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Andorra (1997)

par Peter Cameron

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2589103,234 (3.76)17
For mysterious reasons, a man forsakes his American life and arrives in a strange country calledAndorra. He settles into the grand--and only--hotel in its seaside capital, and gradually makes the aquaintance of this tiny city's most prominent residents: the ancient Mrs. Reinhardt, who has a lifetime lease on the penthouse in the hotel; Sophonsobia Quay, the kayaking matriarch of an Andorran dynasty; and the Ricky Dents, an Australian couple who share a first name, a gigantic dog, and a volatile secret. As the stranger reveals himself to his new friends, and becomes entangled in their lives, the mystery of his own origin deepens. What is he hiding, and why? And when a mutilated dead body appears in the harbor, everyone is a suspect, including our narrator. Part thriller, part comedy of manners, part surrealistic dream,Andorra is "a work of remarkable and sustained invention and imagination . . . a nearly perfect book" (Robert Drake,The Philadelphia Inquirer).… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 17 mentions

Affichage de 1-5 de 8 (suivant | tout afficher)
A beautifully written, intriguing story. I really did not expect that ending! ( )
  KristinaSimon | Nov 24, 2018 |
Andorra is a very atmospheric story. The crisp, correct language, just on the threshold of stilted, creates the feeling that one's frail dream is about to be disrupted, for the reader knows there are details being withheld, but what are they? This is a beautifully written story with a surprising twist at the end. I will watch for more books by Cameron. ( )
  VivienneR | Dec 10, 2014 |
Andorra is like a fine wine. You can get through a whole bunch of it without realizing how much you have consumed. From the very beginning readers don't know a lot about the narrator of Andorra. Little by little, page by page, we learn he is Alexander Fox, an American from San Fransisco, trying to escape a past tragedy. In his former life he was married, a father, and owner a bookstore. He has come to Andorra to figuratively and literally start over. He has arrived, thanks in part, to a novel by Rose Macaulay which takes place in Andorra but isn't like the Andorra he has arrive in at all. By chapter four we finally learn his name and discover he is distrustful of Mrs. Dent (although Mr. Fox doesn't know why). Soon after meeting Sophonsobia Doyle Quay and her daughter Jean, Mr. Fox's life begins to change. Slowly, as if a snail from a shell, Mr. Fox reveals he has trouble with relationships, especially women. The Dents have a secret, but he has a larger one. ( )
  SeriousGrace | Nov 17, 2014 |
Following the death of his wife and daughter Alexander Fox moves to Andorra to start his life anew. He quickly falls under the spell of this tiny isolated country that moves at its own pace, its ancient stone buildings and people who come from everywhere and nowhere. In Andorra's capital, La Plata, he meets an Australian couple, Mr. and Mrs. Dent, who have moved to this strange place seeking a fresh start for reasons of their own. He also becomes involved with the Quays, a family of aristocrats, well established on La Plata's outskirts in their estate, called Quayside. But as Fox builds new relationships his old life comes back to haunt him, and he begins to understand how difficult it is to re-invent oneself and leave the past behind. Andorra is a mesmerizing and seductive novel. Peter Cameron's prose is a delight to read, memorable and evocative and gently rhythmic, much like the lapping of waves upon the shore. The story unfolds slowly--building mystery and suspense but so subtly that you hardly notice how gripping it is. If you prefer fiction with all the questions answered and everything tied up in a neat little package, then maybe Andorra is not for you, but if you don't read this book you're missing a brilliant work by a master novelist. ( )
  icolford | May 4, 2014 |
His writing is amazing. Fabulous characters and character relations. His vocabulary is challenging and enriching. This book was slightly disappointing though I think that was his intent. At the end of the book I was just disappointed in the lead character, but it was a good story and a nice literary journey. ( )
  GothicGuru13 | Mar 22, 2012 |
Affichage de 1-5 de 8 (suivant | tout afficher)
A precise, unsettling (if somewhat overlong) study of loss and duplicity. Cameron, the author of several well-received novels (The Weekend, 1994, etc.) and story collections (Far Flung, 1991, etc.), sets this terse work in the tiny country of Andorra, a mountainous, pocket-sized nation wedged between France and Spain. Alex Fox, his disaffected narrator, arrives there fleeing some at first unspecified horror, and finds the carefully ordered, slightly eccentric society of Andorra to be both enticing and soothing. He falls in with the Dents, a handsome, charming Australian couple who, separately, set out to seduce him. And he in turn begins to pursue the beautiful, hesitant Jean Quay, a young woman who seems to be locked in a constant struggle to suppress some disturbing incident in her past. Cameron deftly introduces a grim subtext to Alex's amours: The bodies of several men, strangled to death, wash up on a nearby beach. Ricky Dent disappears, and his frantic wife and a coolly charming policeman both wonder whether Alex has had something to do with it. Dent reappears but, convinced that he will be arrested for the murders, flees. Alex, who had come to Andorra looking for the solace of anonymity, allows himself to drift into an affair with the not-terribly-distraught Mrs. Dent and to entertain the idea of settling down with Jean. But things quickly go wrong. Alex, protesting his innocence, becomes the police's prime suspect in the murders. He isn't guilty, but an even more horrendous crime in his past spurs him to attempt to flee. That crime is revealed only at the last, and Cameron does a very deft job of gradually peeling away the seeming charm of the place and its inhabitants to uncover some nasty secrets underneath. While the pace occasionally lags toward the climax, Cameron's sly, complex characters, wonderfully intelligent dialogue, and masterful pacing combine to create a cumulatively powerful tale of the unforgiving workings of fate.
ajouté par VivienneR | modifierKirkus Reviews
 
