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Sto caricando le informazioni... The Lone Woman (1996)di Bernardo Atxaga
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Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. Prescindible. No he conseguido entrar en la historia en ningún momento. Si bien la idea podría tocar muchos matices, se queda en nada. ( ) Die ETA-Terroristin Irene hat mit der baskischen Untergrundorganisation gebrochen und wird nach vier Jahren aus der Haft entlassen. Von Barcelona aus tritt sie in einem Fernbus die Heimreise nach Bilbao an. Atxaga beschreibt Irenes Heimreise mit vielen Reflexionen und Reminiszenzen. "Fenster zum Himmel" ist trotz des Hintergrunds des baskischen Terrors ein unpolitisches Buch, dessen Hauptmotiv die Suche nach persönlicher Freiheit ist. In diesem Zusammenhang kreisen die Situationen um ein Gedicht des baskischen Literaten Joseba Sarrionandia: "Der Geist dessen, der gefangen war, stets kehrt er in Gefangenschaft zurück..." und sohin um die Frage, ob nach dem Gefängnisaufenthalt überhaupt noch ein normales freies Leben möglich ist. Atxagas gelingt es dieser Kernfrage verblüffend unspektakulär aber dafür umso stimmiger auf den Grund zu gehen. Tras cuatro años de cárcel, Irene decide separarse de la organización armada a la que pertenece. Ahora es una mujer de treinta y siete años que, a pesar del miedo y los recuerdos, necesita ampliar los pasos de su antigua celda en el suelo de su ciudad, y no sabe cómo empezar a hacerlo. En el trayecto de un viaje en autobús lleno de incidentes y pensamientos, Bernardo Atxaga simplifica la belleza de las palabras para presentarnos el rostro de alguien que ha estado en la cárcel, ha sufrido por amor, y que necesita enfrentarse a su soledad y a su desconfianza para construirse de nuevo a sí mismo. nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
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"After four years in a Barcelona jail, the woman was free to go home, back to the Basque country, to Bilbao. But she had nothing to go back to - her lover was dead, her husband had divorced her, her family had disowned her, she had no children. Back to nursing? She was burnt out. Back to her comrades in the Organization? No, they thought she had betrayed them. All that she carried with her was a suitcase with a few treasured books, a pack or two of smokes, and memories. But no plans: the horizon was empty, featureless. On the coach carrying her back to Bilbao she kept herself to herself, with only a few words to the large lady in the next seat, a couple of nuns, and two men, a smooth talker in a red tie and a tough who showed a little too much interest in her. It was as though she had no need to hide from them that she was fresh out of prison, an amnestied terrorist, her reputation compromised."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)863.64Literature Spanish and Portuguese Spanish fiction 20th Century 1945-2000Classificazione LCVotoMedia:
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