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Chargement... Fantômes et Cie (1991)par Robertson Davies
rest, peace, fiction (12) Chargement...
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[2 - 93-94] Family History. Wales/as. Film festival/film device narration. Dead author contrivance. Connor Gilmartin, director de la sección de espectáculos de un periódico de Toronto, encuentra a su mujer en la cama con el crítico del mismo diario. El amante lo asesina, pero el fantasma de Connor perseguirá a su homicida hasta un importante festival de cine que tiene que cubrir. Mientras el crítico se esfuerza en analizar las películas que proyectan, el espectro de Gilmartin deviene espectador privilegiado de unas sesiones fantasmales en las que visiona films alucinantes sobre la historia de su propia familia. De algún modo, la realidad y la ficción terminarán por confundirse. Con su tono más humorístico, Robertson Davies, el mejor novelista canadiense del siglo xx, nos ofrece el fantástico retrato de un hombre cuya vida se ve repentinamente truncada, pero que renace a otro tipo de existencia mucho más lúcida, y libre. En esta magnífica novela, la aventura y la reflexión se alternan en una serie de episodios tan hilarantes como, por qué no, deliciosamente creíbles. The novel begins with the death of its narrator, Connor Gilmartin, who walks in on his wife and her lover, and gets coshed with a weighted walking stick for his indiscretion. Adding insult to injury, the lover was a newspaper colleague Gil contemptuously referred to as "the Sniffer", a man seemingly possessed of no personal magnetism or uncommon sexual appeal whatsoever. Furthermore, as the murder is officially attributed to an unidentified intruder, the Sniffer gets away with it. Gil finds himself in an odd sort of limbo in which he must accompany his murderer to a film festival for several days, viewing a rather different sort of cinema than the classics being shown to the Sniffer and everyone else. As generations of family history unfold on the screen, both Gil and the reader learn a great deal about American and Canadian history that aren't well-covered in the textbooks. He finds himself to be descended from Loyalists who fled the colonies of North America to settle in Canada at the time of the American Revolution. This works well as straight historical fiction, and if Davies had left out the frame he still would have had a fine novel. But naturally, the point of all this is for Gil to come to a fuller understanding of who he was, and what meaning his life may have had. At one point, Gil observes "It is merciful of Whatever or Whoever is directing my existence at this moment to show the past as a work of art, for it was as a work of art that I tried to understand life, while I had life, and much of my indignation at the manner of my death is its want of artistic form, dimension, emotional weight, dignity."
En près de quatre cents pages, Robertson Davies traverse deux siècles d'une Histoire mouvementée, qui prend parfois des allures de western. Le romancier américain John Irving espère qu'on décernera le prix Nobel à ce fringant octogénaire, encore trop méconnu en France. "Mr. Davies is a tremendously enticing storyteller, whether his characters are cajoling in Welsh brogue or portaging a canoe through the northern wilderness ..." Appartient à la sériePrix et récompenses
Connor Gilmartin's inauspicious, but much beloved, mortal life comes to an untimely end when he discovers his wife in bed with one of his more ludicrous associates, Randall Allard Going. Death becomes a bit complicated when Gilmartin's out-of-body experience stays an out-of-body experience. Enraged at being so unceremoniously cut down, he avenges himself against his now panic-stricken murderer. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Classification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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