@article{oai:shukutoku.repo.nii.ac.jp:00001560, author = {星野, 英樹 and Hoshino, Hideki}, issue = {1}, journal = {国際経営・文化研究, Cross-cultural business and cultural studies}, month = {Dec}, note = {After the release of his last novel, A Maggot, the two volumes of John Fowles’s journals were published. The volume I begins in 1949 when he was studying French at New College, Oxford, and the second journal covers the years from 1966 to 1990. These journals, condensed from the original two million word diaries by the editor Charles Drazin, contain John Fowles’s exercise book for his writing, critique of books, plays, films and most importantly observations of nature. The of objects of these observations of nature in The Journals, which John Fowles called ‘disjoints’, range from birds, insects to trees and some episodes of these observations are resources for the study of his great novels as The Magus and The French Lieutenant’s Woman. As he says, nature has the most profound influence in John Fowles’s life., 23, 研究ノート}, pages = {301--309}, title = {ジョン・ファウルズの『日誌』 : 最後の小説としての「とりとめのないもの」}, volume = {21}, year = {2016}, yomi = {ホシノ, ヒデキ} }