
Guy Cook
Author of Applied Linguistics
About the Author
Guy Cook is Professor of Applied Linguistics at the University of Reading.
Works by Guy Cook
Principle and Practice in Applied Linguistics: Studies in Honour of H. G. Widdowson (Oxford Applied Linguistics) (1991) — Editor — 18 copies, 1 review
Aplicacion lingüitica 3 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1951-10-10
- Gender
- male
- Organizations
- University of London, Institute of Education
- Nationality
- UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- UK
Members
Reviews
Rob is a resident of present-day England, specifically, the town of Winchester. He runs a blog where he commits to do one culture thing per week, like visiting a local museum or art gallery, and then writes about it. Marianne, his ex-girlfriend, is a biochemist for a major food company.
One day, Rob makes himself a peanut butter and jam sandwich. It's not jam, it's one of Marianne's biochem creations. Combined with a painful, but non-fatal, bite from a lizard during a previous trip to Greece, show more Rob suddenly gains super-hero powers.
No, he does not turn into the Incredible Hulk. He does gain the ability to run 100 meters in six seconds, and he can fly. The first thing Rob wants to do is to win a local tennis tournament. Because of his culture blog, Rob starts to call himself Culture Man.
Every super-hero needs a super-villain. Someone called the Velvet Vandal has evidently been reading Rob's blog. That is because items from the places mentioned in the blog are stolen. The two eventually agree to meet at the top of Winchester Cathedral for the Final Confrontation. Who is the Velvet Vandal? Does someone fall dramatically to their death from the top of the cathedral? Are Rob's abilities permanent or do they have an expiration date? Does an ambitious Oxford Professor of Biochemistry have any involvement?
This is a very "quiet" superhero tale, but a very good one. It shows what can happen when an average person becomes a super-hero. Yes, it is well worth the reader's time. show less
One day, Rob makes himself a peanut butter and jam sandwich. It's not jam, it's one of Marianne's biochem creations. Combined with a painful, but non-fatal, bite from a lizard during a previous trip to Greece, show more Rob suddenly gains super-hero powers.
No, he does not turn into the Incredible Hulk. He does gain the ability to run 100 meters in six seconds, and he can fly. The first thing Rob wants to do is to win a local tennis tournament. Because of his culture blog, Rob starts to call himself Culture Man.
Every super-hero needs a super-villain. Someone called the Velvet Vandal has evidently been reading Rob's blog. That is because items from the places mentioned in the blog are stolen. The two eventually agree to meet at the top of Winchester Cathedral for the Final Confrontation. Who is the Velvet Vandal? Does someone fall dramatically to their death from the top of the cathedral? Are Rob's abilities permanent or do they have an expiration date? Does an ambitious Oxford Professor of Biochemistry have any involvement?
This is a very "quiet" superhero tale, but a very good one. It shows what can happen when an average person becomes a super-hero. Yes, it is well worth the reader's time. show less
Decent overview of the concepts. Not terribly enthralling, but covers the material quickly and clearly. It helps if you have some background in linguistics, or else it’s not likely the information will stick.
urban-fantasy, british, art, art-theft, humor, sports, adventure
The book is great fun and the characters are a riot! I totally enjoy the read, wished certain parts were true, and got lost in the sport talk. So why is this book not read by more people? Marketing. Just trying to find it on Goodreads is bad enough, but on Amazon it really gets ridiculous. Even if you hunt it down by author you have a hard time. What to do? Have it reentered by the cover title: CULTURE MAN AN ADVENTURE ! Then show more readers wouldn't be fooled into thinking that the only reason I loved this book was because I got it for free in a Goodreads Giveaway! That is so not the truth! show less
The book is great fun and the characters are a riot! I totally enjoy the read, wished certain parts were true, and got lost in the sport talk. So why is this book not read by more people? Marketing. Just trying to find it on Goodreads is bad enough, but on Amazon it really gets ridiculous. Even if you hunt it down by author you have a hard time. What to do? Have it reentered by the cover title: CULTURE MAN AN ADVENTURE ! Then show more readers wouldn't be fooled into thinking that the only reason I loved this book was because I got it for free in a Goodreads Giveaway! That is so not the truth! show less
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 12
- Members
- 153
- Popularity
- #136,479
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 6
- ISBNs
- 21
- Languages
- 2



