Photo de l'auteur

Paweł Huelle (1957–2022)

Auteur de Who Was David Weiser?

12+ oeuvres 401 utilisateurs 9 critiques 2 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: Sławek

Œuvres de Paweł Huelle

Who Was David Weiser? (1987) 121 exemplaires
Mercedes-Benz (1900) 95 exemplaires
Castorp (2007) — Auteur — 66 exemplaires
Moving House Stories: Stories (1991) 56 exemplaires
Cold Sea Stories (1800) 25 exemplaires
The Last Supper (1705) 24 exemplaires
Śpiewaj ogrody (2014) 6 exemplaires
Talita (2020) 3 exemplaires
Silberregen (2000) 2 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Granta 42: Krauts! (1992) — Contributeur — 130 exemplaires
Found in Translation (2018) — Contributeur, quelques éditions36 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Huelle, Paweł
Autres noms
HUELLE, Paweł
HUELLE, Pawel
Date de naissance
1957-09-10
Date de décès
2022-11-27
Sexe
male
Nationalité
Poland
Lieu de naissance
Gdansk, Poland
Lieux de résidence
Gdansk, Poland (born)
Études
Gdansk University

Membres

Critiques

 
Signalé
BegoMano | 4 autres critiques | Mar 5, 2023 |
Recommended by Maciek. Set in the late 1950s in Gdansk (Poland), this is a classic coming of age story. David Weiser is a mysterious Jewish outcast in a Catholic town. His sole defender is a girl named Elka, and over time, three other boys become fascinated by this seemingly worldly classmate. The book is narrated by one of the three, while they are being interrogated following the disappearance of Weiser and Elka, who are presumed to have died in a huge explosion detonated by Weiser. The constant time shifting in narration was a challenge, and the fact that the parents of these boys left them alone and at the mercy of school officials and investigators was hard to believe, even given the time period. Well written, with some intriguing mystery/mysticism, but I would have preferred more resolution.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
skipstern | 2 autres critiques | Jul 11, 2021 |
This story of Hans Castorp's school days in Danzig works pretty well on its own as a shrewd and fluent amusement, and the amusement is doubled and trebled by little references to Schnitzler's Traumnovelle or Grass's Danzig novels, but it's of course the new lens it brings to The Magic Mountain that's the real point of interest. Huelle precapitulates Mann's novel for purposes that are often straight-up satirical, like the conversations in the bathhouse between the English proto-Settembrini (we need a word or suffix for "proto-" but with an implication of already-in-the-context-of-the-thing-being-protoedness, in other words, a situation where proto-x comes before x but is nevertheless framed by it) and the German proto-Naphta, or the way the Decline-of-the-West pre-WWI stuff with Clavdia Chauchat about Germans and Slavs in the original gets made explicit here--at the end, rolled out in more or less thesis form by a sudden 21st-century narrator. But the book goes deeper too, and the fact that these things happened, will have happened, had already happened, had always had to happen, before the events of the MM changes Castorp from a sheepish Everyman into someone a bit numinous, a character to whom unexpected journeys to magical kingdoms and the descent of visions suffused with yearning are destined to happen, and whose ultimate destiny (I won't spoil the end of The Magic Mountain here) makes him a kind of dreamy blankish slate forced into the role of representative of and sacrificial lamb for the old bourgeois Europe. When Hans is caught looking out the window in math class and oh-snaps the professor with a heavy nineteenth-century comeback about Fermat's last theorem, the other students don't start to call him Cloudgazer or imbue him a reputation for legendary wit. They call him "Practical Castorp," against all the evidence. He's being forced into the role. This makes his Maria Mancinis and good meals and punctilious habits no longer cloying physical indulgences but humanizing details, and his bicycle rides, like the later walk in the snow, attempts to escape the role. It makes the essence of Castorp not practicality and innocence but enchantment and doom--and looking back, all four things were true of the pre-war world. Thus, the two-part story that Castorp and The Magic Mountain now become are revealed as a walk to the gallows no longer of a decadent and distracted world that doesn't know it's coming, but of an agitated and desperate one that suspects, and isn't yet aware that it suspects, but is looking desperately for a way out that isn't there, not in the highest mountain or the fluffiest Baltic cloud.… (plus d'informations)
½
4 voter
Signalé
MeditationesMartini | Nov 19, 2011 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
12
Aussi par
5
Membres
401
Popularité
#60,558
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
9
ISBN
69
Langues
13
Favoris
2

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