Afbeelding van de auteur.

S. Fowler Wright (1874–1965)

Auteur van The World Below

52+ Werken 297 Leden 7 Besprekingen Favoriet van 1 leden

Over de Auteur

Ontwarringsbericht:

(eng) Also wrote as Sydney Fowler and Anthony Wingrave.

Fotografie: Cropped scan of back cover of Penguin No.507. Image attributed to Howard Coster.

Reeksen

Werken van S. Fowler Wright

The World Below (1929) 64 exemplaren
Deluge (1928) 47 exemplaren
The Island of Captain Sparrow (1928) 34 exemplaren
The King Against Anne Bickerton (1930) 22 exemplaren
The Throne of Saturn (1949) 17 exemplaren
The Amphibians (1951) 13 exemplaren
Dawn (1683) 11 exemplaren
Spiders' War (1954) 5 exemplaren
The Adventure of Wyndham Smith (1938) 5 exemplaren
The Bell Street Murders (1931) (2009) 3 exemplaren
VENGEANCE OF GWA (2008) 3 exemplaren
The Siege of Malta (1972) 3 exemplaren
The Attic Murder (2008) 3 exemplaren
The Witchfinder (1946) 3 exemplaren
Who Murdered Reynard? (1947) 3 exemplaren
The Rat 2 exemplaren
By Saturday (1931) 2 exemplaren
Arresting Delia (1933) 2 exemplaren
The life of Sir Walter Scott (1971) 2 exemplaren
The Rissole Mystery (1941) 2 exemplaren
Brain {short story} 2 exemplaren
The wills of Jane Kanwhistle (1939) 1 exemplaar
Was murder done? 1 exemplaar
Too much for Mr. Jellipot (2009) 1 exemplaar
With cause enough? (2008) 1 exemplaar
Three witnesses 1 exemplaar
Crime & Co. (1932) 1 exemplaar
The murder in Bethnal square (1938) 1 exemplaar
Dream (2009) 1 exemplaar
Original Sin 1 exemplaar
Gloucester 1 exemplaar
P.n. 40 1 exemplaar
Power (1933) 1 exemplaar
Who else but she? 1 exemplaar

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The Other Side of the Moon (1949) 79 exemplaren
The Treasury of Science Fiction Classics (1954) — Medewerker — 75 exemplaren
The Best of British SF 1 (1977) — Medewerker — 38 exemplaren
Science Fiction Thinking Machines (1954) — Medewerker — 38 exemplaren
The Red Brain (1961) — Medewerker — 10 exemplaren
Det sidste spørgsmål og andre historier (1973) — Auteur, sommige edities6 exemplaren

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Officiële naam
Wright, Sydney Fowler
Pseudoniemen en naamsvarianten
Seymour, Alan
Wingrave, Anthony
Fowler, Sydney
Geboortedatum
1874-01-06
Overlijdensdatum
1965-02-25
Geslacht
male
Nationaliteit
UK
Geboorteplaats
Birmingham, England, UK
Woonplaatsen
England, UK
Beroepen
accountant
Ontwarringsbericht
Also wrote as Sydney Fowler and Anthony Wingrave.

Leden

Besprekingen

El mundo subterráneo es justamente famoso como el más sobresaliente de los libros de c-f escritos entre las primeras novelas imaginativas de H.G. Wells y las historias del futuro de Olaf Stapledon. Puede leérselo, si se quiere, como una emocionante novela de aventuras, pues en él se combinan, de un modo maravillosamente rico, un fondo de imaginación ilimitada con los hechos más sorprendentes.
 
Gemarkeerd
Natt90 | 1 andere bespreking | Mar 8, 2023 |
Arrgh! my computer crashed in the middle of writing this, sigh! Start again.

So short version. An odd mix of fantasy and high seas adventure. The plot of a pulp but much better and more thoughtful writing style.

With its mix of perspectives to tell the story and the history of this mysterious island it reminded me of the series 'Lost' and not unlike that show the build up meant i was somewhat disappointed by the end.
But its still really quite good, pretty decent romance and adventure i thought, some racism but mostly in the subtext so many may not even notice it.

