Monday, October 8, 2012

The iPad application of the novel by Anthony Burgess is a spectacular winner

"Poor little surprise" was how the TLS described Clockwork Orange when it was published in 1962. A half-century later, Anthony Burgess joined TS Eliot and Shakespeare in his work became a blockbuster application for the iPad.

As a pioneer of Faber The Waste Land

and

The (William Heinemann and PopLeaf, £ 9 99) combines interactive text, archives and audio and video recordings in a sumptuous production orders after the words "unique" and "spectacular" in the press release.

You do not worship the novel (I prefer the film) application to an evangelist crazy eyes, tending to push your iPad in the faces of strangers. "Hey, see the Glossary Nadsat integrated slang! Listening Tom Hollander tell! See Martin Amis discuss controversial last chapter! Hey Burgess interviewed view the doodles in the original manuscript!" Yes, the

Clockwork Orange application
main disadvantage is to turn yourself into a hole.

As with other literary applications, its real value is educational democratization of the material once the preserve of scholars and biographers. The archive section is fun, like rummaging through a box of shoes belonging to Anthony Burgess stalker. I liked the general information sheet, where hobby of the author are indicated as "safe, educational broadcasting, comparative philology and the occult."
Anyone who still believes the new technology will make us all illiterate idiots should be transferred to a prison, tied to a chair and given the



Find best price for : --Orange----Clockwork----Heinemann--

0 comments:

Blog Archive