Photo de l'auteur

Saša Stanišić

Auteur de Le Soldat et le Gramophone

17+ oeuvres 1,121 utilisateurs 45 critiques 2 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: Dankesrede von Saša Stanišić anlässlich der Verleihung des Preises der Leipziger Buchmesse 2014 By Amrei-Marie - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=31668199

Œuvres de Saša Stanišić

Oeuvres associées

Granta 129: Fate (2014) — Contributeur — 58 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Stanišic, Saša
Date de naissance
1978-03-07
Sexe
male
Nationalité
Yugoslavia
Germany
Pays (pour la carte)
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Lieu de naissance
Visegrad, Bosnia-Herzegovina
Lieux de résidence
Višegrad, Bosnia-Herzegovina (birth)
Hamburg, Germany
Professions
author
Prix et distinctions
Adelbert von Chamisso Prize (2008)
Courte biographie
website: http://www.kuenstlicht.de/kuenstlicht...

Membres

Critiques

I love the voice, the tone, the story, the... everything. First-person child voices are so difficult to do well, even when they are grounded in your own childhood. Playful with language in the way of those who have to relearn the world in another idiom. Creative, fragmented but whole, so specific and also so relevant to anyone who has lived through a world changing suddenly. I only wish I'd read this earlier, and maybe in the original.
Ok well that's not really a review, maybe I'll write one later.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Kiramke | 21 autres critiques | Jun 27, 2023 |
Ein Dorf in der Uckermark, wenige Stunden vor dem Annenfest.
Der Autor portraitiert die Einheimischen, aus Gegenwart und Vergangenheit, Mensch und Tier.
Das fand ich ganz vernüglich, wird aber vermutlich keinen sehr tiefen Eindruck bei mir hinterlassen.
½
 
Signalé
Wassilissa | 9 autres critiques | May 30, 2023 |
This was Saša Stanišić’s first novel, focusing mainly on his early life in Višegrad and his childhood experience of the Bosnian war. In a patchwork of stories, pastiche school essays, and even a novel within a novel, the narrator Aleksandar tells us about his family connections, Serbian and Muslim, his rural grandparents, his neighbours in the town of Višegrad and the river he fishes in and talks to. Ivo Andrić is always there in the background, as is the famous bridge, of course. But the main theme, of course, is the puzzling and distressing experience of finding yourself caught up in a bloody conflict between groups you barely had any reason to identify as distinguishable groups before.

Clever and sophisticated writing: it’s no surprise that Herkunft turned out to be such a tour-de-force
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
thorold | 21 autres critiques | Dec 23, 2022 |
I am so confused about where this book falls on the spectrum of novel--memoir. It reads like a memoir that is based solely on childhood memory, impressions, and stories remembered and less on research (with family, with newspapers, etc) to find "the truth". Because, obviously, every person experiences their own truth--and childhood and long-ago truth can easily be distorted.

Stanisic was born in Yugoslavia (now Bosnia) and his family moved to Germany as refugees during the war in Yugoslavia. He is the narrator/main character of the book. In chapters of varying length he considers his childhood, what leaving did for and to his parents and grandparents. How they adjusted to Germany and how he did--they lost their careers and struggled with language, and he writes in German. Then his parents' being deported, his grandmother returning to Bosnia when she was deported (post-war). His fighting to get the paperwork to allow himself to stay in Germany--never considering, at the time, what his parents thought as they left for Florida. Much of the last half of the book his his grandmother's descent into dementia.

The overall tone of this book is wistfulness. Wondering who he and his parents might have been if there was no war, missing the camaraderie of his high school friends in Germany (from Yugo, Italy, Poland, Turkey, Germany). Missing his grandparents and the Bosnian traditions he never really learned; watching his grandmother deteriorate from afar. Interestingly, this book does not feel angry--this is not a book angry at the different factions in the former Yugoslavia or anger at people in Germany who mocked his name or accent (as so many North American immigration stories are). Rather it's an exploration of how it was and a recognition of his family's luck (his mother was warned by an acquaintance) and perhaps a touch of survivor's guilt. The little obvious anger in this book is focused on his grandmother's dementia.

The Choose-You-Own-Adventure bit at the end? Not for me, but I do wonder if Stanisic wrote that first, and then it morphed into the book.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Dreesie | 11 autres critiques | Oct 14, 2022 |

Listes

Prix et récompenses

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi

Auteurs associés

Statistiques

Œuvres
17
Aussi par
2
Membres
1,121
Popularité
#22,922
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
45
ISBN
89
Langues
18
Favoris
2

Tableaux et graphiques