Its mysteries while not explored to the extent you would want will mean i won't be forgetting it anytime soon. In the end really good and the 3 stars are mostly due to the high expectations it gave me from its early chapters and never quite fulfilled.
… (meer)
 
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wreade1872 | 1 andere bespreking | Nov 28, 2021 |
Sydney Fowler Wright’s The World Below, published in 1929, is a time travel tale clearly patterned on H.G. Wells’s The Time Machine template: a time traveler relating his fantastical adventures to a skeptical cadre of friends and associates. And as in Wells’s story, far in the future human life on earth has evolved into a pair of separate and competing species. Wright’s strength lies in his beautifully detailed descriptions of the future world’s landscapes, creating a uniquely immersive experience for the reader. The action sequences are exciting and have a real swashbuckling flair, but these moments are few and very far between, as the primary downfall of the book is the frequent treatises on philosophical subjects (government, libertarianism, capitalism, socialism, justice, logic/reason, etc.) that, while intrinsically intriguing, routinely bring the story itself to a screeching halt. The World Below consists of two-thirds of an intended trilogy, with the concluding section never written.… (meer)
 
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ghr4 | 1 andere bespreking | May 10, 2021 |
ORIGINALLY POSTED AT Fantasy Literature.

During his profitable pirating career, Captain Sparrow discovered an unknown South Pacific island that appeared to consist entirely of rocky cliffs but contained a lushly fertile inland landscape. It could only be accessed at high tide from a small hidden recess high in the cliffs. Sparrow and his crew, who were wanted all over the world for their crimes, made the island a hideout where they stowed heaps of gold bars and lots of guns and ammunition. Before his last voyage, Sparrow left some of his crew, several Chilean women, and his young son on the island. But Sparrow had tempted fate one time too many; he and his remaining crew were caught and hanged. Not knowing what happened to their leader and the rest of his men, the pirates and women left on the island degenerated into illiteracy and lawlessness.

A couple of generations later, Charlton Foyle, drifting alone in a lifeboat, happens upon the island??s hidden recess. After gaining access to the interior of the island, he discovers several oddities: huge flesh-eating birds, satyrs and, most interesting of all, a pretty young French woman named Marcelle who was marooned two years earlier and has been hiding from the pirates in the forest. Marcelle is excited to have a civilized companion but canƒ??t show herself because sheƒ??s naked. When she tries to steal clothing to cover her indecency, sheƒ??s caught by the pirates and is about to be forced to marry their brutish leader, the grandson of Captain Sparrow. Will Charlton, the refined Englishman, come and save her?

The Island of Captain Sparrow, published in 1928, is a classic lost world fantasy which contains many of the themes found in similar stories written in the early 1900s. Charlton Foyleƒ??s adventure is thrilling and the world he discovers is both beautiful and horrible. Because of S. Fowler Wrightƒ??s lovely descriptive prose, I felt like I was drifting in the boat, exploring the caves, and peeking through the trees with Charlton. I was truly anxious during the scenes in which Marcelle and Charlton encountered the degenerate pirates. Itƒ??s too bad that the plot gradually fizzled after the climax; I wish it had ended more strongly.

One noticeable annoyance with Wrightƒ??s story, and this is surely due to the time period during which it was written, is the glaring racism and classism. There are several reminders from the narrator that the islanders were brutes because they were descended from 1. Europeans of the lowest class, and 2. Chileans:

It is doubtless true that the men and women that Captain Sparrow had landed upon the island had been subnormal both in intellect and in moral stability. That is a reasonable supposition considering their occupation and antecedents.

The physical features of the islanders are often described as offensive and contrasted with the attractive features of Charlton and Marcelle who are upper-class Europeans. At one point, Charlton notices that Marcelle, who had been running around the island naked before he arrived, has a suntan. But he quickly assures us that she is tanned ƒ??only lightlyƒ? for which he thanks the shady forest. Fortunately, ƒ??only the soles of her dust-stained feet were very dark.ƒ? Another time, Charlton uses a metaphor to suggest that he and Marcelle are like the mighty trees that struggle to push through the ƒ??strifeƒ? and ƒ??parasitesƒ? of the forest canopy to rise above the rest of the ƒ??savageƒ? jungle. This Eurocentrism is ugly, but perhaps not surprising since S. Fowler Wright, an Englishman, lived from 1874 to 1965.

The audio production I listened to was performed by Napoleon Ryan, a British comedy screen actor. As far as I can tell, this is his first audiobook performance. His presentation was genuine and he has a terrific voice ƒ?? even his voice for Marcelle was completely convincing. I hope Mr. Ryan will continue narrating audiobooks.

The Island of Captain Sparrow is a relatively short book (only 7 hours) which is fast-paced and exciting. If you you can look past the Eurocentrism, itƒ??s an entertaining example of an old lost world fantasy.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
Kat_Hooper | 1 andere bespreking | Apr 6, 2014 |

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Statistieken

Werken
52
Ook door
12
Leden
297
Populariteit
#78,942
Waardering
4.1
Besprekingen
7
ISBNs
55
Talen
2
Favoriet
1

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