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Ian Jack

    Ian Jack es un periodista escocés conocido por su larga trayectoria como editor de la revista literaria Granta, cargo que ocupó de 1995 a 2007. Su labor editorial moldeó el panorama de la literatura contemporánea durante sus influyentes años en la publicación.

    What We Think of America
    Cumbres Borrascosas
    Unbelievable
    Children
    Granta 64
    Celebrity
    • Celebrity

      • 254 páginas
      • 9 horas de lectura

      This edition centres around celebrity, both good and bad. Contributions include: the search for Hitler's doctor; an Irish republican looks at the Queen Kyle Stone; how Hillary Clinton's home views Hillary; and the cannibal emperor of the Central African Republic.

      Celebrity
    • This issue on Russia explores how an old country is finding new ways to think and write. As well as fiction by Russian writers, there is a report on a visit to the once unvisitable Siberia, interviews with the survivors of Stalin's gulag, and a discussion of the place of vodka in Russian culture.

      Granta 64
    • Ah, the darling little ones. According to UN estimates there are now 1.7 billion of them under the age of sixteen, nearly a third of the world's population. In thirty years there will be 2.1 billion. We will go on making them.This issue of Granta describes the rearing, loving, loathing and fearing of them, and evokes what it was like to be that lost personality in a vanished time, a child.

      Children
    • Unbelievable

      Unlikely Ends, Fateful Escapes and the Fascism of Flowers

      We think we like surprises. Shocks, on the other hand, are harder to accept. We lose people. Bad luck, bad judgement, bad habits; fate. They die, they change, they disappear; and sometimes there's a public fuss and sometimes not. Always there are questions (though the answers rarely make a difference). Why did he die? Why did I live? Was the driver drunk? Was the car going too fast? What was she doing there in the first place? Above all: why me?

      Unbelievable
    • Obra maestra de la literatura universal, Cumbres borrascosas narra la tragica historia de Catalina y Heathcliff, atrapados en un torbellino pasional que finalmente destruira sus vidas. Catalina, victima de una pasion salvaje y frustrada, no consigue superar las convenciones sociales y se precipita a la locura y la muerte. Heathcliff alimenta un odio insaciable e intenta apaciguar su dolor mediante una venganza implacable contra quienes impidieron la consumacion de su amor. Los sombrios y desolados parajes de Yorkshire constituyen un sugestivo decorado para la desgarradora belleza de esta historia inmortal.

      Cumbres Borrascosas
    • What We Think of America

      • 352 páginas
      • 13 horas de lectura

      In this issue, writers from across the world describe how America has affected them - culturally, politically, economically, as citizens, as writers, as children and as adults, for better or worse.

      What We Think of America
    • Australia

      • 352 páginas
      • 13 horas de lectura

      This issue of "Granta" celebrates Australian writing and examines a country which is forging a strong new identity. The contributors include Peter Carey, Thomas Keneally, Les Murray and Tim Winton. There are picture essays by Polly Borland and David Moore, and a novella by Ben Rice.

      Australia
    • What Young Men Do

      • 288 páginas
      • 11 horas de lectura

      The newest GRANTA annual features an interview with Martha Gellhorn on the subject of marriage; civil war and economic collapse in Indonesia; a photographic essay on Jakarta's last boom; a humorous piece by Todd McEwen on the fetish of high heels; a look at the Northern soul (opposite the Southern soul?); and a timely article entitled "The Mistress", about a young woman entangled in lies.

      What Young Men Do
    • France, the Outsider

      • 254 páginas
      • 9 horas de lectura

      What has happened to France — the universal nation, the tutor of the good life, the place we visited to feel the kiss of a superior civilization? This issue presents fresh new voices from a country searching for a new idea of itself.

      France, the Outsider