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Der rauchende Berg

Geschichten aus Nachkriegsdeutschland

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Hodnotenie knihy

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  • 253 stránok
  • 9 hodin čítania

Viac o knihe

A collection of eleven short stories of occupied Germany where Kay Boyle has spent the last two years, introduced by a longer piece on the trial of the ""Frankfort Butcher"", Heinrich Boab. Both here, and in the stories, the ""true computation is fervently made"" that here, in the German people, is no realization of guilt, no knowledge of guilt. The stories are enormously effective, compassionate, bitter, sharpened by the understated, the unsaid,-and it is in the short story situation (rather than in the novel) that Kay Boyle is particularly gifted. There's the arson revenge of a German child against an American family; a take-off of the Amis in Cabaret, a touching tribute to a soldier, and the little boy he outfits, and a harsh scoring of the occupation's bigger brass; and The Lost and Adam's Tod give a powerful, tacit portrayal of the victims- young and old- of displacement and discrimination... If not keyed to the preferences of her more popular audience, this will carry to her earlier, discriminating following.

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Der rauchende Berg, Kay Boyle

Jazyk
Rok vydania
1991
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Titul
Der rauchende Berg
Podtitul
Geschichten aus Nachkriegsdeutschland
Jazyk
nemecky
Autori
Kay Boyle
Rok vydania
1991
Väzba
pevná
Počet strán
253
ISBN10
3801502481
ISBN13
9783801502485
Série
Pôvodný názov
The smoking mountain
Hodnotenie
5 z 5
Anotácia
A collection of eleven short stories of occupied Germany where Kay Boyle has spent the last two years, introduced by a longer piece on the trial of the ""Frankfort Butcher"", Heinrich Boab. Both here, and in the stories, the ""true computation is fervently made"" that here, in the German people, is no realization of guilt, no knowledge of guilt. The stories are enormously effective, compassionate, bitter, sharpened by the understated, the unsaid,-and it is in the short story situation (rather than in the novel) that Kay Boyle is particularly gifted. There's the arson revenge of a German child against an American family; a take-off of the Amis in Cabaret, a touching tribute to a soldier, and the little boy he outfits, and a harsh scoring of the occupation's bigger brass; and The Lost and Adam's Tod give a powerful, tacit portrayal of the victims- young and old- of displacement and discrimination... If not keyed to the preferences of her more popular audience, this will carry to her earlier, discriminating following.