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Brodeck par Claudel, Philippe

by Claudel, Philippe | HC | Good
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Former library book; Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ... En savoir plussur l'état
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Caractéristiques de l'objet

État
Bon
Un livre qui a été lu, mais qui est en bon état. La couverture présente des dommages infimes, par exemple des éraflures, mais aucun trou ni aucune déchirure. Dans le cas des livres à reliure, la jaquette peut ne pas être incluse. La reliure présente des traces d'usure minimes. La plupart des pages ne sont pas endommagées et les plis, les déchirures, les passages soulignés ou surlignés et les inscriptions en marge sont minimes. Il n'y a aucune page manquante. Afficher toutes les définitions d'état(s'ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre ou un nouvel onglet)
Remarques du vendeur
“Former library book; Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ...
Binding
Hardcover
Weight
1 lbs
Product Group
Book
IsTextBook
No
ISBN
9780385527248
Book Title
Brodeck
Item Length
8.5in
Original Language
French
Publisher
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Publication Year
2009
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Item Height
1.1in
Author
Philippe Claudel
Genre
Fiction
Topic
Crime, Literary, Mystery & Detective / General
Item Width
5.9in
Item Weight
18.2 Oz
Number of Pages
336 Pages

À propos de ce produit

Product Information

Forced into a brutal concentration camp during a great war, Brodeck returns to his village at the war's end and takes up his old job of writing reports for a governmental bureau. One day a stranger comes to live in the village. His odd manner and habits arouse suspicions: His speech is formal, he takes long, solitary walks, and although he is unfailingly friendly and polite, he reveals nothing about himself. When the stranger produces drawings of the village and its inhabitants that are both unflattering and insightful, the villagers murder him. The authorities who witnessed the killing tell Brodeck to write a report that is essentially a whitewash of the incident. As Brodeck writes the official account, he sets down his version of the truth in a separate, parallel narrative. In measured, evocative prose, he weaves into the story of the stranger his own painful history and the dark secrets the villagers have fiercely kept hidden. Set in an unnamed time and place, Brodeck blends the familiar and unfamiliar, myth and history into a work of extraordinary power and resonance. Readers of J. M. Coetzee's Disgrace , Bernhard Schlink's The Reade,r and Kafka will be captivated by Brodeck .

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
ISBN-10
0385527241
ISBN-13
9780385527248
eBay Product ID (ePID)
71112941

Product Key Features

Book Title
Brodeck
Author
Philippe Claudel
Original Language
French
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Topic
Crime, Literary, Mystery & Detective / General
Publication Year
2009
Genre
Fiction
Number of Pages
336 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
8.5in
Item Height
1.1in
Item Width
5.9in
Item Weight
18.2 Oz

