Lila
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- $22.99
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- $22.99
Publisher Description
1950'ernes USA: Lila, som er både ensom og hjemløs, søger ly fra regnen iden lille by Gileads kirke, og her møder hun kirkens pastor. Herfra forandres hendes tilværelse sig radikalt.
I årevis har hun vandret formålsløst rundt, men nu befinder hun sig pludselig i faste rammer i et lille samfund, hvor hun har slået sig ned som hustru til byens noget ældre pastor John Ames. Lila voksede op sammen med Doll, en ung og snarrådig vagabond, som tog hende til sig, og sammen levede de fra hånden til munden uden andre end hinanden at stole på. På trods af de hårde kår, var der imidlertid også glimt af ømhed og kærlighed i deres omflakkende tilværelse. Efter at Lila slår sig ned i Gilead, kæmper hun for at forene sin tidligere barske tilværelse med sit nye liv i faste rammer og med sin mands kristne verdenssyn.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This third of three novels set in the fictional plains town of Gilead, Iowa, is a masterpiece of prose in the service of the moral seriousness that distinguishes Robinson's work. This time the narrative focuses on Lila, the young bride of elderly Reverend Ames, first met in Gilead. Rescued as a toddler from abusive caretakers by a rough but kind drifter named Doll, raised with love but enduring the hard existence of a field worker, and later, in a St. Louis whorehouse, Lila is a superb creation. Largely uneducated, almost feral, Lila has a thirst for stability and knowledge. As she yearns to forget the terrible memories and shame of her past, Lila is hesitant to reveal them to her loving new husband. The courtship of the couple John Ames: tentative, tender, shy, and awkward; Lila: naive, suspicious, wary, full of dread will endure as a classic set piece of character revelation, during which two achingly lonely people discover the comfort of marital love. Threaded through the narrative are John Ames's troubled reflections that the doctrines of his Calvinist theology, including the belief that those who are not saved are destined for hell, are too harsh. Though she reads the Bible to gain knowledge, Lila resists its message, because it teaches that her beloved Doll will never gain the peace of heaven. Her questions stir up doubt in Ames's already conflicted mind, and Robinson carefully crafts this provocative and deeply meaningful spiritual search for the meaning of existence. What brings the couple together is a joyous appreciation of the beauty of the natural world and the possibility of grace. The novel ends with the birth of their son, to whom Ames will leave his diary in Gilead.