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Einband grossA Blessed Child
ISBN/GTIN

A Blessed Child

E-BookEPUBDRM AdobeE-Book
256 Seiten
Englisch
Pan Macmillanerschienen am22.03.2012
Every summer throughout their childhood, Erika, Molly and Laura, half-sisters by different mothers, gather on the magical Baltic island of Hammarsö to stay with their charismatic father, Isak. Until one year when a childhood betrayal causes an incident of such senseless cruelty that it alters forever each sister's life. Twenty-five years later, the three women return to the island to see their father, and finally confront the spectre that has continued to haunt them.



'A Blessed Child is like a fine, long evening of light. There are all sorts of colours on the horizon, and even when the darkness becomes visible, there is still a place to turn to. This is a book for fathers and daughters, and for anyone who's beguiled by the country of family. The language is clear and runs deep. The story is profound and touching. Together, they announce another great story-telling feat by Linn Ullmann. She reminds me of Berger, or Acimna, of Tóibín: no greater praise'



Colum McCann



'Ullmann wants us to be patient as she is patient, and it's worth it; for the accomplished writing and to spend time on Hammarsö, which is the greatest character in this book; a fascinating island with its African landscape, its Norse customs, its blood-fat ticks and wild strawberries, its late-blooming lilac and rumours of bears'



Guardian



'Abounding in the inner correspondences usually associated with lyric poetry - resonant changes are rung on 400-million-year old rocks, birds, ticks, a boy running, Prospero and Caliban - A Blessed Child shows Ullmann asserting the indestructibility of the imagination, whether a social outcast's or a trapped insider's'



TLS



'First affecting, then alarming, sometimes acerbically comic, A Blessed Child has an exhilarating candour and clarity in its grasp of family, period and place'



Boyd Tonkin, Independent
mehr
Verfügbare Formate
TaschenbuchKartoniert, Paperback
EUR17,50
E-BookEPUBDRM AdobeE-Book
EUR5,49
E-BookEPUBDRM AdobeE-Book
EUR7,49

Produkt

KlappentextEvery summer throughout their childhood, Erika, Molly and Laura, half-sisters by different mothers, gather on the magical Baltic island of Hammarsö to stay with their charismatic father, Isak. Until one year when a childhood betrayal causes an incident of such senseless cruelty that it alters forever each sister's life. Twenty-five years later, the three women return to the island to see their father, and finally confront the spectre that has continued to haunt them.



'A Blessed Child is like a fine, long evening of light. There are all sorts of colours on the horizon, and even when the darkness becomes visible, there is still a place to turn to. This is a book for fathers and daughters, and for anyone who's beguiled by the country of family. The language is clear and runs deep. The story is profound and touching. Together, they announce another great story-telling feat by Linn Ullmann. She reminds me of Berger, or Acimna, of Tóibín: no greater praise'



Colum McCann



'Ullmann wants us to be patient as she is patient, and it's worth it; for the accomplished writing and to spend time on Hammarsö, which is the greatest character in this book; a fascinating island with its African landscape, its Norse customs, its blood-fat ticks and wild strawberries, its late-blooming lilac and rumours of bears'



Guardian



'Abounding in the inner correspondences usually associated with lyric poetry - resonant changes are rung on 400-million-year old rocks, birds, ticks, a boy running, Prospero and Caliban - A Blessed Child shows Ullmann asserting the indestructibility of the imagination, whether a social outcast's or a trapped insider's'



TLS



'First affecting, then alarming, sometimes acerbically comic, A Blessed Child has an exhilarating candour and clarity in its grasp of family, period and place'



Boyd Tonkin, Independent
Details
Weitere ISBN/GTIN9780330479110
ProduktartE-Book
EinbandartE-Book
FormatEPUB
Format HinweisDRM Adobe
Erscheinungsjahr2012
Erscheinungsdatum22.03.2012
Seiten256 Seiten
SpracheEnglisch
Dateigrösse471 Kbytes
Artikel-Nr.1272061
Rubriken
Genre9200

Inhalt/Kritik

Kritik
"Ullmann's sentences...are a pleasure to read and her deft modern sensibility is winning."--"The New York Times Book Review" "Linn Ullmann's A Blessed Child is a like a fine, long evening of light. There are all sorts of colors on the horizon, and even when the darkness becomes visible, there is still a place to turn to. This is a book for fathers and daughters, and for anyone who's beguiled by the country of family. The language is clear and runs deep. The story is profound and touching. Together, they announce another great story telling feat by Linn Ullmann. She reminds me of Berger, of Aciman, of Toibin: no greater praise."--Colum McCann, author of "Zoli: A Novel" "A world-famous octogenarian father approaching death, three daughters, each of a different mother, a windswept island in the Baltic: of these, of fragments of recollection, and of a childhood summer when an event of unimaginable cruelty changed everything, Linn Ullmann has woven a memory novel of haunting power and grace."--Honor Moore, author of "The Bishop's Daughter" "A hauntingly beautiful novel of family ties, A Blessed Child takes on what it means to be old, what it means to have loved selfishly, deeply and - equally - to no longer love. Linn Ullmann has crafted an inescapably evocative novel about memory, about childhood, about the movement of life, the nature of grief and the enormous mystery of love."--A.M. Homes, author of "The Mistress's Daughter" "A Blessed Child is a tour de force of, for want of a better way of putting it, narrative memory. In this nuanced and subtle and smart novel, the past and its tragedies are supervening over the present and its tragedies in wait, andeven the living can seem to inhabit a kind of timeless island of familial memory. The folding of time upon time upon time, however complexly difficult for the writer to achieve, creates an effect that is sure and beautiful. This is a novel about how people think, and about the things we think, and about how, finally, the manner and content of our thoughts may very well be pretty much who we are."--Donald Antrim, author of "The Afterlife: A Memoir" "A novel of stark beauty that leaves moral issues tantalizingly open."--"Kirkus Reviews"mehr