Fai clic su di un'immagine per andare a Google Ricerca Libri.
Sto caricando le informazioni... Speedboat (NYRB Classics) (originale 1976; edizione 2013)di Renata Adler (Autore), Guy Trebay (Postfazione)
Informazioni sull'operaFuoribordo di Renata Adler (1976)
Sto caricando le informazioni...
Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. comes off to me like the wine-drunk divorcee aunt of Reena Spaulings with all implications it carries - old money, haughty, vain, mildly reactionary, genuinely entertaining - in a way that i cant get too mad at because of how perfectly these qualities suit the character, but am also not super eager to spend additional time with. i guess. This book is fabulous! I was not expecting to love it as much as I did—I had no expectations, in fact, knowing nothing about it going in—and I found it utterly fabulous! The prose is so sharp and intriguing, leading one into the most curious inferences, most curious avenues of thought. It characterizes an era without the painstaking task of depicting that era—without, as Anne Carson says, “the boredom of a story.” It is dazzling, funny and educational; it reminded me of just how fun reading can be. I wish I could read it for the first time again. nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
Premi e riconoscimentiMenzioniElenchi di rilievo
"It has been more than thirty-five years since Renata Adler's Speedboat, Winner of the Ernest Hemingway Award for Best First Novel, charged through the literary establishment, blasting genre walls and pointing the way for a newly liberated way of writing. This unclassifiable work is simultaneously novel, memoir, commonplace book, confession, and critique. It is the story of every man and woman cursed with too much consciousness and too little comprehension, and it is the story of Jen Fein, a journalist negotiating the fraught landscape of contemporary urban America. Her voice is searching, cuttingly perceptive, and darkly funny as she breaks narrative convention to send dispatches back from the world as she finds it"-- Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
Discussioni correntiNessunoCopertine popolari
Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Classificazione LCVotoMedia:
Sei tu?Diventa un autore di LibraryThing. |
Less a story than an image of a time presented experimentally through usually short (3 line - one page) anecdotes. The reader learns little about any character; the goal of the novel instead is for the reader to gain an understanding of the fractured, uncertain but materially well-off world the characters inhabit. "Malaise" is a cliched term for the period of the late 1970s before Reagan appeared to sweep all that away, but it would apply here, in a more existential sense than an economic one.
Adler is sometimes hilariously biting about the strata of society she is writing about, in a slightly meaty passage: or in a one-liner: In the end, despite the occasional amusements, I am unsatisfied. Fiction remains for me about telling stories and creating character, and I remain unconvinced by the plotless novel. ( )