital, Kevin T. Jackson
offers a practical guide to taking the high road--the only path
that leads to lasting success.
Based on extensive research and real-world experience, Building
Reputational Capital reveals basic principles of integrity and
fairness with which firms can build an enduring reputation. More
than image, a firm's reputation is a form of capital often
neglected in the boardroom and overlooked in conventional analyses
of financial statements. Speaking directly to the work experience
of real people in practical business settings, Jackson couples each
principle with straightforward actions that drive management
systems, and he provides tested strategies--from downsizing
techniques to e-commerce tips--that cultivate the hidden power of a
good reputation. He outlines the advantages of a superior
reputation (simply put, people want to work for, invest in, and do
business with a company or person with integrity), describes the
vital role the firm's leader must play, offers ways to build and
protect your reputation on the Internet (from defusing Internet
rumors to creating an online community), and shows how to rescue
your reputation once disaster hits. Perhaps most important, he
shows how to strike the right balance of virtues like authenticity,
honesty, responsibility, and stewardship of the environment,
employees, and the economy.
Highlighted with real-life success stories--from giants like
Hewlett-Packard to small firms like Thanksgiving Coffee Company
(which invests part of its revenues in the Central American
villages in which its beans are grown), Building Reputational
Capital offers a simple but effective guide for executives,
managers, entrepreneurs, legal professionals, and corporate
consultants.
Money. Rhino. The long green. It is "the most important thing in
the world" (George Bernard Shaw). It is "power, freedom, a cushion,
the root of all evil, the sum of blessings" (Carl Sandburg). It is
"the alienated essence of man's work and existence" (Karl Marx). It
is a medium of exchange, a measure of value, a standard of deferred
payment. It is "better than poverty, if only for financial reasons"
(Woody Allen). It is "the final enemy that will never be subdued"
(Samuel Butler).
Few things occupy as central a place in our lives as money, and few
provoke such intense and varied response. Now in an entertaining
and also thought-provoking book, Kevin Jackson brings together
reflections on money by some of the most brilliant minds who ever
lived, drawing on such writers as Dante and Chaucer, Shakespeare
and Milton, Dostoevsky and Dickens, Mark Twain and Jane Austen,
Edith Wharton and Henry James, and such thinkers as Max Weber,
Thorstein Veblen, Adam Smith, Karl Marx, and John Maynard Keynes.
Here is an all-encompassing look at the bottom line of human
life--wealth and poverty, lending and borrowing, money heavens and
money hells. There are colorful scenes from fiction--Silas Marner
alone at night bathing his hands in gold and silver, Captain Ahab
nailing a doubloon to the Pequot's mast, three hooligans in
Chaucer's "The Pardoner's Tale" finding death in a sack of coins.
We find Polonius's advice "neither a borrower nor a lender be" side
by side with Panurge's comic paeon to debt ("a thing most precious
and dainty, of great use and antiquity") and Charles Lamb's
memorable portrait of the debtor ("What a careless, even deportment
hath your borrower What rosy gills What a beautiful reliance on
Providence doth he manifest"). There are telling portraits of the
money binge of the 1980s, in excerpts from Michael Lewis's Liar's
Poker and Tom Wolfe's Bonfire of the Vanities, and harrowing
descriptions of the Great Crash of 1929 and the German
hyperinflation of the early 1920s, where at one point a dollar was
worth a trillion marks. And perhaps most important, there are many
thoughtful observations on money, such as Adam Smith's comment that
"with the greater part of rich people, the chief enjoyment of
riches consists in the parade of riches." Or Roger Scruton's point
that without money transactions are limited to barter and gifts,
but with it "exchange multiplies quietly and peacefully to
infinity." Or Alexander Pope's caustic remark that "we may see the
small value God has for riches, by the people he gives them
to."
By looking at money from so many different perspectives, through
the eyes of writers and poets, philosophers and economists,
financiers and politicians, The Oxford Book of Money offers us a
deeper appreciation of what money is, what it can do, what it is
really worth. By turns insightful, amusing, and intriguing, it will
help readers to reexamine what money means to them and rethink its
value in their lives.
Cult experimental novel from the late William Hayward first
published by Heinemann in 1964.Follows the progress of Bran Lynch,
Irish ex-poet, and a group of refugees from employment. Shows
influences of the Beats and modernists such as James Joyce: 'a
raucous combustion of jazz, sex and cider.'
The Fourth Edition of the industry-acclaimed OpenStack Cloud
Computing Cookbook, from four recognized experts, updated to the
latest OpenStack build including Cinder, Nova, and Neutron. Key
Features Over 100 recipes created by a team of OpenStack experts
Updated to work with the latest OpenStack builds, with recipes
covering the installation and use of OpenStack with Ansible It
covers topics such as Keystone, Glance, Neutron, Nova, Cinder, and
more, plus recipes for OpenStack storage, networking, and
orchestrating workloads Test drive OpenStack using the accompanying
Vagrant environment Book DescriptionThis is the fourth edition of
the industry-acclaimed OpenStack Cloud Computing Cookbook, created
by four recognized OpenStack experts. It has now been updated to
work with the latest OpenStack builds, using tools and processes
based on their collective and vast OpenStack experience. OpenStack
Open Source Cloud software is one of the most used cloud
infrastructures to support a wide variety of use cases, from
software development to big data analysis. It is developed by a
thriving community of individual developers from around the globe
and backed by most of the leading players in the cloud space today.
