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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tq-oMYIS44o
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John Banville's black comedy of life in a disaster-ridden house on a large Irish estate.<
Tras la reciente muerte de su esposa después de una larga enfermedad, el historiador de arte Max Morden se retira a escribir al pueblo costero en el que de niño veraneó junto a sus padres. Pretende huir así del profundo dolor por la reciente pérdida de la mujer amada, cuyo recuerdo le atormenta incesantemente. El pasado se convierte entonces en el único refugio y consuelo para Max, que rememorará el intenso verano en el que conoció a los Grace (los padres Carlo y Connie, sus hijos gemelos Chloe y Myles, y la asistenta Rose), por quienes se sintió inmediatamente fascinado y con los que entablaría una estrecha relación. Max busca un improbable cobijo del presente, demasiado doloroso, en el recuerdo de un momento muy concreto de su infancia: el verano de su iniciación a la vida y sus placeres, del descubrimiento de la amistad y el amor; pero también, finalmente, del dolor y la muerte. A medida que avanza su evocación se desvelará el trágico suceso que ocurrió ese verano, el año en el que tuvo lugar la «extraña marea»; una larga y meándrica rememoración que deviene catártico exorcismo de los fantasmas del pasado que atenazan su existencia.
El mar, ganadora del Premio Man Booker 2005, es una conmovedora meditación acerca de la pérdida, la dificultad de asimilar y reconciliarse con el dolor y la muerte, y el poder redentor de la memoria. Escrita con la característica brillantez de la prosa de John Banville, de impecable precisión y exuberante riqueza lingüística, El mar confirma por qué Banville es justamente celebrado como uno de los más grandes estilistas contemporáneos en lengua inglesa. «Por su meticulosa inteligencia y estilo exquisito, John Banville es el heredero de Nabokov… La prosa de Banville es sublime. En cada página el lector queda cautivado por una línea o una frase que exige ser releída. Son como colocones de una droga deliciosa, estas frases» (Lewis Jones, The Telegraph). «Banville demuestra un magistral control de su material narrativo. El relato avanza a través del pasado con un movimiento ondulante y majestuoso, al ritmo de los ensueños de su protagonista» (John Tague, Independent on Sunday). «Una novela otoñal, elegiaca, cuya desoladora historia es narrada mediante las dulces y tempestuosas mareas de su exquisita prosa» (Boston Globe). «Una hermosa novela, exigente y extraordinariamente gratificante… Tranquiliza saber que contamos con un lord del lenguaje como John Banville entre nosotros» (Gerry Dukes, Irish Independent). «Un maestro, un artista con el pleno control de su oficio» (The Times).
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In a brilliant illumination of the Renaissance mind, acclaimed Irish novelist John Banville re-creates the life of Johannes Kepler and his incredible drive to chart the orbits of the planets and the geometry of the universe. Wars, witchcraft, and disease rage throughout Europe. For this court mathematician, vexed by domestic strife, appalled by the religious upheavals that have driven him from exile to exile, and vulnerable to the whims of his eccentric patrons, astronomy is a quest for some form of divine order. For all the mathematical precision of his exploration, though, it is a seemingly elusive quest until he makes one glorious and profound discovery.
Johannes Kepler, born in 1571 in south Germany, was one of the world's greatest mathematicians and astronomers. The author of this book uses this history as a background to his novel, writing a work of historical fiction that is rooted in poverty, squalor and the tyrannical power of emperors.
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One part Nietzsche, one part Humbert Humbert, and a soupcon of Milton's Lucifer, Axel Vander, the dizzyingly unreliable narrator of John Banville's masterful new novel, is very old, recently widowed, and the bearer of a fearsome reputation as a literary dandy and bully. A product of the Old World, he is also an escapee from its conflagrations, with the wounds to prove it. And everything about him is a lie.
Now those lies have been unraveled by a mysterious young woman whom Vander calls "Miss Nemesis." They are to meet in Turin, a city best known for its enigmatic shroud. Is her purpose to destroy Vander or to save him-or simply to show him what lies beneath the shroud in which he has wrapped his life? A splendidly moving exploration of identity, duplicity, and desire, Shroud is Banville's most rapturous performance to date.
Alex Vander is a fraud, big-time. An elderly professor of literature and a scholarly writer with an international reputation, he has neither the education nor the petit bourgeois family in Antwerp that he has claimed. As the splenetic narrator of this searching novel by Banville (Eclipse), he admits early on that he has lied about everything in his life, including his identity, which he stole from a friend of his youth whose mysterious death will resonate as the narrator reflects on his past. Having fled Belgium during WWII, he established himself in Arcady, Calif., with his long-suffering wife, whose recent death has unleashed new waves of guilt in the curmudgeonly old man. Guilt and fear have long since turned Vander into a monster of rudeness, violent temper, ugly excess, alcoholism and self-destructiveness. His web of falsehoods has become an anguishing burden, and his sense of displacement ("I am myself and also someone else") threatens to unhinge him altogether. Then comes a letter from a young woman, Cass Cleave, who claims to know all the secrets of his past. Determined to destroy her, an infuriated Vander meets Cass in Turin and discovers she is slightly mad. Even so, he begins to hope that Cass, his nemesis, could be the instrument of his redemption. Banville's lyrical prose, taut with intelligence, explores the issues of identity and morality with which the novel reverberates. At the end, Vander understands that some people in his life had noble motives for keeping secrets, and their sacrifices make the enormity of his deception even more shameful. This bravura performance will stand as one of Banville's best works.
