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L'étreinte du poisson (1999)

par Jim Crace

Autres auteurs: Voir la section autres auteur(e)s.

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1,5534911,524 (3.78)95
The author ponders the redemptive power of secular love in this novel. Their bodies had expired, but anyone looking at them could see that Joseph and Celice were still devoted, the couple seemed to have achieved a peace the world denies, a period of grace, defying even murder. They were still man and wife, quietly resting, dead but not yet departed… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 95 mentions

Affichage de 1-5 de 49 (suivant | tout afficher)
(4) Oh dear. This was a haunting short novel that took me much longer to read than it should have. A pair of married zoologists take the day off from work to go for a hike and picnic in the dunes along the stretch of coast where they first met 30 years previous. It is not a spoiler to say they are brutally murdered and left to rot in the dunes -- not found for many days. The natural world goes about decomposing them. Because, well, that is what being dead is all about. Not gates of heaven or eternal bliss is the author's underlying thematic point. He describes the act of dying and the macabre life of corpses in beautiful, grandiose, and lyrical language. It is disturbing to say the least.

This is a powerful book. It vacillates between the day they first met, which ironically includes the death of their classmate; their present day condition on the dunes; and their taciturn rebellious young adult daughter's dawning discovery of her parents death. Crace fills the novel with details that are specific to Joseph and Celice but surely must be real in some way. Patterns of hair, moles, body smells and indignities that one usually just tosses around in one's subconscious. It is almost terrifying as it speaks the unvarnished truth. But is there grace in there somewhere? I think so.

I wonder if I am underrating the novel at 4 stars. Parts were stunning, but parts were a bit boring. I found some parts such as the end with the prolonged description of the lissom grasses, and some of the details of Syl's life to be overblown. And then there were some things that were left un-explored like the couple's relationship to parenting and their daughter. All in all, I am left moved and unsettled by this novel. I have never read anything quite like it, but it is surely not for everyone. ( )
  jhowell | Jan 14, 2022 |
Gets 4 stars for the language and for the subject matter and characterisation. Also a great sense of place, which is strange because for a long time I thought it was America yet we find out the one place it is not is USA. So I am left with feeling I know the place well yet have no idea where on the planet it is! ( )
  Ma_Washigeri | Jan 23, 2021 |
Interesting read. The author kept the reader distanced from any real connection to the couple. I would have been totally okay without the gruesome details of decay and stages of insect/animal consumption. I did enjoy the transition to the living couple and their story. ( )
  3CatMom | Dec 28, 2020 |
Deeply original and a deeply affecting novel. Jim Crace gets under the skin of life and views it from a unique angle. A poetic writer. ( )
  kazzer2u | Jul 21, 2020 |
Hmmm, if reading about rather unfortunate middle-aged British zoologists rotting naked on a beach is your idea of a good time, then this book is right up your alley. LOL. Ok, so I'm oversimplifying a bit but the characters don't evoke sympathy from me. The wife is shallow, selfish and cold and the husband is ugly, lacking self-esteem and boring. They die. No one really even cares. They have no close friends and their icy daughter is almost glad b/c now she has an indentity as "the dead couple's daughter." They are decomposing on the beach and we know this through the again, again, again, again scientific descriptions of flesh drying, maggots laying eggs, bacteria munching etc. ( )
  gakgakg | May 28, 2020 |
Affichage de 1-5 de 49 (suivant | tout afficher)
Yet for all the "experimental" feel that he imparts to his work, the fact is that, to say it again, Crace is working firmly within the mainstream of English fiction, and a good thing that is, for English fiction, at least. A solid yet always adventurous writer, he has done much to revitalize a tradition in danger of becoming moribund.
ajouté par jburlinson | modifierNew York Review of Books, John Banville (payer le site) (Apr 13, 2000)
 
Some Buddhist monks practise the contemplation of decaying corpses, breathing in the smell and minutely observing every change. It is considered an advanced form of meditation. Jim Crace's Being Dead is a kind of literary equivalent of this.

Disturbed in the act of love and murdered by a deranged stranger with a rock, Joseph and Celice, a married couple in their 50s, lie naked in a remote spot amongst the singing sand dunes of Baritone Bay. Undiscovered they decompose for six days in the changeable coastal weather. This book, we are told, will be a "quivering," the old practice of waking the dead by shaking the house with grief before recalling the lives of those departed. The difference is that this is now, there is no god and "there's nothing after death for Joseph and Celice but 'death and nothing after'." ... From bloody violence to the morgue, we are spared nothing of these deaths and thereby see our own. The book is a modern memento mori.
ajouté par Cynfelyn | modifierThe Guardian, Carol Birch (Sep 18, 1999)
 

» Ajouter d'autres auteur(e)s (5 possibles)

Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Crace, Jimauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Ahlers, WalterÜbersetzerauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
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          Oh, sure!
It's Putrefaction and Manure
And unrelenting Rot, Rot, Rot
As you regress, from Zoo. to Bot.
I'll Grieve, of course,
Departing wife,
Though Grieving's never
Lengthened Life
Or coaxed a single extra Breath
Out of a Body touched by Death

'The Biologist's Valediction to his Wife'
from Offcuts by Sherwin Stephens
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For old times' sake, the doctors of zoology had driven out of town that Tuesday afternoon to make a final visit to the singing salt dunes at Baritone Bay.
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The author ponders the redemptive power of secular love in this novel. Their bodies had expired, but anyone looking at them could see that Joseph and Celice were still devoted, the couple seemed to have achieved a peace the world denies, a period of grace, defying even murder. They were still man and wife, quietly resting, dead but not yet departed

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