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A carregar... Hopeful monsters (original 1990; edição 1991)por Nicholas Mosley
Informação Sobre a ObraHopeful Monsters por Nicholas Mosley (1990)
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Adira ao LibraryThing para descobrir se irá gostar deste livro. Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. A fascinating novel of ideas, depicting the early lives of two characters, Max and Eleanor, in an almost epistolatory style, with each of them narrating alternate chapters, addressing the other as "you." The story takes place in Europe in the 1930s, a time of unrest (Nazi Germany, the development of the atomic bomb, the Spanish Civil War). Max and Eleanor make their way as best they can, exploring ideas and nurturing their love. The ideas are the main focus of the novel and it is through their ideas that the characters are built up and explored. This is not a novel for someone looking for a love story. I suspect that in order to like this novel, one must like ideas as much as one likes characters. Several times I put the book down to contemplate the ideas the book explores, not because it was difficult to understand, but because the ideas were so fascinating I wanted to give them room to breathe. First book I finished this year, and it really has taken me two years or so to get through it. There's nothing wrong with the book - it's amazing and I highly recommend it - it just requires a certain commitment and dedication on the reader's part. It isn't that it's a hard read. Maybe a bit like reading philosophy. Well, it is, I suppose. This book needs the right kind of readers, though, if that makes sense, so not everyone should expect to like it. At times, it's as if someone had an unbound textbook and an unbound novel and dropped them on the floor, not bothering to sort them after, and just publishing the juxtaposition together. And yet the writing somehow carries it all. I have tried, and tried, and tried, and tried to read and like this book. I can't; I hate it. I like the premise - organisms born a bit before their time which will succeed or fail, but don't, as they live, know whether they are monsters. I can't get by the artificial style. My father said '----' My mother said '----' I thought - ----- or even worse, I said '---' I thought - ---- I guess I'll try again some day, but not this one. sem críticas | adicionar uma crítica
Pertence a SériePrémios
This Whitbread Book of The Year Award winner for 1990 is the final novel of the Catastrophe Practice series. Set in the 1920s and 30s it tells the story of two young radicals, Max and Eleanor, who meet, love, separate and come together again during the maelstrom of the Spanish Civil War. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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Google Books — A carregar... GénerosSistema Decimal de Melvil (DDC)823.914Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1945-1999Classificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos EUA (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:
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But the uniqueness of this book is that Mosley illustrates all these perspectives by means of his concrete characters and what they experience or do: they constantly function in one of the above-mentioned scientific debates (for example, as particles that attract or repel each other, or who function as matter or wave according to the observer's point of view) and he constantly lets those characters, while they say or do certain things at the same time think of the underlying scientific-philosophical issues in themselves; and on top of that, Mosley again and again underlines the ethical implications of these ideas and actions. That gives a certain artificial character to the 'dramatis personae' (they literally seem to be actors who create their role and also undergo him at the same time). It takes quite some patience and attention to follow all this, and it makes the reading of this book utterly intriguing and difficult at the same time. Hence the very different reviews by the readers of this book, from wildly enthusiastic to absolutely horrified, and hardly anything in between. In the unlikely hope of being original, I opt for the ambiguous middle-opinion: this book is an incredible achievement of Mosley, but it is not a successful piece of fiction. ( )