Additional Product Features

Lc Classification Number
Pq2663.L31148r3713
Reviews
"This is a remarkable novel, all the more so because this account of man's inhumanity to man, of coarse and brutal stupidity, of fear and surrender to evil, is nevertheless not without hope. Brodeck survives because, despite all he has experienced, he remains capable of love. It is also beautifully written, and well translated… I mentioned Kafka earlier, and the novel is as compelling as anything he wrote. In France it won the Prix Goncourt des Lycéens. The reviewer inLe Mondecalled it, simply, magnificent. And so it is." -The Scotsman, *starred review* "Coming across as the love child of Bela Tarr's filmWerckmeister Harmóniákand Gabriel García Márquez's 'A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings,' this disconcerting and darkly atmospheric novel, set in an unnamed European town secluded high in the mountains, deals with the effects of collective guilt by examining the dark secrets of its residents as they recall the hardships of war and occupation. Following the end of an unspecified war that sounds very much like WWII, protagonist Brodeck, who survived the camps by literally becoming a guard's pet (Brodeck the Dog), is reunited with his wife and daughter. After the murder of a mystical drifter, Brodeck is made to write a narrative of the events for the authorities absolving the village's inhabitants of any blame. Though there are no innocents, by the end some characters make tentative footsteps toward reclaiming their humanity. Claudel's style is very visual and evocative (he also wrote and directed the filmI've Loved You So Long), and this novel, like the brothers Grimm fables, is full of terror, horror, and beauty and wonder." -Publishers Weekly "Deeply wise and classically beautiful….Brodeckwon the Prix Goncourt des Lycéens in the original French and John Cullen's English translation is as clear as a mountain stream. It is a modern masterpiece." -The Daily Telegraph "This is a remarkable novel, all the more so because this account of man's inhumanity to man, of coarse and brutal stupidity, of fear and surrender to evil, is nevertheless not without hope. Brodeck survives because, despite all he has experienced, he remains capable of love. It is also beautifully written, and well translated… I mentioned Kafka earlier, and the novel is as compelling as anything he wrote. In France it won the Prix Goncourt des Lycéens. The reviewer inLe Mondecalled it, simply, magnificent. And so it is." -The Scotsman "[O]riginal, brilliant and disturbing… It is a relentless, uncomfortable book that achieves a beauty of its own through Claudel's deft writing and passionate commitment to truth. Claudel is a novelist of ideas, in the French tradition. He deals skillfully in archetypes and abstractions. His characters and their village are sparsely sketched, just like the De Anderer portraits and landscapes that cause such fatal offence. [Clauel's film]I've Loved You So Longwas certainly an upsetting film, but it was also life-affirming and celebratory. The same, ultimately, can be said ofBrodeckbut, in this case, the journey towards affirmation is as bleak and dark as can be, a journey that goes to the heart of what it means to be human, responsible and committed to the truth. A journey towards what it means to live a life that is something rather than nothing at all. -The Times "In John Cullen's deft translation, Claudel's writing is lucid and passionate…. [An] excellent novel." -The Guardian "….a grave, powerful, unforgettable book." -Livres Hebdo "In a finely-wrought style…Philippe Claudel describes a terrible world where crime is a natural function of the living." -Le Magazine-Littéraire "Philippe Claudel is at the peak of his art as a storyteller and portrait-painter." -Elle(France) "Don't expect to get out of this powerful, disturbing novel unscathed….Long after you close the book, you'll remember its words, which always sound like terribly accurate reflections of our doubts as well as our fears." -Lire<br, Winner of the 2010 Independent Foreign Fiction Prize! "Although Claudel had long been respected as a novelist in France, only two of his previous books,By a Slow RiverandGrey Souls, had been translated into English. Now his latest novel,Brodeck, arrives like a fresh, why-haven't-we-known-him discovery, revealing him to be as dazzling on the page as he is on the screen....Brodeckis the Brothers Grimm by way of Kafka.... [Claudel] audaciously approaches a subject that seems thoroughly covered and makes it fresh. His nightmarish fairy tale captures the essential, inescapable evil at the center of the Holocaust, the human urge to destroy Others ... a compulsion existing beyond time, place or politics." -The New York Times Book Review "Coming across as the love child of Bela Tarr's filmWerckmeister HarmÓni�kand Gabriel Garc�a M�rquez's 'A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings,' this disconcerting and darkly atmospheric novel, set in an unnamed European town secluded high in the mountains, deals with the effects of collective guilt by examining the dark secrets of its residents as they recall the hardships of war and occupation. Following the end of an unspecified war that sounds very much like WWII, protagonist Brodeck, who survived the camps by literally becoming a guard's pet (Brodeck the Dog), is reunited with his wife and daughter. After the murder of a mystical drifter, Brodeck is made to write a narrative of the events for the authorities absolving the village's inhabitants of any blame. Though