Paradox in Oz
- 256pages
- 9 heures de lecture
Time travel in the land of Oz! New paperback edition with a dozen new illustrations and a new Afterword by the author!
Edward Einhorn est un écrivain et metteur en scène dont l'œuvre couvre une gamme étonnante de genres. Il crée des pièces de théâtre explorant la neurologie, des livres illustrés plongeant dans les mathématiques et des adaptations de romans de science-fiction. Einhorn s'engage également dans la traduction d'auteurs absurdes et de drames grecs anciens, révélant une profonde curiosité pour diverses formes narratives. Son approche unique réside dans son exploration audacieuse de sujets et de formats non conventionnels, de la théorie économique aux drames autobiographiques.





Time travel in the land of Oz! New paperback edition with a dozen new illustrations and a new Afterword by the author!
What are the odds? Ethan wakes up one morning to find a very strange cat stuck on his head. The cat, Odds, refuses to budge until Ethan wins a game of probability. Without looking, Ethan must pick out a dime from his coin collection or two matching socks from his dresser, or do something else improbable. If he doesn't, Odds is there to stay, and Ethan has a 100% chance of missing his big soccer game. A very improbable story about a challenging math concept.
High King Agamemnon faces the most crushing dilemma ofhis life. Kill his beloved eldest daughter? Or forfeit victory in the TrojanWar? A father's secret plot clashes with a girl's romantic dreams inthis chilling classic play from AncientGreece. The most powerful dramatic script byEURIPIDES springs to life anew in a fresh adaptation by writer EDWARD EINHORN(Paradox in Oz, Fractions in Disguise, The Marriage of Alice B. Toklas byGertrude Stein) with AGE OF BRONZE art by Eisner Award-winning ERIC SHANOWER(AGE OF BRONZE, Oz Graphic Novels, Little Nemo: Return toSlumberland).
Equal parts action and humor add up to a wholly entertaining introduction to simplifying fractions, in this one-of-a-kind math picture book story. When a valuable fraction goes missing, George Cornelius Factor (a.k.a. GCF) vows to track it down. Knowing that the villainous Dr. Brok likes to disguise his ill-gotten fractions, G.C.F. invents a Reducer—half ray gun, half calculator— that strips away the disguise, reducing the fraction to its lowest common denominator and revealing its true form. With the Reducer in hand, George seeks out Dr. Brok in hopes of retrieving the missing fraction. David Clark’s illustrations are packed with humorous details as well as clearly defined fractions and their corresponding reduction equations.