Livros aleatórios da biblioteca de svoboda
THE GOOD WAR AN ORAL HISTORY OF WORLD WAR TWO de Studs Terkel
Open to the Public: New & Collected Stories de Muriel Spark
Whites Stories by Norman Rush de Norman Rush
The Lover de Marguerite Duras
In Case We're Separated: Connected Stories de Alice Mattison
Nightwork: Stories de Christine Schutt
Mere Mortals: Poems (Contemporary Poetry Series) de Terese Svoboda
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ColeçõesSua biblioteca (70)
Resenhas1 resenha
Tagsexperimental fiction (7), russian (1), Black Arts (1), experimental plays (1), British (1), memoir (1), poetry (1), prose poetry (1), occupations (1), southern (1) — ver todas as tags
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Sobre mimI've just had my 11th book published--Weapons Grade, my fifth book of poetry. PW said "Svoboda’s poems are as haunting as they are funny, as pleasurable as they are powerful." The paperback of Trailer Girl and Other Stories is due out in October 2009, Pirate Talk or Mermelade in 2010 and Bohemian Girl in 2011.
Sobre a minha bibliotecaIt's much larger but I'm so busy getting all these books out I haven't had time to catalogue.
Página pessoalhttp://teresesvoboda.com
Nome verdadeiroTerese Svoboda
LocalizaçãoNYC
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http://www.librarything.com/profile/svoboda (perfil)
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/svoboda (Biblioteca)
Conhecimento CompartilhadoSéries (2), Prêmios (62), Personagens (41), Lugares (23)
Membro desdeJul 13, 2007
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svoboda avaliado, resenhado, adicionado:An African in Greenland de Tété-Michel Kpomassie (ler resenha) |





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Karel Horák (Jan Hartl) and Božena Horáková (Veronika Žilková) are a childless couple and for medical reasons are doomed to remain so. While on vacation with their neighbors at a house in the country, Karel decides to buy the house at the suggestion of his neighbor. When he is fixing up the house, he digs up a tree stump that looks vaguely like a baby. He spends the rest of the evening cleaning it up and then presents it to his wife. She names the stump Otík and starts to treat it like a real baby. She then works out a plan to fake her pregnancy and becoming more and more impatient she speeds up the process and 'gives birth' one month early.
Otík comes alive and has an insatiable appetite. Alžbětka (Kristina Adamcová), the neighbor's daughter, who has been suspicious all along, when she reads the fairy tale about Otesánek, the truth sets in for her. Meanwhile little Otík has been just eating and growing. At one point he eats some of Božena's hair, and another day she returns home to find that Otík has eaten their cat. Karel and his wife are at odds with Karel pushing for killing the thing and Božena defending it as their child. The baby later consumes a postal worker (Gustav Vondráček) and then a social worker (Jitka Smutná).
escrito por lstover, às 6:33 pm (EST) , Nov 3, 2009
"Supposing a tree fell down, Pooh, when we were underneath it?"
"Supposing it didn't" said Pooh after careful thought!
A.A Milne Winnie the Pooh
escrito por theoldman, às 8:52 am (EST) , Aug 27, 2009
I'm glad you saw the squib in the Japan Times. I meant to send you a message about it, but . . . one thing and another.
Best,
David
escrito por dcozy, às 1:52 am (EST) , Dec 21, 2008
Sorry I haven't replied until now. I hadn't been on LT for quite some time and just now updated my account. I loved Trailer Girl--your work as a poet shines through. And, your book about your uncle sounds fascinating. I order all the fiction for our public library--and because I read/write poetry--order the poetry for our collection. I am definitley asking my colleague who orders the nonfiction to get Black Glasses Like Clark Kent. Thanks for the note!
escrito por bibliofile55, às 8:50 am (EST) , Aug 21, 2008
escrito por dcozy, às 7:59 am (EST) , May 26, 2008
My review of Black Glasses Like Clark Kent appeared Sunday, May 25 in The Japan Times (Tokyo). You can read it on-line here:
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/f...
Thank you very much for the review copy, and for having written such a good book.
Best,
David
escrito por dcozy, às 7:58 am (EST) , May 26, 2008
Best,
escrito por dcozy, às 6:09 pm (EST) , Mar 1, 2008
Your book, Trailer Girl: And Other Stories is an excellent collection of short fiction. Your characters are poignant, gritty and tremendously human. It's wonderful to find you here.
Lisa Haynes
escrito por anoisblue, às 11:39 pm (EST) , Sep 28, 2007
These are my blurbs so far:
Delving into the past, in this wonderful, singularly wry memoir, turns up enough guilt to go around for everyone. And yet, such is the honesty, humor and literary skill of Terese Svoboda that she manages to turn this sad story into a triumph of compassion and insight.
- Phillip Lopate, author of "The Art of the Personal Essay"
"Few books over the past decade have surprised and moved me as much as Terese Svoboda’s Black Glasses Like Clark Kent. A family romance in the guise of a biography and memoir, this is also a mystery in the spirit of writers as various as Dashiell Hammett and Sigmund Freud, Patricia Highsmith and D. W. Winnicott. Black Glasses is, as Svoboda intimates, a 'triptych,' a three-story house that spans World War II Japan and contemporary America, creating imaginative space for the intricate lives of her uncle and cousin as well as her own. Resourceful, elegantly phrased, angry, stubborn, fierce, beautiful, and ultimately devastating— I’m honored and pleased to award the Graywolf Nonfiction Prize to Terese Svoboda's Black Glasses Like Clark Kent." Robert Polito, author of "Crime Novels."
"When Teresa Svoboda agrees to write the war story of her uncle, who served
in the American military police in Japan in the aftermath of World War II,
she enters a nightmarish world of secrets and irretrievable truths.
Lucid, self-knowing and artful, her memoir about getting the story will
resonate for readers of every generation."
Alice Kaplan, author of "The Interpreter"
escrito por svoboda, às 9:11 am (EST) , Sep 10, 2007
Best,
escrito por dcozy, às 9:41 pm (EST) , Jul 16, 2007