Clique em uma foto para ir ao Google Livros
Carregando... Fair Play (1989)de Tove Jansson
Carregando...
Registre-se no LibraryThing tpara descobrir se gostará deste livro. Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. A series of vignettes, tied loosely together by the twin threads of love and work, the work being that of an artist. Tove is the perfect writer for this kind of material, her light touch precisely what is needed. ( ) I read this entire book in one sitting, in the waiting room at the oral surgeon for my oldest kid (wisdom teeth) and it was perfection. (The book. Not the waiting room.) An absolute delight. Everything I wanted and then some. Do you want thoughts on how to fill a day, how to live a life, how to balance the creative and emotional needs of two people who have been life partners for decades? Do you want depctiions of the kind of relationship where you can have a circular argument about unresolved issues from years ago that goes nowhere, but also understand each other so well that you can silently arrange to salve unexpressed disappointments for the other? Do you want women who take their art, their careers, their legacies seriously? Do you want boats and islands and attics that connect the artist lofts and homes of the two? Do you want a series of vignettes that depicts a relationship that closely resembles the author's own? All depicted with a hand so light and matter of fact that it almost hides how skilled it all is? This might be my new favorite Tove Jansson. It was so wonderful. I am still reeling. These stories feel like they've been earned - you can't just set out to write something as understated, wise and sincere without the requisite experience. Jansson's storytelling is elegantly spare, and each tale conveys what feels like a lifetime's detail, encapsulated in a small vignette of a few pages. It is as if Jansson is sketching enormous, imposing landscapes in just a few strokes. The theme of the book is the relationship between Mari (Jansson's proxy) and Jonna another artist - both around 70 years old - in all its fractious, stubborn argumentative devotion. They have clearly been together so long that each manages the other like one would an old car (or, more appropriately, an old boat), of which you know all that idiosyncrasies and annoyances and how to cope with them, and that, additionally, you dearly love. Contentment may be the word, but without any connotation of "settling". Their stories are told in tiny vignettes, illustrating many varied aspects of their diverse life together. It's similar in that regard to The Summer Book, although personally I preferred this. In fact I started it again the moment I finished it, the first time I have done that with a prose novel, but, at just 100 pages, I was left wanting more. A beautiful little book. This is a beautiful story about two people in late middle age and how they navigate their relationship and how their quirks and foibles do and don't threaten their relationship. It is clearly a story but it has very little plot, or at least the plot is not center stage. In a series of 4-6 page vignettes we come to know them as vividly drawn individuals and we experience (without being TOLD) how they understand themselves and each other: how they argue, how they support and rescue each other, how they protect each other. The prose is simple. This is a slim, evocative excursion into a relationship that has weathered years and developed depth. Highly recommended. I read her "The Summer Book" when I was a young adult and remembered it as a book of yearning, so I wanted to read more about Jansson's life. (I followed that book long ago with one of the Moomintroll books & just thought it foolish.) Reading this collection of possibly autobiographical stories was a mixed experience. Some of them showed the women's lives to be so placid and blase, so full of habitual patterns, that I couldn't understand them. In other stories we can see how compromises, acceptance, and tolerance were important for the women to keep their friendship along with being true to their own natures. I particularly liked "Stars", in which Mari looks forward to an autumn camping trip, and "Viktoria" which gives a glimpse at the skills needed to live on the island, and both of those stories show the love held for her family of origin. A quote from "Viktoria" is a lesson I've noticed also: "When was it we realized we couldn't do it anymore?...it was actually interesting, not being strong enough to lift and roll anymore. It gave me ideas, you know--completely new ideas. About lifting, leverage, balance, angles of fall, about trying to use logic." (p.87)
Fair Play beschrijft de bijna gewone, dagelijkse bezigheden en gesprekken van de twee dames. Juist door de “gewoonheid” van de gebeurtenissen geeft Jansson een prachtige inkijk in de intimiteit van de relatie. Ook de stilte van het samenzijn, van de verbinding tussen twee mensen die elkaar heel goed kennen en waartussen diepe genegenheid bestaat – “daar waar geen woorden nodig zijn” – komt sterk naar voren. Dat laatste wordt nog versterkt, doordat een deel van het leven van de dames zich op een eiland afspeelt…lees verder > Pertence à série publicadaEstá contido emPrêmiosNotable Lists
Fiction.
Literature.
HTML: Fair Play is the type of love story that is rarely told, a revelatory depiction of contentment, hard-won and exhilarating. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
Current DiscussionsNenhum(a)Capas populares
Google Books — Carregando... GênerosClassificação decimal de Dewey (CDD)839.7374Literature German and related languages Other Germanic literatures Swedish literature Swedish fiction 1900-1999 1945-1999Classificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos E.U.A. (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:
É você?Torne-se um autor do LibraryThing. |