The Limits of the World: A Novel
Autor Jennifer Ackeren Limba Engleză Hardback – 15 apr 2019
Preț: 144.31 lei
Nou
Puncte Express: 216
Preț estimativ în valută:
27.64€ • 28.48$ • 23.15£
27.64€ • 28.48$ • 23.15£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 03-17 februarie
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781883285777
ISBN-10: 1883285771
Pagini: 225
Dimensiuni: 140 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: DELPHINIUM
Colecția Delphinium
ISBN-10: 1883285771
Pagini: 225
Dimensiuni: 140 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: DELPHINIUM
Colecția Delphinium
Recenzii
“A magnificent achievement. Acker’s novel immerses us fully into the lives and feelings of people who are completely unlike us and makes us learn to love them and hope for them, just as we love and hope for those who are like us.” — Los Angeles Review of Books
“A rich and rewarding debut... Acker is a brainy writer... but she also writes with great heart. A novel full of characters wrestling with ethical questions, [she] has updated the immigration saga with a gaze that looks back to Kenya and carries its own urgent suspense." — Elizabeth Taylor, The National Book Review
“Acker unwinds a complex intergenerational story of immigration, culture, family, partnership, and ethics in her skillful debut. Fans of Jhumpa Lahiri or Yaa Gyasi will want to check out Acker’s elegant saga.” — Publishers Weekly
“Acker’s debut is a carefully drawn portrait of a family constrained by choices... a rare but honest look at the way parents, children, and spouses talk to one another but don’t always hear what’s being said. A thoughtful, deeply researched debut.” — Kirkus Reviews
“The Limits of The World is such a smart, compassionate and elegant novel, so deeply invested in morality and the subtleties of families, cultures, and continents, that it feels delicious and exciting to recall that this is Jennifer Acker’s debut.” — Lauren Groff, author of Florida
“The Limits of the World is the most masterful debut novel I have read in years. In beautiful, understated prose, it shows the complicated ways in which family splits and regathers. In this wise, loving book I saw my mother’s family, exiled from Nairobi; I saw me.” — Suketu Mehta, author of Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found
“Evocative and profound... an intimate novel about family that is, at the same time, an illumination of miscommunication across cultures, an exploration of the legacy of migration in both Africa and the US, and a philosophical rumination on ethical behaviors. Jennifer Acker’s is a wise and honest literary voice.” — Claire Messud, author of The Burning Girl
“The Limits of the World is a riveting and nuanced study of how we belong—to a lover, a family, a country. The prose is beautiful, the story is refreshingly original, and the characters are achingly human. The novel announces Acker as a writer of deep feeling and intelligence, a formidable writer whose talent is limitless.” — Bret Anthony Johnston, author of Remember Me Like This
“The world of the 21st century is transnational, connected, and small, and the only remaining borders we have left are of our own design. From the Harvard Halls of Boston to the grassy plains of Nairobi, this unabashedly intelligent and beautiful book of generational conflict, culture clashes, and immigrant assimilation reminds us the limits of this world depend entirely on the sizes our hearts, our capacity to love ourselves and each other.” — Scott Cheshire, author of High as the Horses’ Bridles
“The Limits of the World travels vast distances, not only from India to Kenya to the United States, but also from grandfather to mother to son. A gorgeously written, bravely honest novel about moral philosophy and love: the difficult kind, the beautiful kind, and every other kind in between.” — Katherine Hill, author of The Violet Hour
“A rich and rewarding debut... Acker is a brainy writer... but she also writes with great heart. A novel full of characters wrestling with ethical questions, [she] has updated the immigration saga with a gaze that looks back to Kenya and carries its own urgent suspense." — Elizabeth Taylor, The National Book Review
“Acker unwinds a complex intergenerational story of immigration, culture, family, partnership, and ethics in her skillful debut. Fans of Jhumpa Lahiri or Yaa Gyasi will want to check out Acker’s elegant saga.” — Publishers Weekly
“Acker’s debut is a carefully drawn portrait of a family constrained by choices... a rare but honest look at the way parents, children, and spouses talk to one another but don’t always hear what’s being said. A thoughtful, deeply researched debut.” — Kirkus Reviews
“The Limits of The World is such a smart, compassionate and elegant novel, so deeply invested in morality and the subtleties of families, cultures, and continents, that it feels delicious and exciting to recall that this is Jennifer Acker’s debut.” — Lauren Groff, author of Florida
“The Limits of the World is the most masterful debut novel I have read in years. In beautiful, understated prose, it shows the complicated ways in which family splits and regathers. In this wise, loving book I saw my mother’s family, exiled from Nairobi; I saw me.” — Suketu Mehta, author of Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found
“Evocative and profound... an intimate novel about family that is, at the same time, an illumination of miscommunication across cultures, an exploration of the legacy of migration in both Africa and the US, and a philosophical rumination on ethical behaviors. Jennifer Acker’s is a wise and honest literary voice.” — Claire Messud, author of The Burning Girl
“The Limits of the World is a riveting and nuanced study of how we belong—to a lover, a family, a country. The prose is beautiful, the story is refreshingly original, and the characters are achingly human. The novel announces Acker as a writer of deep feeling and intelligence, a formidable writer whose talent is limitless.” — Bret Anthony Johnston, author of Remember Me Like This
“The world of the 21st century is transnational, connected, and small, and the only remaining borders we have left are of our own design. From the Harvard Halls of Boston to the grassy plains of Nairobi, this unabashedly intelligent and beautiful book of generational conflict, culture clashes, and immigrant assimilation reminds us the limits of this world depend entirely on the sizes our hearts, our capacity to love ourselves and each other.” — Scott Cheshire, author of High as the Horses’ Bridles
“The Limits of the World travels vast distances, not only from India to Kenya to the United States, but also from grandfather to mother to son. A gorgeously written, bravely honest novel about moral philosophy and love: the difficult kind, the beautiful kind, and every other kind in between.” — Katherine Hill, author of The Violet Hour
Notă biografică
Jennifer Acker is founder and editor in chief of The Common. Her short stories, essays, translations, and reviews have appeared in the Washington Post, Literary Hub, n+1, Guernica, The Yale Review, and Ploughshares, among other places. Acker has an MFA from the Bennington Writing Seminars and teaches writing and editing at Amherst College, where she directs the Literary Publishing Internship and organizes LitFest. She lives in western Massachusetts with her husband. The Limits of the World is her debut novel.