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The Death of Ahasuerus par Par Lagerkvist
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The Death of Ahasuerus (original 1960; édition 1982)

par Par Lagerkvist, Emil Antonucci (Illustrateur), Naomi Walford (Traducteur)

Séries: Pilgrim Tetralogy (2)

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1794151,125 (3.52)7
Roman om den evige jødes sidste opgør med Gud.
Membre:ctpress
Titre:The Death of Ahasuerus
Auteurs:Par Lagerkvist
Autres auteurs:Emil Antonucci (Illustrateur), Naomi Walford (Traducteur)
Info:Vintage Books (1982), Edition: 1st Vintage Books ed, Paperback, 118 pages
Collections:Read, Lus mais non possédés
Évaluation:***
Mots-clés:novels

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La mort d'Ahasverus par Pär Lagerkvist (1960)

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» Voir aussi les 7 mentions

So I thought this book was the beginning of a trilogy and in some ways it is because a main character is introduced here and lasts through the next two books. But I found out today that this book is the middle book in a pentalogy (or however that is spelled) because there is a string of five books that deal with the crucifixion. Not knowing this I read these five books entirely out of order which means I need to reread them all in order for things to make sense.

So they should be read as follows: Barabbas, The Sibyl, The Death of Ahasuerus, Pilgrim at Sea and finally The Holy Land.

Now that that has been said this book was pretty dark. There was one part that I had a hard time reading so I read through it as fasting as I could. Again like Lagerkvist's other books it deals with some heavy things which is reason he should be read more widely. I think the problem might be that he was an atheist who dealt mainly in the spiritual and mystical (at least in this pentalogy). Too atheistic for religious people and too religious for the atheists?

I have his novel The Dwarf to take on soon which I believe is his first novel. ( )
  dtn620 | Sep 22, 2013 |
"I've always liked wandering about, being alone, at peace. Perhaps that day I felt more need for it than usual - more need to get away from the others; I was weary of this meaningless existence, of the pointlessness of everything." (p 33)

Set during the age of medieval pilgrimages, Par Lagerkvist's short novel brings together two fascinating, yet mysterious characters. They include Tobias (a soldier who became a bandit) and a wandering saint who meet at an inn on the way to the Holy Land. Although each look at divinity, sin, atonement and faith in different ways, embarking on the same road to Jerusalem (one on a mission as a sort of soldier of fortune, the other there to not let him alone). Both trying to accomplish a personal dream. We eventually come to understand that the alien could not be anyone but Ahasuerus, a name that is known in mythology as the "Wandering Jew" . Tobias has acquired another companion along the way, a woman named, appropriately for this story, Diana. The interactions among these on their journey would surprise this reader, while the importance of the relation of them to each other and to nature would seem to be overpowering in its implications. From the scene of the storm to its peaceful aftermath the beauty of nature is exemplified in the following passage: "On the very loftiest mountains now had fallen - the first since the summer - and white peaks rose to the heavens like a song of praise." (p 64)
The ideas, images and questions raised by this story combine to make it an exceptionally thoughtful read. What sets Lagerkvist apart is his use of paradox, and his constant examination of faith and one's relationship to "god." The novel mirrors aspects of life. It is a book that ends too quickly and that, ultimately, makes you wish you to think about its meaning and perhaps read it again.

"People puzzle themselves so much about what they're to live on - they talk and talk about it. But what is one to live for? Can you tell me? (p 32) ( )
  jwhenderson | Jan 29, 2011 |
Par Lagerkvist picks up the tale, begun in the The Sibyl, of Ahasuerus, the Wandering Jew. Ahasuerus stands in for modern man in his ambivalence toward Christ and his ultimate rejection of God. By reimagining and reinterpreting biblical themes, the author sheds a brilliant, strange light onto ancient questions. He does not, however, write prescriptively. Characters grasp their way in the dark -- sometimes hopeful, more often confused. Ahasuerus's release, his Holy Land, comes at last, and the reader may find comfort that it is a fate that eludes no one. ( )
  stpetebeach | Oct 17, 2010 |
Det är nog tur att Pär Lagerkvists Ahasverus död bara är 130, glest skrivna, sidor i litet format, för annars vet jag inte om jag hade tagit igenom den så smärtfritt som jag gjorde: det är visst första delen av en trilogi, och då kanske man skall förlåta ett visst mått av obegriplighet, men detta var ändå mer poänglöst än vad jag riktigt står ut med.

Handlingen är i korthet att Ahasverus, dömd att evigt vandra för att han förvägrade Jesus vila på vägen till korsfästningen, kommer till ett härberge för pilgrimer. Där träffar han på Tobias, före detta soldat, och dennes före detta älskade, som han gett smeknamnet »Diana« men vars riktiga namn aldrig nämns, som numera försörjer sig på sin kropp. Eftersom Diana ser det som Tobias fel att hon är vad hon är, så präglas deras förhållande av bitterhet som endast ibland avlöses av mer ömma stunder. Hur som haver, de berättar sin historia, inklusive varför Tobias bestämt sig för att bli pilgrim. Efter det följer några händelser som för mig tedde sig tämligen banalt tomma, innan på slutet Ahasverus bestämmer sig för att han genomskådat Gud och dör.

Utöver detta vet jag inte vad jag skall säga: all handling känns bara som tomma händelser som följer på varandra utan all poäng. Som bok beträffat är det en enda stor axelryckning; det enda som väckte lite känslor var den milda irritationen över Lagerkvists tro att en mening inte är komplett utan en satsradning. ( )
  andejons | Jun 4, 2009 |
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I ett härbärge för pilgrimer till Det heliga landet kom det en kväll in en man som tycktes jagad av blixten, när han ryckte upp dörren flammade hela himlen upp bakom honom och regnet och blåsten kastade sig över honom, det var med knapp nöd han kunde få igen dörren efter sig.
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