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Chargement... The Lacuna: A Novel (édition 2009)par Barbara Kingsolver
Information sur l'oeuvreUn autre monde par Barbara Kingsolver
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Kingsolver, at the top of her craft, builds pyramids of language and scenic highways through mountains of facts, while plotting a mostly tight course through the fictional premises that convey her writing’s social conscience. In this book, pacifism, social justice, and free expression are the standards she shoulders. “The Lacuna” can be enjoyed sheerly for the music of its passages on nature, archaeology, food and friendship; or for its portraits of real and invented people; or for its harmonious choir of voices. But the fuller value of Kingsolver’s novel lies in its call to conscience and connection. Barbara Kingsolver's new novel, "The Lacuna," is the most mature and ambitious one she's written during her celebrated 20-year career, but it's also her most demanding. Spanning three decades, the story comes to us as a collection of diary entries and memoir, punctuated by archivist's notes, newspaper articles, letters, book reviews and congressional transcripts involving some of the 20th century's most radical figures. The sweetness that leavened "The Bean Trees" and "Animal Dreams" has been burned away, and the lurid melodrama that enlivened "The Poisonwood Bible" has been replaced by the cool realism of a narrator who feels permanently alienated from the world. A serious problem with The Lacuna is telegraphed in its striking title. "Lacuna" refers to a gap or something that's absent. The motif of the crucial missing piece runs throughout the novel, but the thing unintentionally missing here is an engaging main character. Our hero, Harrison Shepherd, is an accidental onlooker to history buffeted by other people's plans and passions. Narrated in the form of letters, diary entries and newspaper clippings, the novel takes a while to get going, but once it does, it achieves a rare dramatic power that reaches its emotional peak when Harrison wittily and eloquently defends himself before the House Un-American Activities Committee (on the panel is a young Dick Nixon). Employed by the American imagination, is how one character describes Harrison, a term that could apply equally to Kingsolver as she masterfully resurrects a dark period in American history with the assured hand of a true literary artist. Appartient à la série éditorialePrix et récompensesDistinctions
Né aux Etats-Unis mais élevé dans le Mexico des années 1930, H. Shepherd ne trouvera jamais de réel foyer au cours de son odyssée. Afin de garder une trace de ce qu'il est, il écrit son journal intime. A travers cette quête d'identité, c'est à un voyage épique au coeur du XXe siècle que convie l'auteure, de Mexico à l'Amérique de Roosevelt et de Hoover en plein maccarthysme. 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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Un bien beau livre, une bien belle histoire. J'ai eu parfois l'impression que le déroulement était assez artificiel - ce garçon fait beaucoup de rencontres plus ou moins probables - mais au final ce n'est pas vraiment gênant, si on se laisse porter par l'histoire, par la narration du héros, qu'importe la vraisemblance.
J'ai également apprécié le rythme du livre: oser des discontinuités, oser des coupures, oser une certaine frustration pour le lecteur qui ne saura pas TOUT, hé ben, fallait oser. ( )