there are no innocents, by the end some characters make tentative footsteps toward reclaiming their humanity. Claudel's style is very visual and evocative (he also wrote and directed the filmI've Loved You So Long), and this novel, like the brothers Grimm fables, is full of terror, horror, and beauty and wonder." -Publishers Weekly (starred review) "A beautiful, sinister and haunting fable of persecution, resistance and survival. It is set in the aftermath of genocidal war in a vividly etched rural landscape that has all the spine-tingling intensity of a waking dream. . . . Claudel prevailed with his hallucinatory story-almost a dark fairy-tale in which Kafka meets the Grimms-of an uneasy homecoming after wrenching tragedy. . . . Written with a lyrical but solemn grace to which John Cullen's English does rich justice, this book both is, and is not, a novel about the moral wastelands left behind by the Holocaust and other modern killing-fields." -The Independent "Deeply wise and classically beautiful….Brodeckwon the Prix Goncourt des LycÉens in the original French and John Cullen's English translation is as clear as a mountain stream. It is a modern masterpiece." -The Daily Telegraph "This is a remarkable novel, all the more so because this account of man's inhumanity to man, of coarse and brutal stupidity, of fear and surrender to evil, is nevertheless not without hope. Brodeck survives because, despite all he has experienced, he remains capable of love. It is also beautifully written, and well translated… I mentioned Kafka earlier, and the novel is as compelling as anything he wrote. In France it won the Prix Goncourt des LycÉens. The reviewer inLe Mondecalled it, simply, magnificent. And so it is." -The Scotsman "[O]riginal, brilliant and disturbing… It is a relentless, uncomfortable book that achieves a beauty of its own through Claudel's deft writing and passionate commitment to truth. Claudel is a novelist of ideas, in the French tradition. He deals skillfully in archetypes and abstractions. His characters and their village are sparsely sketched, just like the De Anderer portraits and landscapes that cause such fatal offence. &ldq, "Although Claudel had long been respected as a novelist in France, only two of his previous books,By a Slow RiverandGrey Souls, had been translated into English. Now his latest novel,Brodeck, arrives like a fresh, why-haven't-we-known-him discovery, revealing him to be as dazzling on the page as he is on the screen....Brodeckis the Brothers Grimm by way of Kafka.... [Claudel] audaciously approaches a subject that seems thoroughly covered and makes it fresh. His nightmarish fairy tale captures the essential, inescapable evil at the center of the Holocaust, the human urge to destroy Others ... a compulsion existing beyond time, place or politics." -The New York Times Book Review "Coming across as the love child of Bela Tarr's filmWerckmeister HarmÓni�kand Gabriel Garc�a M�rquez's 'A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings,' this disconcerting and darkly atmospheric novel, set in an unnamed European town secluded high in the mountains, deals with the effects of collective guilt by examining the dark secrets of its residents as they recall the hardships of war and occupation. Following the end of an unspecified war that sounds very much like WWII, protagonist Brodeck, who survived the camps by literally becoming a guard's pet (Brodeck the Dog), is reunited with his wife and daughter. After the murder of a mystical drifter, Brodeck is made to write a narrative of the events for the authorities absolving the village's inhabitants of any blame. Though there are no innocents, by the end some characters make tentative footsteps toward reclaiming their humanity. Claudel's style is very visual and evocative (he also wrote and directed the filmI've Loved You So Long), and this novel, like the brothers Grimm fables, is full of terror, horror, and beauty and wonder." -Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Deeply wise and classically beautiful….Brodeckwon the Prix Goncourt des LycÉens in the original French and John Cullen's English translation is as clear as a mountain stream. It is a modern masterpiece." -The Daily Telegraph "This is a remarkable novel, all the more so because this account of man's inhumanity to man, of coarse and brutal stupidity, of fear and surrender to evil, is nevertheless not without hope. Brodeck survives because, despite all he has experienced, he remains capable of love. It is also beautifully written, and well translated… I mentioned Kafka earlier, and the novel is as compelling as anything he wrote. In France it won the Prix Goncourt des LycÉens. The reviewer inLe Mondecalled it, simply, magnificent. And so it is." -The Scotsman "[O]riginal, brilliant and disturbing… It is a relentless, uncomfortable book that achieves a beauty of its own through Claudel's deft writing and passionate commitment to truth. Claudel is a novelist of ideas, in the French tradition. He deals skillfully in archetypes and abstractions. His characters and their village are sparsely sketched, just like the De Anderer portraits and landscapes that cause such fatal offence. [Clauel's film]I've Loved You So Longwas certainly an upsetting film, but it was also life-affirming and celebratory. The same, ultimately, can be said ofBrodeckbut, in this case, the journey towards affirmation is as bleak and dark as can be, a journey that goes to the heart of what it means to be human, responsible and committed to the truth. A journey towards what it means to