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Sign up todayUtopia
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Learn moreIn this political work written in 1516, Utopia is the name given by Sir Thomas More to an imaginary island. Book I ofUtopia, a dialogue, presents a perceptive analysis of contemporary social, economic, and moral ills in England. Book II is a narrative describing a country run according to the ideals of the English humanists, where poverty, crime, injustice, and other ills do not exist. Locating his island in the New World, More bestowed it with everything to support a perfectly organized and happy people.
The name of this fictitious place, Utopia, coined by More, passed into general usage and has been applied to all such ideal fictions, fantasies, and blueprints for the future, including works by Rabelais, Francis Bacon, Samuel Butler, and several by H. G. Wells, including hisA Modern Utopia.
Sir Thomas More (1478โ1535), was placed at number thirty-seven in the BBCโs poll of the โ100 Greatest Britons.โ An English statesman, lawyer, humanist, saint, poet, and author, he was one of the most versatile and talented men of his age. He held important government positions, including serving as Lord Chancellor. Though he had been a long-time friend of King Henry VIII, he was a staunch Catholic and could not accept the kingโs demand that all subjects acknowledge the king above the pope, resulting in his execution in 1535. With his writing ofย Utopia, he takes his place with the most eminent humanists of the Renaissance.
James Adams is one of the worldโs leading authorities on terrorism and intelligence, and for more than twenty-five years he has specialized in national security. He is also the author of fourteen bestselling books on warfare, with a particular emphasis on covert warfare. A former managing editor of the London Sunday Times and CEO of United Press International, he trained as a journalist in England, where he graduated first in the country. Now living in Southern Oregon, he has narrated numerous audiobooks and earned an AudioFile Earphones Award and two coveted Audie Award for best narration.
Reviews
โFluent and highly readable, this new version should be welcomed by all admirers of the Utopia.โ
โSurprisingly apropos as civilization enters the twenty-first centuryโฆThrough James Adamsโ skillful narration one envisions More standing at a lectern in historical garb. Adamsโ deep, measured tones lend weight to the utopian portrayal, as do his accurate pronunciations of the names of Greek philosophers. The disparity between Moreโs world of harmony and balance and the real events of the last 500 years makes this work all the more relevant.โ
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