Apostoloff
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- 99,00 Kč
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- 99,00 Kč
Publisher Description
Il nuovo romanzo di Sibylle Lewitscharoff è una storia raccontata dal sedile posteriore, il pungente, oscuro ed esilarante conto in sospeso di una figlia con il padre e il suo paese. Coloro che si avvicineranno alla scrittura di Sibylle Lewitscharoff troveranno un po' di Eichendorff, un po' di Robert Walser e di Peter Handke, e un po' di annoiata sfacciataggine e un tremendo desiderio di esprimersi, abbondante raffinatezza e sconcertante precisione, l'inclinazione a disdegnare l'assurdo in favore di un cosmopolita buonsenso che come è a proprio agio nei diversi ambienti così è difficile da dissuadere dalla convinzione che la vita è piena di bellezza.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Greeted with howls of protest when it was published in 2009 (while also earning the Leipzig Book Fair Prize that same year), German novelist and playwright Lewitscharoff's English-language debut digs into the histories of a troubled family and a shattered nation and comes up with nothing but outrage and contempt. An unnamed narrator who misses nothing and hates everything and her infinitely more sociable sister are being escorted through Bulgaria by Rumen Apostoloff, an old family acquaintance, on the return trip home to Berlin from their father's burial. As they travel, Rumen bravely attempts to share with these women some of the sights of his homeland while regaling them with stories of local history, most of them regrettably violent and grim. As they roll along, Lewitscharoff's narrator contemplates her father's suicide, her mother's unhappiness, and her sister's unsinkable attitude, while fiendishly riffing on Bulgaria's dreary landscapes, horrid food, and mafia-controlled culture. Lewitscharoff's caustic prose can be occasionally overbearing but it's her sharp-eyed, unsentimental, and even lyrical musings that make this novel a spiky, pungent pleasure.