We make it simple to implement, massively scalable, and able to
store a large pool of data and networking resources. OpenStack has
a strong ecosystem that helps you provision your cloud storage
needs. Add OpenStack's enterprise features to reduce the cost of
your business. This book will begin by showing you the steps to
build up an OpenStack private cloud environment using Ansible.
You'll then discover the uses of cloud services such as the
identity service, image service, and compute service. You'll dive
into Neutron, the OpenStack Networking service, and get your hands
dirty with configuring networks, routers, load balancers, and more.
You'll then gather more expert knowledge on OpenStack cloud
computing by managing your cloud's security and migration. After
that, we delve into OpenStack Object storage and you'll see how to
manage servers and work with objects, cluster, and storage
functionalities. Finally, you will learn about OpenStack dashboard,
Ansible, Keystone, and other interesting topics. What you will
learn Understand, install, configure, and manage a complete
OpenStack Cloud platform using OpenStack-Ansible Configure
networks, routers, load balancers, and more with Neutron Use
Keystone to setup domains, roles, groups and user access Learn how
to use Swift and setup container access control lists Gain hands-on
experience and familiarity with Horizon, the OpenStack Dashboard
user interface Automate complete solutions with our recipes on
Heat, the OpenStack Orchestration service as well as using Ansible
to orchestrate application workloads Follow practical advice and
examples to run OpenStack in production Who this book is forThis
book is written for cloud system engineers, system administrators,
and technical architects who are moving from a virtualized
environment to cloud environments. This book assumes that you are
familiar with cloud computing platforms, and have knowledge of
virtualization, networking, and managing Linux environments.
Learn how you can put the features of OpenStack to work in the real
world in this comprehensive path About This Book * Harness the
abilities of experienced OpenStack administrators and architects,
and run your own private cloud successfully * Learn how to install,
configure, and manage all of the OpenStack core projects including
topics on Object Storage, Block Storage, and Neutron Networking
services such as LBaaS and FWaaS * Get better equipped to
troubleshoot and solve common problems in performance,
availability, and automation that confront production-ready
OpenStack environments Who This Book Is For This course is for
those who are new to OpenStack who want to learn the cloud
networking fundamentals and get started with OpenStack networking.
Basic understanding of Linux Operating System, Virtualization, and
Networking, and Storage principles will come in handy. What You
Will Learn * Get an introduction to OpenStack and its components *
Store and retrieve data and images using storage components, such
as Cinder, Swift, and Glance * Install and configure Swift, the
OpenStack Object Storage service, including configuring Container
Replication between datacenters * Gain hands on experience and
familiarity with Horizon, the OpenStack Dashboard user interface *
Learn how to automate OpenStack installations using Ansible and
Foreman * Follow practical advice and examples for running
OpenStack in production * Fix common issues with images served
through Glance and master the art of troubleshooting Neutron
networking In Detail OpenStack is a collection of software projects
that work together to provide a cloud fabric. Learning OpenStack
Cloud Computing course is an exquisite guide that you will need to
build cloud environments proficiently. This course will help you
gain a clearer understanding of OpenStack's components and their
interaction with each other to build a cloud environment. The first
module, Learning OpenStack, starts with a brief look into the need
for authentication and authorization, the different aspects of
dashboards, cloud computing fabric controllers, along with
'Networking as a Service' and 'Software defined Networking'. Then,
you will focus on installing, configuring, and troubleshooting
different architectures such as Keystone, Horizon, Nova, Neutron,
Cinder, Swift, and Glance. After getting familiar with the
fundamentals and application of OpenStack, let's move deeper into
the realm of OpenStack. In the second module, OpenStack Cloud
Computing Cookbook, preview how to build and operate OpenStack
cloud computing, storage, networking, and automation. Dive into
Neutron, the OpenStack Networking service, and get your hands dirty
with configuring ML2, networks, routers, and distributed virtual
routers. Further, you'll learn practical examples of Block Storage,
LBaaS, and FBaaS. The final module, Troubleshooting OpenStack, will
help you quickly diagnose, troubleshoot, and correct problems in
your OpenStack. We will diagnose and remediate issues in Keystone,
Glance, Neutron networking, Nova, Cinder block storage, Swift
object storage, and issues caused by Heat orchestration. This
Learning Path combines some of the best that Packt has to offer in
one complete, curated package. It includes content from the
following Packt products: * Learning OpenStack by Alok Shrivastwa,
Sunil Sarat * OpenStack Cloud Computing Cookbook - Third Edition by
Kevin Jackson , Cody Bunch, Egle Sigler * Troubleshooting OpenStack
by Tony Campbell Style and approach This course aims to create a
smooth learning path that will teach you how to get started with
setting up private and public clouds using a free and open source
cloud computing platform-OpenStack. Through this comprehensive
course, you'll learn OpenStack Cloud computing from scratch to
finish and more!"
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