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Sto caricando le informazioni... At the Hairdresser'sdi Anita Brookner
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Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. Good grief, I have a real knack for choosing stories that don't help my current spirits. In this evocative but unremittingly sad story, we meet eighty-year-old Beth, who lives in defiant independent in a basement flat near Victoria. Her solitary state is partly a matter of choice: she asserts, with a prickle, 'I am not lonely except in company.' And yet there's a smack of wishful thinking behind those words. With a broken marriage behind her, without children and with no close friends or neighbours, Beth passes her days with a strict schedule of books and visits to the local hairdresser's, where she finds a measure of company and liveliness. But one morning she wakes having had a dream of her two girlhood friends, which causes her to revisit her past and her present situation. When Beth is caught in the rain at the hairdresser's, one of the girls introduces her to Chris, who runs a car service for elderly ladies. His brightness, youth and enthusiasm bewitch Beth, who discovers that her heart hasn't yet entirely withered away. This cheerful young man becomes an answer to the yawning void in her life. But do we run the risk of building castles in the air around charming people who appear suddenly in our lives? Can such idealism be sustained? For all her assertions of satisfaction, Beth's loneliness is so vividly present that it's almost another character, darkly clawing at the corners of the page, and when events cast a new light on her new friend Chris, she is finally nudged into wondering whether it's time to make a stand and change her life. Deeply moving as a picture of isolated old age, tragic, and enough to make one start casting worried glances in the mirror. And yet, the story is so affecting precisely because Brookner is so clever, insightful and articulate. nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
Penguin Specials are designed to fill a gap. Written to be read over a long commute or a short journey, they are original and exclusively in digital form. This is a poignant novella from Anita Brookner. 'I rather hope I shall die at the hairdresser's, for they are bound to know what to do. At least that is what I tell myself.' Solitude is a familiar burden for Elizabeth Warner. She lives in a basement flat near Victoria and leaves the house only to go shopping and to have her hair done - until a chance encounter at the hairdresser's brings unexpected change. At the Hairdresser's is a deeply moving, unflinchingly observed story about trust and betrayal by one of the greatest writers of contemporary fiction. Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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It feels to me that Brookner put her love of writing, her talent, and all the topics she addressed over and over again in her novels and compressed them into this short story. Her compassion for her main protagonist, the typical lonely Brookner woman which she herself probably was too, shines through in every sentence she dedicates to her, who is in this story an 80 years old woman. The protagonist sheds all her bitterness, her frustration and unhappiness and Brookner pulls her one more time into the spotlight which is this time not dim and grey, but golden.
And finally! The Brookner woman finds redemption and finds it in herself to step out of her discomfort, propelled forward by the most unlikely character you would have expected.
Beautiful and cathartic, this final gift from Anita Brookner to her readers and I feel, to herself.