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4 oeuvres 1,158 utilisateurs 49 critiques 2 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Louise Murphy was born in 1943 in Kentucky. She attended the Universty of Kentucky and upon graduating became an English teacher in Newark, DE. She then went on to earn her master's degree of art at San Francisco State University and became a professor at the university from 1977-1982. She started afficher plus writing novels in 1980 with her first book, My Garden: A Journal for Gardening around the Year. Her next novel was The Sea Within. After writing it, she went on to teach novel writing at the Acalanes Adult Education in California. She also wrote several poetry pieces and essays for newspapers and magazines. In 2003 she wrote her very popular book, The True Story of Hansel and Gretel: A Novel of War and Survival. She won the Writers Digest award for poetry and she also won the Shaunt Basmajian Award for books in 2003. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins

Comprend les noms: Louise Murphy

Å’uvres de Louise Murphy

The True Story of Hansel and Gretel (2003) 1,148 exemplaires
My Garden (1980) 5 exemplaires
The Sea Within (1985) 4 exemplaires
Making hats (1993) 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1943-03-12
Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA
Lieu de naissance
Bowling Green, Kentucky, USA
Lieux de résidence
Mill Valley, California, USA
Études
University of Kentucky (BA)
San Francisco State University (MA)
Courte biographie
Educator, poet, and fiction writer. English teacher in Newark, DE, junior high school, 1966-68; San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA, instructor, 1977-82; Acalanes Adult Education, Lafayette, CA, teacher of novel writing, 1986-91.

Membres

Critiques

KIRKUS REVIEWA classic fairy tale is darkly reimagined in this brutally explicit Holocaust story by poet and second-novelist Murphy (The Sea Within, 1985).The eponymous protagonists are Polish Jews, the preadolescent daughter and seven-year-old son of a fugitive intellectual ironically nicknamed ?the Mechanic,? who survived by servicing German military vehicles. In the late stages of the war, the Mechanic and his second wife ?rename? his children and send them into a forest, hoping they can elude both Nazi pursuers and advancing Russian troops. The children are taken in by an aged ?witch,? Magda, and reluctantly sheltered by the embattled residents of a nearby Polish village. At first juxtaposing the ordeals of the children and their father, Murphy gradually expands her novel?s scope, focusing in turn on an unwed pregnant woman (Nelka) and the redoubtable villager (Telek) who loves her; Magda?s brother, a sin-burdened priest who redeems himself by a heroic sacrifice; and German Major Frankel, a suave monster who ?refreshes? himself with the transfused blood of Polish women and orchestrates the inspection of their children for the purposes of ?assimilation into the German people.? Murphy?s crisp prose renders the war?s terrors memorably, and she makes expert use of indigenous folklore and superstition¥perhaps expressed most beautifully in ?Gretel?s? declaration to ?Hansel? that stars above them are ?all the Jews that died . . . and went up in the air, and the stars are the stars that they wore on their coats.? Comparisons to Jerzy Kosinski?s The Painted Bird are inevitable, but the relentlessly grim depiction of the children?s perilous odyssey, and especially the stalwart, mordant figure of Magda (whose eventual fate and transfiguration are stunningly described) link it even more closely with Davis Grubb?s Appalachian morality tale The Night of the Hunter. Only an unconvincing hopeful ending and elegiac coda dilute the power of Murphy?s unusually gripping fiction.Lyrical, haunting, unforgettable.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
bentstoker | 48 autres critiques | Jan 26, 2024 |
Uhg. Nazis. Horrible horrible horrifically horrible. Interesting conceit to use the fairy tale. Pretty well done. But Uhg. Nazis.
 
Signalé
BookyMaven | 48 autres critiques | Dec 6, 2023 |
This is what I wrote about this read in 2010: "Interesting! Story set in eastern Poland as the end of WWII approaches in the winter 1945. Two small Jewish children and their parents' struggle to survive. The human goodness that shelters them and love of others around them that survives the horrors of war and powerful hates. Interesting to be introduced to the Bialowieza forest."
 
Signalé
MGADMJK | 48 autres critiques | Aug 18, 2023 |
This book re-imagines the story of Hansel and Gretal during World War II. It is the story of a young Jewish boy and girl who are separated from their parents and protected by a Polish woman who lives in the woods. Trust me when I say that you don't even need to know the story of Hansel and Gretal to get a lot out of the book. The influence is there, but this book is no fairy tale.

This story has it all - - symbolism, pathos, well developed and sympathetic characters, succinct and cleanly written prose, and suspense. Plus, it had the added bonus of being hard to put down.

For me, the book evoked two of my favorites - - The Book Thief and The Road . . .much more so, the Book Thief, but both came to mind. I didn't cry at the end of this one, like I did both of those - - but there were moments while I was reading that my emotions ran very high. There are some very graphic scenes so be forewarned - - but I did not think they were gratuitous.

If I have to be critical - - which I am loathe to do because I really did enjoy reading this one - - I would say that the final chapter did required a bit of suspension of disbelief. Not a whole lot, but some. I felt the way one of the characters was handled at the end wasn't as realistic as the rest of the book. But that's one teensy blemish on an otherwise outstanding read. Highly recommend!
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Anita_Pomerantz | 48 autres critiques | Mar 23, 2023 |

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Statistiques

Å’uvres
4
Membres
1,158
Popularité
#22,187
Évaluation
4.1
Critiques
49
ISBN
15
Favoris
2

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