live a life that is something rather than nothing at all. -The Times "In John Cullen's deft translation, Claudel's writing is lucid and passionate…. [An] excellent novel." -The Guardian "….a grave, powerful, unforgettable book." -Livres Hebdo <b, "Coming across as the love child of Bela Tarr's filmWerckmeister Harmóniákand Gabriel García Márquez's 'A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings,' this disconcerting and darkly atmospheric novel, set in an unnamed European town secluded high in the mountains, deals with the effects of collective guilt by examining the dark secrets of its residents as they recall the hardships of war and occupation. Following the end of an unspecified war that sounds very much like WWII, protagonist Brodeck, who survived the camps by literally becoming a guard's pet (Brodeck the Dog), is reunited with his wife and daughter. After the murder of a mystical drifter, Brodeck is made to write a narrative of the events for the authorities absolving the village's inhabitants of any blame. Though there are no innocents, by the end some characters make tentative footsteps toward reclaiming their humanity. Claudel's style is very visual and evocative (he also wrote and directed the filmI've Loved You So Long), and this novel, like the brothers Grimm fables, is full of terror, horror, and beauty and wonder." -Publishers Weekly, starred review "This is a remarkable novel, all the more so because this account of man's inhumanity to man, of coarse and brutal stupidity, of fear and surrender to evil, is nevertheless not without hope. Brodeck survives because, despite all he has experienced, he remains capable of love. It is also beautifully written, and well translated… I mentioned Kafka earlier, and the novel is as compelling as anything he wrote. In France it won the Prix Goncourt des Lycéens. The reviewer inLe Mondecalled it, simply, magnificent. And so it is." -The Scotsman "[O]riginal, brilliant and disturbing… It is a relentless, uncomfortable book that achieves a beauty of its own through Claudel's deft writing and passionate commitment to truth. Claudel is a novelist of ideas, in the French tradition. He deals skillfully in archetypes and abstractions. His characters and their village are sparsely sketched, just like the De Anderer portraits and landscapes that cause such fatal offence. [Clauel's film]I've Loved You So Longwas certainly an upsetting film, but it was also life-affirming and celebratory. The same, ultimately, can be said ofBrodeckbut, in this case, the journey towards affirmation is as bleak and dark as can be, a journey that goes to the heart of what it means to be human, responsible and committed to the truth. A journey towards what it means to live a life that is something rather than nothing at all. -The Times "[I]n John Cullen's deft translation, Claudel's writing is lucid and passionate…. [An] excellent novel." -The Guardian "….a grave, powerful, unforgettable book." -Livres Hebdo "In a finely-wrought style…Philippe Claudel describes a terrible world where crime is a natural function of the living." -Le Magazine-Littéraire "Philippe Claudel is at the peak of his art as a storyteller and portrait-painter." -Elle(France) "Don't expect to get out of this powerful, disturbing novel unscathed….Long after you close the book, you'll remember its words, which always sound like terribly accurate reflections of our doubts as well as our fears." -Lire "InBrodeck, Philippe Claudel delves deep into his obsession with the theme of hatred for the other and with the evil perpetrated in the name of that hatred. His writing, free from any trace of pathos, is astonishingly virtuosic and beautiful, and his humanist stance is all t, "This is a remarkable novel, all the more so because this account of man's inhumanity to man, of coarse and brutal stupidity, of fear and surrender to evil, is nevertheless not without hope. Brodeck survives because, despite all he has experienced, he remains capable of love. It is also beautifully written, and well translated… I mentioned Kafka earlier, and the novel is as compelling as anything he wrote. In France it won the Prix Goncourt des Lycéens. The reviewer inLe Mondecalled it, simply, magnificent. And so it is." -The Scotsman "….a grave, powerful, unforgettable book." -Livres Hebdo "In a finely-wrought style…Philippe Claudel describes a terrible world where crime is a natural function of the living." -Le Magazine-Littéraire "Philippe Claudel is at the peak of his art as a storyteller and portrait-painter." -Elle(France) "Don't expect to get out of this powerful, disturbing novel unscathed….Long after you close the book, you'll remember its words, which always sound like terribly accurate reflections of our doubts as well as our fears." -Lire "InBrodeck, Philippe Claudel delves deep into his obsession with the theme of hatred for the other and with the evil perpetrated in the name of that hatred. His writing, free from any trace of pathos, is astonishingly virtuosic and beautiful, and his humanist stance is all the stronger for it. Unforgettable." -L'Express "….a meditation upon the hatred of the foreigner, the rejection of difference, the blindness of crowds, group stupidity, collective cowardice. Once again, Philippe Claudel plumbs the black depths of the human heart, with contained fury and deliberate humility….In the end, this is simply very great literature." -Le Parisien
Copyright Date
2009
Target Audience
Trade
Lccn
2008-038252
Dewey Decimal
843/.92
Dewey Edition
22

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