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Sto caricando le informazioni... L'insopportabile Bassington e altri racconti (1912)di Saki
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Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. I discovered Saki, (Hector Hugh Munro) when I read one of his short stories in a Folio collection of Christmas Ghost Stories. I thoroughly enjoyed it, so when I saw this short novel at a used book store I snapped it up, where it languished with all my other 'improving' books on my TBR. Digression: The pandemic and this stupid broken leg have been a pain in the ass in most ways, but together they've wrought great improvements on the size of my TBR. There are noticeable spaces on the shelves! The Unbearable Bassington - I don't know what to say about it. Imagine an Austen novel with no redeeming or sympathetic characters. None. at. all. Imagine her scathing wit let loose on such a cast of worthless characters. The result is the pure misanthropic comedy Saki released here. Either Saki was having a bad day when he wrote this, or he truly found nothing redeeming in humanity, but either way this is the most mercenary glimpse of early 20th century London society I've ever read, and while it starts out as a comedy, and remains so through most of the book (a black comedy, to be sure) the ending is thoroughly ... not tragic, because tragedy implies a level of sympathy or empathy and there's none of that to be found between these covers, but not at all happy. In fact the author's note at the beginning sums it up best: This story has no moral. If it points out an evil at any rate it suggests no remedy. Exactly so. But oh, the writing is brilliant. Even though I found myself uncomfortable with the complete and utter lack of any redeeming quality, I couldn't stop reading. I'm not sure I could recommend this book unless someone was in the mood for a misanthropic read, but I do recommend giving Saki a try one way or there other. England, London, ca 1910 Francesca Bassington på ca 40 bor i et hus, som hun kun kan beholde, sålænge hendes niece Emmeline Chetrof er ugift. Hendes søn, Comus, som hendes afdøde mand bestemte navnet på, er på kostskole i Thaleby. Francesca går meget op i ting og penge. Hun har tre planer for at holde på huset. Første mulighed er at få Comus og Emmeline smedet sammen. Anden mulighed er at få Comus landet i et godt og velbetalt job og tredje mulighed er at få ham til at gifte en rig arving, så han kommer til penge. Comus har et veludviklet talent for at være på tværs, så han spolerer ret hurtigt alle tre planer. Francescas yndlingsejendel er et stort maleri af Van der Meulen forestillende en stor slagscene. ??? Joan Aiken har skrevet et nydeligt forord, hvor hele handlingen afsløres.
Appartiene alle Collane EditorialiFlorin Books (91) Elenchi di rilievo
Classic Literature.
Fiction.
HTML: Edwardian satirist Hector Hugh Munro produced a prodigious body of fiction, plays, and other writing under the pen name Saki. The novella The Unbearable Bassington follows the travails of Comus Bassington, a playboy and ne'er-do-well who is ultimately sent away to the British Colonies by his long-suffering family. .Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)823.912Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1901-1945Classificazione LCVotoMedia:
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himself contributes an introduction to the edition I read, and his analysis of Saki’s strengths and limitations is fitting and may colour one’s reading. (Or one may sense pre-echoes of the risible extras showing up two decades later in Waugh’s comic world: Saki’s Ada Spelvexit, for example, surely sounds like a Maltravers associate?) As that introduction recognises, there are stylistic gems on every page of “Bassington”. Saki cannot resist a wry and pithy paradox (the “intensely English look… one seldom sees out of Normandy” (p82), the outdoor scene “alive with…alert stagnation” (p87))
and is not above manoeuvring the plot or description to work in one of his bon mots (“The poor have us always with them” (p77)) or Wilde-like epigrams (“The art… of knowing exactly where to stop and going a bit further”(p32)). But this sparkling style and wit also mean the work lacks emotion. It’s cheerfully amoral, it leans towards the heartless and hollow; the dialogue can be stiff and staged. And with such a satirical approach, one challenge is how to avoid merely sneering, being nasty? I’m not sure if there is any good answer to that, but certainly this book lacks one. In that light, this reader preferred getting through the book in small doses. Given also that Saki here is sometimes inclined to dabble rather than to deepen (in chapter 9, halfway through, he is still introducing new character stock), one may see the justification in his eventual focus on short stories rather than novels like “Bassington.” He is of course, and again Waugh’s introduction has primed us here, the acknowledged master of that shorter form. ( )