Andorra has been lucky in its writers -- or, to be more precise, lucky in the writers who have seen this small, land-locked country, tucked high away in the Pyrenees, through the prism of their own invention. The English novelist Rose Macaulay created her Andorra in the 1920's. The Swiss writer Max Frisch presented his in the early 1960's. Now, in his wonderful third novel, Peter Cameron both invokes this tradition and extends it. ''Many years ago,'' his narrator begins, ''I read a book that was set in Andorra.''

A preliminary account, a kind of blueprint for this enterprise, can be found in Mr. Cameron's previous novel, ''The Weekend,'' in which a character proposes to write a travel book about an imaginary 19th-century country free of cars but blessed with the anachronisms of electricity and plumbing. The real point of this imaginary country, however, is not simply to flee technology but to seek refuge from grief and trouble. Initially, Andorra seems like just such a place to the wealthy American protagonist of Mr. Cameron's novel.
ajouté par VivienneR | modifierNew York Times
 
Concealing a dark fable about the transcendent power of the imagination within a slyly ironic tale about a man of refinement and vague intention traveling to a tiny European nation, Cameron's third novel (after The Weekend) displays his gift for language and narrative hijinks in fullest flower. The narrator, Alexander Fox, ""compelled by circumstances to begin my life again in some new place,"" arrives by train in La Plata, the sun-splashed, oddly desolate, Monte Carlo-like capital of Andorra. He quickly becomes the cynosure of two contrasting La Plata families: that of neurotic Australian Ricky Dent, always accompanied by her large dog, Dino, who falls in love with Fox--as does her husband, a troubled bisexual composer also named Ricky Dent; and that of kayaking La Plata doyenne Sophonsobia Quay, whose uncle Roderick leases his home to Fox, and who seeks to marry Fox off to her waifish daughter, Jean. We gradually learn that Fox, a former bookseller and architect, is fleeing a tragedy involving the death of his American wife and daughter. When he is implicated in a series of murders in Andorra and his passport is confiscated by the police, he is forced to flee the country. Fox, whose evasive speech and manners begin to follow a foxy pattern of self-delusion and caprice, is an extremely unreliable narrator. His Andorra, unlike the actual nation, is on the ocean. La Plata, a paradisial yet haunted landscape of dopplegangers and repetitions, increasingly appears to be little more than a projection of his own inner life. There's a delicate poignancy to this novel and to Cameron's surprising conclusion, as the glittering world of Andorra, which proves a consolation for the terrible reality of Fox's true circumstances, dissolves like a fantastic sandcastle in the face of real life.
ajouté par VivienneR | modifierPublisher's Weekly
 

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Jaren geleden las ik een boek dat in Andorra speelde en daaruit kreeg ik een indruk van het land die me bijbleef, dus toen ik door omstandigheden gedwongen elders een nieuw leven moest beginnen, wist ik onmiddellijk waar ik heen wilde.
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For mysterious reasons, a man forsakes his American life and arrives in a strange country calledAndorra. He settles into the grand--and only--hotel in its seaside capital, and gradually makes the aquaintance of this tiny city's most prominent residents: the ancient Mrs. Reinhardt, who has a lifetime lease on the penthouse in the hotel; Sophonsobia Quay, the kayaking matriarch of an Andorran dynasty; and the Ricky Dents, an Australian couple who share a first name, a gigantic dog, and a volatile secret. As the stranger reveals himself to his new friends, and becomes entangled in their lives, the mystery of his own origin deepens. What is he hiding, and why? And when a mutilated dead body appears in the harbor, everyone is a suspect, including our narrator. Part thriller, part comedy of manners, part surrealistic dream,Andorra is "a work of remarkable and sustained invention and imagination . . . a nearly perfect book" (Robert Drake,The Philadelphia Inquirer).

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