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Chargement... Hamnet (original 2020; édition 2021)par Maggie O'Farrell (Auteur)
Information sur l'oeuvreHamnet par Maggie O'Farrell (2020)
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Little enough do we know about the Bard, William Shakespeare, but even less are we privy to in the lives of his most common family. A scant note about his father being an Alderman, the age gap with his wife, and the births of three children at Stratford is all that populates the historical eulogy of the Western world’s most famous writer. And yet his myth looms large centuries after his death, tempting researchers, writers, and enthusiasts to plumb the quilling depths to embellish the Elizabethan era in search of a lifelike Shakespearean family that comes off the page (and stage). O’Farrell may not be the first to be intrigued by the historical potential of the Bard, but she is one of the few who focuses the story away from its most famous player and brings to life the mysterious wife, his forebears, and the children who carried on his name. The story purports to be about Hamnet and Judith (being titled simply for the son who may have inspired Shakespeare’s most well-known play), but the whole family was so uniquely wrought that the story transcended my expectations entirely. Agnes was an easy favourite in the tale, as she plays the part of the surprisingly witchy girlfriend and matures into a woman who stands outside her time period alongside the husband who must leave their small town for London to forge the path that will bring him fame (and more importantly happiness). The pair are unexpected and illbegot according to the town, but their story is one that plays quietly towards Shakespeare’s own themes about troubled families, star-crossed lovers, and the risks one must take to forge a life. As other have remarked, reading this book during the time of Covid 19 gives it an immediacy it couldn't have claimed in 'normal' times. This is story of a family, and how they cope with the death of one of its members, 11 year old twin Hamnet. It's particularly the story of Agnes, mother to Hamnet and wife of the man who's never mentioned by name, Shakespeare: and largely told by alternating the narrative between the time of Agnes' courtship, and the period during which their three children begin to grow, and Shakespeare moves to London. Reading the book, I was immersed in understanding the day-to-day business of bringing up an extended family, of small town life, and later, when Hamnet dies of the plague, of grief the which affects the characters in different ways. I relished the side-stories - understanding how the plague came to Europe for instance. This is an involving story of love and loss which commanded my complete involvement while I was reading it. aucune critique | ajouter une critique
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Women's prize for fiction 2020 Un jour d'été 1596, dans la campagne anglaise, une petite fille tombe gravement malade. Son frère jumeau, Hamnet, part chercher de l'aide car aucun de leurs parents n'est à la maison... Agnes, leur mère, n'est pourtant pas loin, en train de cueillir des herbes médicinales dans les champs alentour ; leur père est à Londres pour son travail ; tous deux inconscients de cette maladie, de cette ombre qui plane sur leur famille et menace de tout engloutir. Porté par une écriture d'une beauté inouïe, ce nouveau roman de Maggie O'Farrell est la bouleversante histoire d'un frère et d'une sœur unis par un lien indéfectible, celle d'un couple atypique marqué par un deuil impossible. C'est aussi l'histoire d'une maladie " pestilentielle " qui se diffuse sur tout le continent. Mais c'est avant tout une magnifique histoire d'amour et le tendre portrait d'un petit garçon oublié par l'Histoire, qui inspira pourtant à son père, William Shakespeare, sa pièce la plus célèbre. Livre de l'année 2020 Librairies Waterstones Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)823.92Literature English English fiction Modern Period 2000-Classification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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This is a brilliantly, lovingly written book.
It is so emotional with quiet yet powerful, lyrically written words.
The writing seems ‘to transport’ one to the late 1500s in England. I was completely
caught up in the day-to-day currents of the the town and its inhabitants. So historically
and culturally accurate.
Hamnet “is a luminous portrait of a marriage, of a family ravaged by grief, and a boy
whose name was given to one of the most celebrated plays of all time.”
***** I am so glad I read this book. ( )