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Man in the Dark | 
agrandir | Auteur: Paul Auster Créateur: Paul Auster Éditeur: Henry Holt & Company
Prix de liste: EUR 19,05 Acheter Neuf: EUR 9,68 Vous épargnez: EUR 9,37 (49%)
Neuf (29) D'occasion (3) de EUR 9,68
Évaluation moyenne des clients: 1 commentaires Classement parmi les ventes: 7975
Média: Relie Pages: 192 Poids (kg): 0.7 Dimension (cm): 8.4 x 5.8 x 0.8
ISBN: 0805088393 Code Décimal Dewey: 813.54 EAN: 9780805088397 ASIN: 0805088393
Date de publication: Août 2008 Disponibilité: Expedition sous 1 a 2 jours ouvres Expédition: Livraison internationale disponible Condition: Expedie des Etats-Unis! Durees de livraison sont 10-14 jours. Produits neufs! A ce moment, nous offrons le service clientele en anglais. Nous vendons en ligne depuis 1995 et avons servis plus de 4 millions de clients. Assure-vous de votre achat! Code: B20081201022341T
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LONELINESS TAKES MANY FORMS Septembre 12, 2008 Gail Cooke (TX, USA) 3 sur 3 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile
Loneliness takes many forms. For some it is a feeling of intense isolation even in a crowd or a room full of friends. If it is dark, nighttime, one may feel almost disabled by desolation. You truly are alone save for your thoughts, memories, unanswered questions that prevent sleep and only summon remorse. That is the condition in which August Brill finds himself in Paul Auster's brilliantly challenging latest novel "Man In The Dark." At 72 years of age Brill finds himself in his daughter's Vermont home where he is trying to recover from an automobile accident. Sleep eludes him as he recalls past tragedies - the death of his wife, the desertion of his daughter's husband, the death in Iraq of Titus, his granddaughter's fiance. A retired book critic Brill has a fertile imagination, and sees in his mind's eye quite a different America, and it is a haunting scene - a place where there has not been a terrorist attack, our country is not at war save for within itself when New York and 16 other states secede from the Union. He flagellates himself for these thoughts, saying, "Why am I doing this? Why do I persist in traveling down these old, tired paths; why this compulsion to pick at old wounds and make myself bleed again?" Auster, as is his wont, challenges us to consider the world in which we live. He underscores the atrocities of war by relating the horrible death of Titus that is posted on the Internet and seen by Brill and his granddaughter. Brilliant, shocking? Yes. It is also unforgettable, undeniably the work of one of the most creative minds of our generation. - Gail Cooke
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