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Paula Fox (1923–2017)

Autor(a) de The Slave Dancer

41+ Works 7,843 Membros 139 Críticas 8 Favorited

About the Author

Paula Fox was born in Manhattan, New York on April 22, 1923. She briefly studied piano at the Juilliard School and spent 3 years at Columbia University but didn't graduate. Before becoming a writer, she worked as a salesgirl, a model, a worker in a rivet-sorting shop, a lathe operator at Bethlehem mostrar mais Steel, and a teacher of troubled children. She wrote books for children and adults. Her children's books included Maurice's Room, Traces, Blowfish Live in the Sea, One-Eyed Cat, and The Eagle Kite. She received the Newbery Medal for The Slave Dancer in 1974 and the Hans Christian Andersen Award for her body of children's work in 1978. Her books for adults include Poor George, The Widow's Children, A Servant's Tale, and The God of Nightmares. Desperate Characters was adapted into a film starring Shirley MacLaine and Kenneth Mars. She also wrote two memoirs entitled Borrowed Finery and The Coldest Winter: A Stringer in Liberated Europe. She died on March 1, 2017 at the age of 93. (Bowker Author Biography) mostrar menos

Obras por Paula Fox

The Slave Dancer (1973) 2,469 exemplares
One-Eyed Cat (1984) 1,344 exemplares
Desperate Characters (1970) 935 exemplares
Monkey Island (1991) 424 exemplares
Borrowed Finery (2001) 394 exemplares
A Likely Place (1967) 220 exemplares
The Village by the Sea (1988) 208 exemplares
The Widow's Children (1976) 154 exemplares
A Servant's Tale (1984) 135 exemplares
Radiance Descending (1997) 133 exemplares
Western Wind (1891) 129 exemplares
The Moonlight Man (1986) 119 exemplares
Poor George: A Novel (1967) 99 exemplares
Maurice's Room (1966) 95 exemplares

Associated Works

The Best American Short Stories 2004 (2004) — Contribuidor — 556 exemplares
The Top Ten: Writers Pick Their Favorite Books (1997) — Contribuidor — 301 exemplares
Granta 84: Over There: How America Sees the World (2004) — Contribuidor — 228 exemplares
The Antiquaries Journal 99 (2019) — Contribuidor — 1 exemplar

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Membros

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Críticas

Ron DeSantis and those who are afraid to have white children traumatized by the slave trade will try to go back in time and and ban this, but it is a chilling tale deserving of its Newbery Medal awarded in 1974. While playing his fife in New Orleans in the 1840's, an impoverished thirteen year old boy, Jessie, is kidnapped and brought aboard an American slave ship, The Moonlight, and forced to play music to keep the captured African men, women, and children from Benin in motion. Most of the sailors hate their lives and the officers aboard the ship, and when all hands but Jessie and Ras, an African boy his age, drown in a shipwreck, the reader will feel little remorse. The book is based upon actual historical documents and is probably best suited for 6th graders and up, and should be incorporated into a school lesson.… (mais)
 
Assinalado
froxgirl | 37 outras críticas | Apr 19, 2023 |
"...she was still smiling as the cat reared up on its hind legs, even as at struck at her with extended claws, smiling right up to that second when it sunk its teeth into the back of her left hand and hung from her flesh so that she nearly fell forward, stunned and horrified...."

Otto and Sophie Bentwood live in a gentrifying Brooklyn neighborhood. Otto is in the process of dissolving his longtime law partnership with Charlie Russell. Cracks are beginning to show in Otto and Sophie's marriage, and outside, all around are signs that civil society is falling apart.

One evening after dinner, Sophie gives a saucer of milk to a stray cat on their back porch. As she bends down to pet the cat, it viciously bites her. Over the next three days she ponders, Will she get rabies and die? or Will nothing happen? Sophies ambivalence was said, by Jonathan Franzen in the forward to the edition I read, to resemble Hamlet, a "morbidly self-conscious character who receives a disturbing and ambiguous message, undergoes torments while trying to decide what the message means...." Over the three days as Sophie tries to decide what to do, then waits test results, the book builds enormous suspense. I found the writing to be exquisite, and I underlined many phrases. (I will probably put a few at the end of this review). I will definitely be searching for more to read by Paula Fox

4 1/2 stars

Incidentally David Foster Wallace called this book "A towering landmark of postwar Realism." And Jonathan Franzen says this book and Fox are better than her contemporaries Updike, Roth, and Bellow.

First line: "Mr. and Mrs. Otto Bentwood drew out their chairs simultaneously."

Last lines: "The voice from the telephone went on and on like gas leaking from a pipe. Sophie and Otto had ceased to listen. Her arms fell away from his shoulders as they both turned slowly to the wall, turned until they could both see the ink running down to the floor in black lines...."

Here are a few more quotes:

"What the owners on the street lusted after was recognition of their superior comprehension of what counted in this world, and their strategy for getting it combined restraint and direction."

"All around them were official buildings, with the peculiarly threatening character. of large carnivorous animals momentarily asleep."

Otto and Charlie were like "smiling people in a swimming pool, kicking each other under water."

"She had only recently realized that one was old for a very ong time."
… (mais)
½
1 vote
Assinalado
arubabookwoman | 38 outras críticas | Dec 10, 2022 |
This was a tough read. I think it would be a real challenge for children. Very gritty and real world. A good education. I thought the writing was excellent. I will look for others by this author.
 
Assinalado
njcur | 37 outras críticas | Jul 29, 2022 |
Pretty great story of a modern (circa 1970) NYC marriage, bookended by a feral cat bit and whether or not the wife has rabies. In the course of the short book, we have a window, mostly into the wife, her affair, her ennui, her discomfort with her unhappy husband. Wondering if there is any more- but both wife and husband are so empty ... just trying to go on and this is so well portrayed. The lack of connection between them is finally broken with the husband's outrage at his former law partner (yelling into the phone and the world) and he sees an ink bottle and throws it violently against the wall. The wife flung her arms around him so tightly that for a moment he could not move. Pretty beautiful. I heard about this because of the tv show called You.… (mais)
1 vote
Assinalado
apende | 38 outras críticas | Jul 12, 2022 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
41
Also by
6
Membros
7,843
Popularidade
#3,103
Avaliação
½ 3.6
Críticas
139
ISBN
421
Línguas
11
Marcado como favorito
8

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