



Nutshell
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4,6 • 7 Bewertungen
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- 8,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
**Sunday Times Number One Bestseller**
A classic tale of murder and deceit from one of the world's best storytellers - 'a masterpiece' The Times
Trudy has betrayed her husband, John. She's still in the marital home - a dilapidated, priceless London townhouse - but not with John. Instead, she's with his brother, the profoundly banal Claude, and the two of them have a plan. But there is a witness to their plot: the inquisitive, nine-month-old resident of Trudy's womb.
'An astonishing act of literary ventriloquism unlike any in recent literature. A bravura performance, it is the finest recent work from a true master...' Daily Telegraph
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
McEwan's latest novel is short, smart, and narrated by an unborn baby. The narrator describes himself upside down in his mother's womb, arms crossed, doing slow motion somersaults, almost full-term, wondering about the future. His mother listens to the radio, audiobooks, and podcasts, so just from listening he has acquired knowledge of current events, music, literature, and history. From experience, he's formed opinions about wine and human behavior. What he's learned of the world has him using his umbilical cord as worry beads, but his greatest concern comes from overhearing his mother and her lover plotting to kill his father. The mother, Trudy, is separated from John, the father. John is overweight, suffers from psoriasis, and, perhaps most annoying for Trudy, loves to recite poetry. Trudy's lover, Claude, is a libidinous real estate developer who covets both John's wife and their highly marketable London home. Claude also happens to be John's brother. Echoes of Hamlet resound in the plans for fratricide, a ghost, and the baby's contemplation of shuffling off his mortal coil. The murder plot structures the novel as a crime caper, McEwan-style that is, laced with linguistic legerdemain, cultural references, and insights into human ingenuity and pettiness. Packed with humor and tinged with suspense, this gem resembles a sonnet the narrator recalls hearing his father recite: brief, dense, bitter, suggestive of unrequited and unmanageable longing, surprising, and surprisingly affecting. 150,000-copy announced first printing.
Kundenrezensionen
Äußerst ungewöhnliche Perspektive, tolle Geschichte
Erzählt aus der Perspektive eines Fötus, wunderbare und einfallsreiche Sprache, ein ungewöhnlicher Plot. Nach dem für mich eher langweiligen „On Chesil Beach“ und „Sweet Tooth“ mal wieder ein Roman von Ian McEwan, der mich gefesselt hat.
Trudy und Claude leben in der Villa von Claudes Bruder und Trudys Mann. Trudy ist schwanger mit dem Kind ihres Mannes, den sie aus der Villa geworfen hat. Dieses Kind beobachtet durch den Bauch seiner Mutter vieles, hört die Podcasts, die sie hört, erträgt ihren Liebhaber Claude, liebt französischen Rotwein und realisiert immer mehr, dass Trudy und Claude planen, den Kindsvater zu töten.
Eine fesselnde Erzählperspektive, sehr treffend beschriebene Charaktere, eine detailreiche Schilderung machen dieses Buch zum einem wahren Lesegenuss.