http://book.klll.cc/ebooks/152.opds 2025-08-18T20:04:50Z Wild Justice by Ruth M. Sprague Free eBooks since 1971. Project Gutenberg https://book.klll.cc webmaster@gutenberg.org https://book.klll.cc/gutenberg/favicon.ico 25 1 2025-08-18T20:04:50Z Wild Justice

This edition had all images removed.

Title: Wild Justice

Summary: "WILD JUSTICE" by Ruth M. Sprague is a fiction novel written in the early 1990s. The book centers on the plight of Professor Diana Trenchant, who faces an unjust termination hearing after being accused of falsifying student evaluations while the university administration appears to condone far worse offenses among its male faculty. Through a blend of humor and indignation, Sprague seeks to expose the systematic sexism ingrained in academic institutions and the often disingenuous practices that protect the status quo. At the start of the story, readers are introduced to Diana Trenchant, an experienced professor who is shocked to find herself at the center of a termination hearing instigated by the committee at Belmont University. The opening chapters set the stage for her defense, revealing the skewed dynamics between faculty and administration, as well as the petty motivations driving the accusations against her. Key administrators, such as Henry Tarbuck and Lyle Stone, are depicted as self-serving figures aiming to discredit Trenchant while maintaining their own questionable positions. Other characters, like Professor Jonathan Bambridge, serve as a reminder of the complicity often found in academia. As the hearing unfolds, it becomes increasingly clear that Diana's case is less about her actions and more about entrenched gender biases and institutional power struggles. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Reading Level: Reading ease score: 73.4 (7th grade). Fairly easy to read.

Author: Sprague, Ruth M.

EBook No.: 152

Published: Aug 1, 1994

Downloads: 165

Language: English

Subject: Sex discrimination -- Fiction

Subject: Universities and colleges -- Fiction

LoCC: Language and Literatures: American and Canadian literature

Category: Text

Rights: Copyrighted. Read the copyright notice inside this book for details.

urn:gutenberg:152:2 1994-08-01T00:00:00+00:00 Copyrighted. Read the copyright notice inside this book for details. Sprague, Ruth M. en 1
2025-08-18T20:04:50Z Wild Justice

This edition has images.

Title: Wild Justice

Summary: "WILD JUSTICE" by Ruth M. Sprague is a fiction novel written in the early 1990s. The book centers on the plight of Professor Diana Trenchant, who faces an unjust termination hearing after being accused of falsifying student evaluations while the university administration appears to condone far worse offenses among its male faculty. Through a blend of humor and indignation, Sprague seeks to expose the systematic sexism ingrained in academic institutions and the often disingenuous practices that protect the status quo. At the start of the story, readers are introduced to Diana Trenchant, an experienced professor who is shocked to find herself at the center of a termination hearing instigated by the committee at Belmont University. The opening chapters set the stage for her defense, revealing the skewed dynamics between faculty and administration, as well as the petty motivations driving the accusations against her. Key administrators, such as Henry Tarbuck and Lyle Stone, are depicted as self-serving figures aiming to discredit Trenchant while maintaining their own questionable positions. Other characters, like Professor Jonathan Bambridge, serve as a reminder of the complicity often found in academia. As the hearing unfolds, it becomes increasingly clear that Diana's case is less about her actions and more about entrenched gender biases and institutional power struggles. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Reading Level: Reading ease score: 73.4 (7th grade). Fairly easy to read.

Author: Sprague, Ruth M.

EBook No.: 152

Published: Aug 1, 1994

Downloads: 165

Language: English

Subject: Sex discrimination -- Fiction

Subject: Universities and colleges -- Fiction

LoCC: Language and Literatures: American and Canadian literature

Category: Text

Rights: Copyrighted. Read the copyright notice inside this book for details.

urn:gutenberg:152:3 1994-08-01T00:00:00+00:00 Copyrighted. Read the copyright notice inside this book for details. Sprague, Ruth M. en 1