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Gilbert

    J. J. Gilbert is a seasoned visual storyteller whose career has spanned decades in the animation industry. His extensive experience as a director, animator, producer, and storyboard artist has allowed him to breathe life into beloved characters, particularly mice and other creatures. Gilbert's artistic journey is marked by a deep understanding of character animation and narrative development. His work showcases a passion for bringing imaginative worlds and their inhabitants to the screen.

    Gilbert & George: The Meaning of the Earth
    Engaged
    St. Gilbert of Sempringham: 1089-1189
    Gilbert's Summary Of The Occupations Of The People Of England, Wales, And Scotland: From The Abstract Of The Population Commissioners
    Mouse Watch Underwater
    • Mouse Watch Underwater

      • 240 pages
      • 9 hours of reading
      4.1(51)Add rating

      You've heard of the Rescue Rangers. Now meet the Mouse Watch. Six months after being recruited to the Mouse Watch, brave mouse Bernie and shy rat Jarvis are now officially Level One agents and are getting along like cheese and crackers! They've already completed their first successful mission, and now it's now back to basic training with the goal of moving up the ranks in the Mouse Watch. But more pressing matters are at hand (or rather, at paw). A mysterious radio transmission reveals that the S.S. Moon, a long-lost spy vessel, may still lie hidden under the sea. Legend has it that on board the ship is an energy source called the Milk Saucer that could save-or destroy-the planet. The Mouse Watch must get to it before it falls into the claws of their evil nemesis, R.A.T.S!

      Mouse Watch Underwater
    • Engaged

      • 128 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      Engaged, W.S. Gilbert’s most popular stage work after the comic operas he produced in collaboration with Arthur Sullivan, is a farcical comedy that has long lived in the literary shadows – although wildly neglected today, the play influenced literary names as great as George Bernard Shaw, and directly inspired Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest. Centring on a rich young man’s search for a wife and his uncle and best friend’s attempts to hinder him, the play toys with conventional notions of love and sincerity. In this edition, which also contains notes and an essay by the undisputed authority on W.S. Gilbert, Andrew Crowther, Engaged deserves to step out into the spotlight once more. 'The laughter was almost incessant.' The New York Times 'The satirical comedy of Mr Gilbert has all the sting, smack and strength of neat brandy… a sudden gulp of it is apt to take one’s breath away.' The Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News

      Engaged
    • The Meaning of the Earth describes an almost unknown revolution that took place in London the 1970s. A revolution where a bloody power struggle raged for many years before its decisive battle ended with a tremendous sacrifice. But no lives were lost in this revolution, just as it was unmarked by rebellious pathos and public calls to violence. Nor did it intervene in contemporary society. Instead it toppled a regime internalised in western individuals. It led to the death of the decrepit and irretrievably dialectically animated spirit that had set the historical revolutions in motion, inspired them and drove them on. It ended too the Christian-influenced and increasingly secular salvation history, and opened a new evolutionary chapter. Its two revolutionaries, Gilbert & George, emerge not unscathed but nonetheless victorious from this inner power struggle. Wolf Jahn's text tells of their world revolution of the soul in the twentieth century and its fruitful results in the form of a new creation and anthropogenesis.

      Gilbert & George: The Meaning of the Earth