History of the Rain
Autor Niall Williamsen Limba Engleză Paperback – 2 noi 2015
Longlisted for the 2014 Man Booker Prize
"We are our stories. We tell them to stay alive or keep alive those who only live now in the telling. That's how it seems to me, being alive for a little while, the teller and the told."
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""So says Ruthie Swain. The bedridden daughter of a dead poet, home from college after a collapse (Something Amiss, the doctors say), she is trying to find her father through stories--and through generations of family history in County Clare (the Swains have the written stories, from salmon-fishing journals to poems, and the maternal MacCarrolls have the oral) and through her own writing (with its Superabundance of Style). Ruthie turns also to the books her father left behind, his library transposed to her bedroom and stacked on the floor, which she pledges to work her way through while she's still living.
In her attic room, with the rain rushing down the windows, Ruthie writes Ireland, with its weather, its rivers, its lilts, and its lows. The stories she uncovers and recounts bring back to life multiple generations buried in this soil--and they might just bring her back into the world again, too.
Toate formatele și edițiile | Preț | Express |
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Paperback (2) | 49.17 lei 3-5 săpt. | |
Bloomsbury Publishing – 11 mar 2015 | 49.17 lei 3-5 săpt. | |
Bloomsbury USA – 2 noi 2015 | 103.75 lei 3-5 săpt. |
Preț: 103.75 lei
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Specificații
ISBN-10: 1620407701
Pagini: 368
Dimensiuni: 140 x 210 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury USA
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Recenzii
A surge of language, beautiful and enchanting, a novel that weaves a love of literature into its own moving tale
Extremely moving, poignantly capturing Ruth's doomed childhood relationship with her twin brother. By the final chapter I was weeping
The Anne Enright award for the Irish novel most guaranteed to make you cry . Niall Williams wins this year's award on the strength of his title alone . Suffused with warmth and humour
Deeply allusive, infectiously hopeful . Somewhere between bildungsroman, epic and family saga, History of the Rain is an unashamedly unfashionable, lyrical paean to the pleasure of reading and to serendipity . A fresh and powerful reminder that: "We tell stories to heal the pain of living
Why Niall Williams's History of the Rain did not win every literary prize is baffling: it provided the most satisfying read of 2014. It is a novel about books and being a bookish, serious reader, as well as about family, Irish village life, devotion and weather, invariably rain. Books rarely make me weep nowadays, but this one did, for all the right reasons - its sublime and funny prose is totally engaging. I could not bear it to end