Immagine dell'autore.

Peter Stephan Jungk

Autore di The Perfect American

17+ opere 198 membri 5 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Opere di Peter Stephan Jungk

Opere correlate

Erzähler des S. Fischer Verlages 1886-1978 (2018) — Autore — 8 copie
Philip Glass: The Perfect American — Original story — 3 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Utenti

Recensioni

I'm a big Disney fan so I read this book I found years ago. It's a novel about this unhinged man who was fired by Disney years before and now stalks him to make a bizarre testament in person. I've since learned that this book was made into an opera. Not a flattering fictional account of Disney. No person is perfect but this is just character assassination by innuendo. Several small things in the book made it easy to dislike Jungk. He said that Walt's personal recreated office was midway down Main Street at Disneyland. Everyone knows it's right about the fire station next to the train depot. The author had obviously never been to Disneyland. He also said that in Disney's last days morphine was administered to him. Jungk describes morphine as poison, which it is not. The Disney Family now has a museum in San Francisco which tells the full story about everything covered in the book with many actual items from Disney's estate. Spend your valuable time there and ignore this book.… (altro)
 
Segnalato
sacredheart25 | 1 altra recensione | Jul 22, 2017 |
El narrador tiene una obsesión: el hombre que le contató y luego le despidió: Walt Disney. El libro cuenta masmas sobre Disney y la megalomanía que una pila de tomos biográficos.
 
Segnalato
pedrolopez | 1 altra recensione | Apr 27, 2013 |
Crossing the Hudson, written by Peter Stephan Jungk and admirably translated from the German by David Dollenmayer, is a philosophical novel exploring the relationship between parents and their children. On his way to join his wife and two children at their vacation home on Lake Gilead just outside of New York City, Gustav Rubin is delayed when his international flight makes an unscheduled overnight stop in Iceland for engine trouble. Exhausted and frustrated, he finally arrives at John F. Kennedy International Airport to reunite with his mother, who lives in an apartment on Central Park West and is joining Gustav’s family at the lake. The pair heads towards Lake Gilead in a rental car, only to be trapped for hours in a monumental traffic jam on the Tappan Zee Bridge, which crosses the Hudson River at one of its widest points.

What follows is a dreamy meditation about the lasting effect of Gustav's parents on his sensitive and impressionable personality. The bridge gives Gustav “the feeling of being transported into a floating, dreamlike state.” As if in a dream, Gustav scrolls through memories of his recently deceased father Ludwig, and he and his mother share a strange hallucination (or is it real?) demonstrating Ludwig's continuing power over his family. Gustav recognizes that, over the course of his adult life, “the foundation of his existence remained Father and Mother.” Gustav’s vital father has sapped his self-assurance and his energy:
“Father’s fantastic, everlasting capacity for hope, his unbearable kindness, completely robbed his son of confidence. Ludwig’s immense productivity often rendered Gustav powerless. The more enterprising the father, the quieter and more worn out the son.”

Gustav's vapidity and his mother's overbearing personality were constant annoyances, as was the plot contrivance of a seemingly endless traffic jam. Fortunately, a healthy amount of humor makes the hours spent on the bridge bearable. Crossing the Hudson is an interesting, if not altogether pleasant, examination of the power of parents over their children.

This review also appears on my blog Literary License.
… (altro)
½
 
Segnalato
gwendolyndawson | 1 altra recensione | Aug 23, 2009 |

Premi e riconoscimenti

Potrebbero anche piacerti

Autori correlati

Statistiche

Opere
17
Opere correlate
3
Utenti
198
Popolarità
#110,929
Voto
½ 3.6
Recensioni
5
ISBN
29
Lingue
4

Grafici & Tabelle