Cliquer sur une vignette pour aller sur Google Books.
Chargement... Inside Story: A novelpar Martin Amis
Chargement...
Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. Martin Amis explora experiencias vividas, evoca a personas importantes para él y reflexiona sobre la escritura como el arte de contar y dar sentido a las historias. ¿Estamos ante unas memorias noveladas? ¿Ante una novela basada en episodios de la propia vida? ¿Ante un ensayo sobre el poder de la literatura? ¿Ante el repaso a una carrera literaria y una vida? Este ambicioso proyecto, escrito sin red y sin cortapisas, es todo esto y unas cuantas cosas más. Desfilan por estas páginas tres figuras fundamentales para el autor como persona y como escritor: el mentor Saul Bellow en sus últimos años de vida, el amigo y compañero de tantas andanzas Christopher Hitchens enfrentado a su temprana muerte, y el solitario, huraño y genial Philip Larkin cuya poesÃa ha acompañado siempre a Amis. Asoman además otros escritores, entre ellos el padre Kingsley, y también la hermana que falleció demasiado pronto por problemas con el alcohol, y los endiablados amorÃos de juventud, y la vida familiar con la esposa e hijas, Inglaterra y Estados Unidos, el terrorismo, el antisemitismo y sobre todo la palabra, la literatura... I heard a long radio interview with Amis a few months ago, and was left with the impression that this was a biography of his friendship with Christopher Hitchins; its not that. Its really a meditation on death and endings, that can be broadly cut into five overlapping pieces. He focuses on three end-of-life stories; that of Hitchens, a life that finishes too soon but at least was lived to the fullest, that of Philip Larkin, a life that ends at a similar age to Hitchens, but, Amis suggests, was hardly lived, and that of Saul Bellow, a life both long and fulfilled. In addition, there is a long meditation - and this, I suppose, would be the "novel" component - on his (fictional?) relationship with a fictional girlfriend. And finally, various pieces of advice on the art of writing. These are actually pretty useful - I am aiming for Elegant Variation within this short review - but sit oddly within the overall structure But the structure is odd anyway. If you call what looks like a memoir, or mainly a memoir, a "novel", but yet a novel peopled by Amis' well known circle of friends, family and cronies, you are going to get questions about what is real and what is not. I think Amis is perfectly within his rights to fictionalise, if indeed he has, conversations, anecdotes and scandals about that circle, especially now that they are gone. After all, how would we know, and its the writing that matters or at least contains its own truths. Similarly, if he wants to write a fantasy of an ex girlfriend, based on amalgam of experiences, we shouldn't bother ourselves trying to work out who is who and what happened and what did not. But its so tempting..... Its not necessary to be familiar with the three writers he profiles; I have read no Bellow, little Larkin, but quite a lot of Hitchins. As might be expected, Hitchins' treatment is hagiographic, when realistically, his support of the Iraq War wore off much of his lustre and revealed him less as a contrarian than an attention seeker. Bellow is presented as the greatest modern American writer - someone who seemed to write "only for me" and I am in no position not to accept this. But Larkin is subject to a meanspirited attack for his lack of ability to have, what seem to Amis anyway, to be adequate sexual or emotional relationships, with his long deceased girlfriends pilloried as well. Which may well be true, but what's the point exactly? In addition we get interesting diversions into Israel, Judaism, Fatherhood, his father and step mother, Nazi Germany, Nabokov and American culture. But mostly its about death and ending, Because you see, Amis now feels his own end nigh. This, he informs us, will be his last long piece of fiction. If it proves to be so, its a good note on which to finish, interestingly written and engrossing yet very self absorbed. aucune critique | ajouter une critique
Appartient à la série éditorialeLlibres Anagrama (90) Prix et récompenses
" La fiction ne connaît nulle loi et sa liberté ne connaît aucune limite. La fiction, c'est la liberté. " Inside Story est une invitation de Martin Amis en personne à parcourir sa vie, mais attention, sous la forme d'un roman s'il vous plaît ! Car d'après le grand provocateur des lettres britanniques, aucun espace n'offre plus de liberté que celui de la fiction. Nous voilà partis pour une grande aventure de vie d'écrivain, de sa genèse à ses temps forts, de ses nombreuses amours à ses mentors, le tout parsemé d'observations et conseils uniques en leur genre. On découvre alors un texte empli d'esprit et de malice qui nous balade dans le temps, les cocasseries, les souvenirs et les émois. Projet littéraire aussi colossal que loufoque, Inside Story est certes une ode à la vie de Martin Amis, mais surtout, une ode à la vie littéraire et à la liberté d'expression la plus totale. L'autofiction n'aura jamais été aussi bousculée. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
Discussion en coursAucunCouvertures populaires
Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)823.914Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1945-1999Classification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
Est-ce vous ?Devenez un(e) auteur LibraryThing. |
https://otearai.blogspot.com/2023/10/watashi-wa-amis-san-o-yomimasu.html
https://otearai.blogspot.com/2023/12/subarashi-utsukushi-sa.html