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Carregando... Aracoelide Elsa Morante
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Registre-se no LibraryThing tpara descobrir se gostará deste livro. Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. Esta resenha foi escrita no âmbito dos Primeiros Resenhistas do LibraryThing. This novel is very detailed in its writing and description of people and places...thus it moved too slow for me. I hope that perhaps I'll find a time when I can take my time with the story. I had high hopes for the book, but my hectic life and need to read things quickly submarined those hopes."This one, unlike the other, was not the herald of weeping, but certain individuals are more inclined to weep for love than death." This is the final sentence of this amazing novel. The reader is lured into a tale of the cataclysmic meeting of past and present, of a psychopathic love of son for mother, of the despair of lonliness, and of a single love beginning in the womb and coming to rest in the mythic El Almedral, where the mother's life began. Cryptic enough? Reading this novel is like participating in a lifelong fever dream which is inhabited with deep fears, monomaniacal love, and the depths of despair. The writing is magnificent and emotionally descriptive to a degree I have rarely seen. This is a translation that uses the highest level of vocabulary in English. I wish I read Italian!! The intensity of the protagonist can be a bit overwhelming, but what the heck. It is an Italian novel after all, isn't it? (I write that with the greatest affection!) sem resenhas | adicionar uma resenha
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"The first time I read Aracoeli, I found it almost pointlessly disturbing and shocking. On rereading it, I still found it disturbing and shocking, but I have also grown to admire it--perhaps because it is so dark and resists any attempt to classify it. In writing this novel, Morante may have knowingly sacrificed clarity and logic in order to express her vision of a chaotic world." (Lily Tuck,Woman of Rome: A Life of Elsa Morante) Aracoeli--Elsa Morante's final novel--is the story of an aging man's attempt to recover the past and get his life on track in the process. The Aracoeli of the title is the narrator's deceased mother, who grew up in a small Spanish town before marrying an upper-class Italian navy ensign. The idyllic years she spends with her only son--Manuel, the narrator of the novel--are shattered when she contracts an incurable disease (probably syphilis) and becomes a nymphomaniac. Now, at the age of 43, Manuel, an unattractive, self-loathing, recovering drug addict who works a dead-end job at a small publishing house, decides to travel to her hometown in Spain in order to look for her. Filled with dreams and remembrances the novel creates a Sebaldian landscape of memory out of this painful journey, painting a portrait that is both touching and bleak. Appearing here for the first time in paperback--the hardcover was published in 1984--Aracoeli is an important, and long-neglected, work in Morante's oeuvre. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
Revisores inicias do LibraryThingO livro de Elsa Morante, Aracoeli, estava disponível em LibraryThing Early Reviewers. Current DiscussionsNenhum(a)Capas populares
Google Books — Carregando... GênerosClassificação decimal de Dewey (CDD)853.912Literature Italian Italian fiction 1900- 20th Century 1900-1945Classificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos E.U.A. (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:
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En busca de sus raíces, Manuele decide dejar Milán y aventurarse hasta un pueblo perdido de Almería, de donde procede la familia materna. Este viaje, que imaginó como un reencuentro, pronto se convierte en una pesadilla en la que se difumina la antigua imagen de Araceli y triunfan los fantasmas del narrador. Aparece también su tío, un soldado que combatió en la Guerra Civil, y el padre, un noble piamontés y eterno rival de Manuele, y finalmente se impone el lamento de un hombre que no creció y que prefiere llorar los amores perdidos a las muertes reales.
Oscura y cautivadora,Araceli es la última novela que escribió Elsa Morante, ganadora del Premio Médicis Étranger y considerada por la crítica su testamento literario: una mirada a la España abandonada del desierto almeriense en los estertores del franquismo y uno de los retratos femeninos más desgarradores que haya dado la literatura contemporánea.