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The story won several awards, including First Prize in the Maclean's fiction contest, and became the basis for Execution. McDougall wrote Execution between 1952 and 1957, keeping copious notes on its development that are now preserved in the McDougall Papers at the Rare Books and Special Collections Division, McGill University Libraries.
Innocent (Japanese: イノサン, Hepburn: Inosan, from the French word) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Shin-ichi Sakamoto, based on Masakatsu Adachi 's book The Executioner Sanson. [2] It was published in Shueisha's Weekly Young Jump from January 2013 to April 2015, and compiled into nine tankōbon volumes.
Execution, a 1958 fictional work by the Canadian author and war veteran Colin McDougall; Execution, a 1995 Chinese art painting "Execution" (The Twilight Zone), season 1 episode 26 of The Twilight Zone in 1960; Execution, a 1968 Italian film; Execution, also known as Stark Raving Mad, a 1981 American film
The Executioner: Death Squad was adapted by Linda Pendleton with art by Sandu Florea. It was a 128-page black and white comic, published in 1996 by Vivid Comics. The Executioner was adapted into a five-part comic book series by IDW, written
Last Words of the Executed is a book by Robert K. Elder published in 2010. Studs Terkel contributed a foreword. The book documents the final words of death row inmates in the United States, from the seventeenth century to the present day. The chapters are organized by era and method of execution.
Execution is a 1958 war novel by Canadian novelist and Second World War veteran Colin McDougall (1917–1984). Although it won McDougall the 1958 Governor General's Award for English-language fiction , it was his only novel, and after publishing it to wide acclaim he retreated into a quiet life as Registrar of McGill University in Montreal .
A staff reviewer at The New Yorker describes the book as a "fascinating study." [3]A staff reviewer at The Times states that "the authors present a nuanced picture of state-imposed execution and, without at any time condoning, succeed in their goal of contextualising lingchi in relation to Western forms of punishment" and that "this challenging and important work will appeal not solely to ...
Prince Rupert and Staff (1875 – Ipswich Museums and Art Galleries) Ironsides returning from sacking a Cavalier's House (1877) Charles I on his way to Execution (1883) At the Sign of the Blue Boar, Holborn (Cromwell questioning a prisoner) (1883 – Dudley Museum and Art Gallery) The return from a raid (1886) The Boscobel Oak (1889)