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John Griesemer

    December 5, 1947
    Roy auf dem Dach
    No One Thinks of Greenland
    Signals And Noise
    • 2003

      Signals And Noise

      • 608 pages
      • 22 hours of reading
      3.9(98)Add rating

      The epic, page-turning story of the laying of the first transatlantic cable, and the men and women who are caught up in its monumental tide. It is also a novel about the collision of worlds seen and unseen, the present and the future, the living and the dead, the real and the imagined. On a dark London morning in 1857, Chester Ludlow, an American engineer, arrives on the muddy banks of the Isle of Dogs to witness the launch of the largest steamship ever built, Isambard Kingdom Brunel's The Great Eastern. Propelled by fierce ambition, Ludlow abandons his fragile wife, Franny, in Maine. The couple are still grieving for their daughter, who died, aged only four, in a tragic accident. And Franny finds some solace in the company of Chester's troubled brother, who introduces her to the mysteries of spiritualism. Chester, Otis and Franny must confront disaster and despair before they can discover any kind of peace and the certain knowledge that mysterious forces move the universe.

      Signals And Noise
    • 2002

      Set in 1959, six years after the Korean War, a young American soldier uncovers a chilling secret at a remote military base in Greenland. John Griesemer weaves a gripping narrative against a historical backdrop, echoing the themes of absurdity and madness found in "MASH" and "Catch 22." The story critiques the insanity of war with a subversive and relentless approach, offering a powerful exploration of its impact on those involved.

      No One Thinks of Greenland