Picture of author.

Vassilis Vassilikos (1934–2023)

Autor(a) de Z

69 Works 552 Membros 8 Críticas

About the Author

Image credit: photo by E Moreau, found at web1.radio-france.fr

Obras por Vassilis Vassilikos

Z (1966) 352 exemplares
The Photographs (1964) 29 exemplares
And Dreams Are Dreams (1996) 19 exemplares
De plant ; De put ; De engel (1964) 14 exemplares
k / κ (1992) 11 exemplares
The Monarch (1976) 10 exemplares
The Harpoon Gun (1973) 8 exemplares
To Teleutaio Antio (1994) 4 exemplares
El monarca (1977) 3 exemplares
Hors les Murs (1973) 3 exemplares
Una storia d'amore (1999) 2 exemplares
L'Eau de Kos (1980) 2 exemplares
Ölümsüz (2016) 2 exemplares
Ο ιατροδικαστής (1989) 2 exemplares
To Nero 1 exemplar
Alfatride 1 exemplar
Maria (1993) 1 exemplar
En ptēsei (2001) 1 exemplar
Sogni diurni (1991) 1 exemplar
Poesie dall'esilio (2003) 1 exemplar
Il greco errante 1 exemplar
El fusil-arpón (1975) 1 exemplar
La plante (1990) 1 exemplar
Les prix des sentiments (1997) 1 exemplar
Foco d'amor 1 exemplar
Ve dr (2003) 1 exemplar
Fotografierne 1 exemplar
L'helicoptere (1991) 1 exemplar
Como Ser Anjo 1 exemplar
La Grèce 1 exemplar

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Membros

Críticas

164/27-Δύσκολο και απόλυτα εξειδικευμένο βιβλίο. Δε βοηθάει και η καθαρεύουσα. Υπερβολικά λογοτεχνικός ο τρόπος που ο συγγραφέας αφηγείται την ιστορία. Συνεχείς δακρύβρεχτες επαναλήψεις. Θα το προτιμούσα πιο σαφές και ιστορικό.
 
Assinalado
Bella_Baxter | 2 outras críticas | Jul 19, 2022 |
133/52-Στιγμιότυπα από τη πορεία μιας σχέσης . Από τη πρώτη γνωριμία ως τη τραγική απώλεια. Ο θρήνος του αποχωρισμού . Η καθημερινότητα χωρίς τον άλλον.
 
Assinalado
Bella_Baxter | Jul 12, 2022 |
Known for his landmark 1967 novel Z, Vassilis Vassilikos is one of Greece’s foremost literary talents. The Few Things I Know About Glafkos Thrassakis functions on many different levels. It is a meditation on the act of research and writing; it is an autobiography written about someone else; it creates a person out of the literary ether from someone who is real. Ostensibly, the book covers the travails of the narrator trying to find out the truth about the fictional writer Glafkos Thrassakis. Thrassakis is supposed to have been killed at the hands of New Guinea cannibals, but this story quickly falls apart. After discovering new manuscripts, he gains different picture of his elusive prey, but never fully captures him.

Thrassakis, we find out, is really a pseudonym for Lazarus Laziridis, a political dissident, and here’s where the dance between distance and intimacy start. Each layer is really just another façade for the author, but he keeps the reader caring about all three people. While the novel tends towards the Borgesian with its stories within stories, the feeling is delightfully European. There are times when Vassilikos becomes very cheeky and knows full well what he’s doing, and there are other times when his poetry cannot contain itself and creates remarkable passages, but overall, this book is both bewildering and satisfying.
… (mais)
½
1 vote
Assinalado
NielsenGW | 2 outras críticas | Apr 22, 2014 |
Few who read in English will have come across Vassilis Vassilikos unless they have seen the Costa Gavros movie Z and that is a shame because his is an important voice and because he is an important talent. His work is taught in Greek schools and he is often portrayed as the voice of exile.

In that respect The Few Things I Know About Glafkos Thrassakis (hereafter referred to as (TFTIKAGT) adds to the evidence. While TFTIKAGT is ostensibly the story of a biographer attempting to write about a famous writer exiled during the times of the Greek junta and his travels and travails TFTIKAGT is fundamentally about the nature of writing itself. As the narrator follows his subject, or should that be prey, trying to piece together his life and work and thoughts he finds himself mirroring said Glafkos Thrassakos more and more closely despite himself. In becoming Thrassakos's biographer the narrator himself becomes a temporary exile and experiences the pain and freedom that exile grants.

Glafkos Thrassakis, we soon learn, is a pseudonym, and a slightly self deprecating one at that, for the true subject of the biography whose given name is actually Lazarus Laziridis. Names and identities are important keys in Vassilikos's work and the adoption of a pseudonym indicates the sense of authorial exile that Thrassakis has chosen over and above his political one.

The narrator, himself a writer remember, presents a series of episodes form Lazaridis's life and Thrassakos's work in a wonderfully evocative tapestry within which we often lose track of who is who. We even begin to wonder whether all of the main characters are not just facets of the same writer and this is where Vassilikos ups the ante with the externals of his plot turning what could and might have been a biographical procedural into a thriller and a mystery and picks up the narrativer pace. At the very same time he also investigates the nature of the writer and the process of writing.

There is a majesty to Vassilikos's text both in its construction and its language that elevates it to a position among important 20th century European writing. That it manages along the way to examine a difficult period in European history is a stunning achievement.

I am so very glad that Karen Emmerich has translated this important work with the balance of wit and insight that Vassilikos must have laboured so hard to invest it with.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
papalaz | 2 outras críticas | Mar 3, 2014 |

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Karen Emmerich Translator

Estatísticas

Obras
69
Membros
552
Popularidade
#45,212
Avaliação
3.1
Críticas
8
ISBN
84
Línguas
13

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