The New Men

Couverture
House of Stratus, 23 sept. 2008 - 290 pages

It is the onset of World War II in the fifth in the Strangers and Brothers series. A group of Cambridge scientists are working on atomic fission. But there are consequences for the men who are affected by it. Hiroshima also causes mixed personal reactions.

 

Pages sélectionnées

Table des matières

Argument with a Brother
3
4
20
5
26
Morning Before the Office
33
7
42
Gambling by a Cautious
49
9
55
Two Kinds of Danger
65
What Do You Expect from Him Now?
181
Hushed Voices Under the Beams
188
A Joyous Moment in the Fog
195
Situation Designed for a Clear Head
199
Distress Out of Proportion
206
Wife and Husband
209
Warm to the Touch
216
The Brilliance of Suspicion
223

Beside the Smooth Water
74
Points on a Graph
88
Quarrel at First Light
98
Request for an Official Opinion
109
The Taste of Triumph
120
Beam of Light over the Snow
126
Swearing in a Hospital Ward
133
Events Too Big for Men
143
What Is Important?
150
Need for a Brother
165
Part Four A RESULT IN PRIVATE
173
An Uneffaceable Afternoon
175
A Cartoonlike Resemblance
228
The Lonely Men
232
Words in the Open
240
Part Five TWO BROTHERS
249
Technique Behind a High Reward
251
Visit to a Prisoner
256
Lights Twinkling in the Cold
260
A Place to Stand?
268
A New Empire
274
Two Brothers
278
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À propos de l'auteur (2008)

C. P. Snow was born on October 15, 1905 in Leicester, England. He graduated from Leicester University and received a doctorate in physics at the University of Cambridge. After working at Cambridge in molecular physics for about 20 years, he became a university administrator. During World War II, he was a scientific adviser to the British government. He was knighted in 1957 and created a Baron in the life peerage in 1964. He wrote an 11-volume novel sequence collectively called Strangers and Brothers, which was published between 1940 and 1970. His other works of fiction include Death Under Sail, In Their Wisdom, and A Coat of Varnish. He also wrote several non-fiction works including The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution, Public Affairs, Trollope: His Life and Art, and The Realists: Eight Portraits. He died on July 1, 1980 at the age of 74.

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