翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ John Scholasticus
・ John Scholastikos
・ John Scholes
・ John Scholey
・ John Scholey (cricketer)
・ John Scholfield
・ John Scholz
・ John Schommer
・ John school
・ John Schoolcraft
・ John Schoolcraft House
・ John Schoon
・ John Schoonraad
・ John Schorne
・ John Schot
John Schreiber
・ John Schricker House
・ John Schriffen
・ John Schroder
・ John Schroeder
・ John Schroeder (golfer)
・ John Schroeder (musician)
・ John Schubeck
・ John Schuck
・ John Schuerholz
・ John Schuette
・ John Schuhmacher
・ John Schultz
・ John Schultz (catcher)
・ John Schultz (director)


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

John Schreiber : ウィキペディア英語版
John Schreiber
John Schreiber (born 1954) is an American author, teacher, and theater director. He has taught for over 30 years in southern Minnesota, was a finalist for Minnesota Teacher of the Year in 2003, and has directed over 130 plays and musicals.〔Schuenke, Bryn. "Local Author John Schreiber Publishes." Kenyon Leader. Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2003.〕 In 2012 he was Minnesota's first Theater Educator of the Year.〔Hanson, Ruth, "Schreiber Named Minnesota Theater Educator of the Year," ''Star Herald,'' Vol. 143, Number 39, Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2012〕
As an author he is best known as the writer of the ''Ironwood County Chronicles'', a series of novels that take place in southern Minnesota. Schreiber's Ironwood County Chronicles are ''Hillcrest Journal'' (published 2002), ''Passing Through Paradise'' (2003-first edition), ''Life on the Fly'' (2005), and ''Catching the Stream' (2015)'. The short story collection ''Tales from 2 A.M.'' (2004) also includes some stories based in the fictional Ironwood County.
The fictional Ironwood County is located between Steele County, Minnesota, Dodge County, Minnesota, and Olmsted County. Unlike other novels based in small towns, the Ironwood County series portrays small towns as realistic microcosms of humanity, not as idyllic, romantic locales nor as backwater societies.〔"Make Your Next Stop Ironwood County". Fictitious travel brochure by Author. 2006.〕
In 2007, Schreiber published ''Heartstone'', an epic fantasy that employs a fast-paced, cinematic writing style "with no transitions between scenes."〔Campbell, Terry. "West Concord Author Releases New Novel." News-Enterprise. Wednesday, Nov 21, 2007.〕 The fantasy revolves around Derrick, a lame young man who discovers he has the power to unlock unlimited power through heartstone, and his struggle to maintain his "true beliefs."〔Campbell, Terry. "West Concord Author Releases New Novel." News-Enterprise. Wednesday, Nov 21, 2007.〕
In the fall of 2008, a second edition of ''Passing Through Paradise'' was released in both hardcover and paperback. This edition is recognizable by its red cover with a childlike crayon sketch. The second edition includes discussion questions for book clubs as well as a map of Paradise.〔Author webpage:http://frontiernet.net/~jamsch/Site/Paradise.html〕 The first edition has a yellow cover with a photograph of a railroad trestle located in Kenyon, Minnesota.
He has also written two short plays, "I AM: the Jesus Incident" (included in ''Tales from 2 A.M.''), a religious play that has been performed by numerous churches throughout the world,〔Fate, Kay. "I Am: The Jesus Incident". Owatonna Peoples Press. April 2004.〕 and "I Never Saw a Moor", a one-act play that explores the pain and alienation felt by those who suffer from epilepsy.
The sequel to ''Heartstone'' entitled ''Heartstone: Under the Shadow'' was published in August, 2011 in both paperback and ebook formats. It centers around Derrick, ten years after the events recounted in ''Heartstone''. His wife is kidnapped by the Shadow Empire and he must design a plan to rescue her without plunging his country into war.
In 2014 he released three shorter ebooks: "Galactic Pariah: the Legend of Methuselah Brown," "Me and Josh and Gideon," and "The New Jerusalem Poems and I AM: the Jesus Incident." 〔http://frontiernet.net/~jamsch/Site/Welcome.html〕
In 2015, Schreiber published the sequel to ''Life on the Fly'' entitled ''Catching the Stream'' that continues the adventures of protagonist Matthew Blake but also involves many of the supporting characters from the previous Ironwood County novels. 〔Rochester Post-Bulletin, Monday 8/24/2015〕
==Bibliography==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「John Schreiber」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.