A scholar and born liar, the elderly but still contentious Axel Vander is about to have his cover blown when an equally contentious young woman enters his life. Banville's lucky 13th novel.
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The Book of Evidence is a 1989 novel by the Irish author John Banville. The book is narrated by Freddie Montgomery, a 38 year old scientist, who murders a servant girl during an attempt to steal a painting from a neighbor. Freddie is an aimless drifter, and though he is a perceptive observer of himself and his surroundings, he is largely amoral. The end of the novel makes it unclear whether anything Freddie has said is true. When asked by the inspector how much of it is true, Freddie responds, "True, Inspector? All of it. None of it. Only the shame." The Book of Evidence won Ireland 's Guinness Peat Aviation Award in 1989, and was short-listed for Britain 's Booker Prize. In reviewing the book, Publishers Weekly compared Banville's writing to that of Albert Camus and Fyodor Dostoevsky. The writing style continues Banville's attempt to give his prose "the kind of denseness and thickness that poetry has".<
I was so blown away by this book I had to meet Viktor in person and now count him as a personal friend. The book is factual in every respect and is difficult to put down once started. John Barron is an excellent author and did a first class job of writing Viktor’s story. In addition to an exciting escape story it reveals why the Soviet Union had to collapse of its own ineptitude, deceit, and corruption. It details humorous incidents such as army pilots’ mess-hall riots due to bad food.
Viktor is not only a first class pilot, he is also a true hero.
Don’t lend this book to anyone and expect to get it back.
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Corre el año 1758 cuando el joven Matthieu Zéla abandona París acompañado por su hermano menor, Tomas, y por Dominique Sauvet, la única mujer a quien amará de verdad. Además de haber sido testigo de un brutal asesinato, aunque aún no lo sabe, Matthieu lleva consigo otro terrible secreto, una característica insólita y perturbadora: su cuerpo dejará de envejecer. Así, su prolongada existencia nos llevará desde la Revolución francesa hasta el Hollywood de los años veinte, de la Gran Exposición Universal de 1851 a la crisis del 29, y cuando el siglo XX llegue a su fin, la mente de Matthieu albergará un cúmulo de experiencias que harán de él un hombre sabio, aunque no necesariamente más feliz.<
Danny Delaney acaba de empezar las vacaciones escolares y ya está saboreando las semanas de libertad que tiene ante sí. Pero al anochecer, cuando su madre regresa a casa acompañada por dos policías, Danny comprende de inmediato que algo muy malo ha sucedido. Abrumada por la culpa, la señora Delaney se encierra en sí misma, y a Danny y su padre les tocará recomponer la unidad de la familia.
Escrita para formar parte de la serie Quick Reads (Lecturas Rápidas) -una iniciativa lanzada con el fin de fomentar el hábito de lectura entre los adultos-, La apuesta se transformó en un inesperado y masivo éxito de ventas.
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Mientras acompaña a su esposa Zoya, que agoniza en un hospital de Londres, Georgi Danilovich Yáchmenev rememora la vida que han compartido durante sesenta y cinco años, una vida marcada por un gran secreto que nunca ha salido a la luz. Los recuerdos se agolpan en una sucesión de imágenes imborrables, a partir de aquel lejano día en que Georgi abandonó su mísero pueblo natal para formar parte de la guardia personal de Alexis Romanov, el único hijo varón del zar Nicolás II. Así, la fastuosa vida en el Palacio de Invierno, las intimidades de la familia imperial, los hechos que precedieron a la revolución bolchevique y, finalmente, la reclusión y posterior ejecución de los Romanov se entremezclan con el durísimo exilio en París y Londres en una hermosa historia de un amor improbable, al mismo tiempo un apasionante relato histórico y una conmovedora tragedia íntima. Con un dominio absoluto del ritmo y el suspense, John Boyne mantiene vivo el interés hasta las últimas páginas, en las que un inesperado desenlace dejará, una vez más, una profunda huella en los lectores.<
Berlin 1942
When Bruno returns home from school one day, he discovers that his belongings are being packed in crates. His father has received a promotion and the family must move from their home to a new house far far away, where there is no one to play with and nothing to do. A tall fence running alongside stretches as far as the eye can see and cuts him off from the strange people he can see in the distance.
But Bruno longs to be an explorer and decides that there must be more to this desolate new place than meets the eye. While exploring his new environment, he meets another boy whose life and circumstances are very different to his own, and their meeting results in a friendship that has devastating consequences.
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