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Paul Hoffman

    1 januari 1957
    Paul Hoffman
    The White Devil
    The Last Four Things
    The beating of his wings
    The left hand of God
    Archimedes' revenge
    The Man who Loved Only Numbers
    • The biography of a mathematical genius. Paul Erdos was the most prolific pure mathematician in history and, arguably, the strangest too. 'A mathematical genius of the first order, Paul Erdos was totally obsessed with his subject -- he thought and wrote mathematics for nineteen hours a day until he died. He travelled constantly, living out of a plastic bag and had no interest in food, sex, companionship, art -- all that is usually indispensible to a human life. Paul Hoffman, in this marvellous biography, gives us a vivid and strangely moving portrait of this singular creature, one that brings out not only Erdos's genius and his oddness, but his warmth and sense of fun, the joyfulness of his strange life.' Oliver Sacks For six decades Erdos had no job, no hobbies, no wife, no home; he never learnt to cook, do laundry, drive a car and died a virgin. Instead he travelled the world with his mother in tow, arriving at the doorstep of esteemed mathematicians declaring 'My brain is open'. He travelled until his death at 83, racing across four continents to prove as many theorems as possible, fuelled by a diet of espresso and amphetamines. With more than 1,500 papers written or co-written,

      The Man who Loved Only Numbers
    • A collection of articles on the highways and byways of mathematics. The book is written in the tradition of Martin Gardner and aims to be both entertaining and fascinating.

      Archimedes' revenge
    • 'Listen. The Sanctuary of the Redeemers is named after a damned lie for there is no redemption that goes on there and less sanctuary.'The Sanctuary of the Redeemers: vast, desolate, hopeless. Where children endure brutal cruelty and violence in the name of the One True Faith.Lost in the Sanctuary's huge maze of corridors is a boy: his age uncertain, his real name unknown. They call him Cale. He is strange and secretive, witty and charming - and violent. But when he opens the wrong door at the wrong time he witnesses an act so horrible he must flee, or die.The Redeemers will go to any lengths to get Cale back.Not because of the secret he has discovered.But because of a more terrifying secret that lies undiscovered in himself.

      The left hand of God
    • In the final installment of the epic Cale and the Sanctuary of Redeemers series, Thomas Cale grapples with a harrowing truth: his brutal training was designed to annihilate humanity, deemed God's greatest mistake. Hunted by Pope Redeemer Bosco, the man who transformed him into the Angel of Death, Cale embodies a complex paradox—arrogant yet innocent, generous yet pitiless. Having already toppled a powerful civilization using his extraordinary destructive abilities, he now faces a personal crisis; his soul is deteriorating, and his body is failing him. As the day of reckoning approaches, Cale's thirst for vengeance drives him back to the Sanctuary, where he confronts his greatest enemy. He must come to terms with being the embodiment of divine wrath and make a pivotal choice: to oppose the Sanctuary of the Redeemers or unleash his devastating powers upon the world. The fate of humanity hinges on his decision. This conclusion to the trilogy promises a gripping blend of epic heroism and moral complexity, appealing to fans of heroic fiction. Paul Hoffman, acclaimed for his previous works, delivers a thrilling narrative that captivates from the first chapter to the last.

      The beating of his wings
    • The Last Four Things

      • 421bladzijden
      • 15 uur lezen
      3,6(7088)Tarief

      The epic story of Thomas Cale-introduced so memorably in "The Left Hand of God"--continues as the Redeemers use his prodigious gifts to further their sacred goal: the extinction of humankind and the end of the world. To the warrior-monks known as the Redeemers, who rule over massive armies of child slaves, "the last four things" represent the culmination of a faithful life. Death. Judgement. Heaven. Hell. The last four things represent eternal bliss-or endless destruction, permanent chaos, and infinite pain. Perhaps nowhere are the competing ideas of heaven and hell exhibited more clearly than in the dark and tormented soul of Thomas Cale. Betrayed by his beloved but still marked by a child's innocence, possessed of a remarkable aptitude for violence but capable of extreme tenderness, Cale will lead the Redeemers into a battle for nothing less than the fate of the human race. And though his broken heart foretells the bloody trail he will leave in pursuit of a personal peace he can never achieve, a glimmer of hope remains. The question even Cale can't answer: When it comes time to decide the fate of the world, to ensure the extermination of humankind or spare it, what will he choose? To express God's will on the edge of his sword, or to forgive his fellow man-and himself?

      The Last Four Things
    • THE GRIPPING NEW ADVENTURE FROM THE AUTHOR OF THE LEFT HAND OF GOD SERIES Welcome those of you from the Old World. Welcome to the New. Mankind's most reluctant hero - Thomas Cale - is back. ________ Thomas Cale has been running from his enemies. Believing him to be the incarnation of God's rage, the world's most violent religious sect trained him to destroy His greatest mistake. Mankind itself. But Cale has other ideas. Cale is a paradox: arrogant and innocent, generous and pitiless. Feared and revered by those that created him, he has already used his terrifying talent for violence and destruction to bring down the most powerful civilization in the world. But having fled to America, Thomas Cale has been caught. He has been given a choice. Murder the American president - the father of that fragile democracy and the the best hope for ending slavery - or be handed over for execution himself. The survival of rule by the people, and the right of millions not to be owned by others, rests on Cale's decision . . . ________ Praise for Paul Hoffman: 'Fiction on a grand and ambitious scale' Daily Telegraph 'Brooding and magnificent' Eoin Colfer 'Exhilaratingly engaging writing' Spectator 'Gripped me from the first chapter' Conn Iggulden 'A riveting, powerful tale' Publishers Weekly

      The White Devil
    • Wings of Madness

      Alberto Santos Dumont and the Invention of Flight

      • 369bladzijden
      • 13 uur lezen

      The story of man's struggle to fly is full of larger than life personalities, but none was so eccentric, so entertaining or so complex as Alberto Santos-Dumont, the Brazilian 'father of aviation'. An engineer and dandy, Santos-Dumont was the darling of the international press in the first decade of the twentieth century, hopping from Parisian restaurant to nightclub in his personal flying machine, circling the Eiffel Tower in his balloon No. 6 or dining with the Rothschilds and Roosevelts. Yet Santos-Dumont was a troubled genius. Depressed by the success of the Wright brothers in Kitty Hawk and by the increasing militarisation of flight, he retreated to European sanatoriums throughout the 1920s, returning to Brazil only to be confronted by the horrors of civil war. Paul Hoffman tells the tale of Santos-Dumont and modern flight with wit and sympathy, showing us how often brilliance is coupled with tragedy.

      Wings of Madness