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Fever (1965)

de Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clézio

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1022264,642 (3.05)28
Translated by Daphne Woodward 'The author's verbal felicity is amazing . . . we come away awed' The New York Times In these nine unforgettable and impressionistic 'tales of little madness', the Nobel Prize-winning author Le Clézio explores how the physical sensations we experience every day can be as strong as feelings of love or hate, with their power to bring chaos to our lives. In 'The Day that Beaumont became Acquainted with his Pain', a man with toothache spends the night seeking ways to disown his throbbing jaw; in 'Fever', Roch finds his mind transported by sunstroke; while in 'A Day of Old Age' little Joseph tries to comprehend the physical suffering of a dying old woman. Set in a timeless, spaceless universe, these experimental and haunting works portray the landscape of the human consciousness with dazzling verbal dexterity and power. Winner if the 2008 Nobel Prize for Literature… (mais)
Adicionado recentemente porTom_Ripley, timwtheov, alo1224, k.lohmy, DanielSTJ, mmbalogh, OrinocoBooks, PaulaMota
Bibliotecas HistóricasEeva-Liisa Manner
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Exibindo 2 de 2
bem escrito, mas de difícil leitura. histórias sem princípio nem fim. ( )
  sylvester_a | May 12, 2009 |
If you really want to know, I'd rather not have been born at all. I find life very tiring. The thing's done now, of course, and I can't alter it. But there will always be this regret at the back of my mind, I shall never quite be able to get rid of it, and it will spoil everything. The thing to do now is to grow old quickly, to eat up the years as fast as possible, looking neither right nor left.

When a book begins with the above lines in the introduction by the author you should immediately know that this will not be a book about hope, about the little wonders of life that make you smile and be happy about being alive on this planet, or about cuddly little bunnies that go hopping in the fields or wildflowers. This is Le Clézio's second novel and I am amazed he stuck around long enough to write more and ultimately win the Nobel instead of walking to the sea and drowning himself.

Nine short stories of people who are tired of life, dead within, or just plain dying.

Like the two Le Clézio books I read earlier, this is a book that just goes on and on and on about the earth's decay, about time and death, about the overbearing sun.

The sun struck down vertically on his skull and on the ground. One seemed to hear the sound of its shafts, and they drove into the soil and stuck there, upright, making patches of tall, stiff grass. Paoli advanced through them, without parting them, without feeling them; but he heard them fall, the great rays of light, he heard them bursting round his feet with tiny, violent explosions, heavy drops possessed of fantastic speed, machine-gun bullets that had travelled about 150,000,000 kilometres.

The above is from the short story called The Walking Man and it begins by describing water dripping from a rag in the desolate apartment that Paoli lived in; 3 pages devoted to water dripping from a rag. When Paoli gets the rhythm of the dripping water embedded into his head, he leaves the apartment and starts walking. He walks for about the remaining 24 pages. That's what you can expect from Le Clézio's earlier work; hundreds upon hundreds of words describing the mundane, hundreds upon hundreds of words elevating the simplest scene into a universe where we are but a speck of dust.

My favorite story was called Beaumont Acquainted with His Pain. Poor Beaumont had a toothache and it tormented him. He seeks ways to disown the pain but he soon becomes obsessed with the abscess and becomes the pain.

In A Day of Old Age, Joseph closely watches an old lady die. He wants to understand the pain she's going through, to see the death that is projecting images in her mind, to breathe in her death rattle.

From A Day of Old Age... In forty years, or perhaps sooner, these will be words written by a dead man. And in two hundred years, in any case, nothing exists today, nothing of this second, will still be alive. When You've read this line, you must turn your eyes away from the mean little scrawl. Breathe, take a strong, deep breath, be alive to the point of ecstasy. Because soon, there won't be much left of you.

And on that positive note I would just add that the writer of this uplifting piece exceeded his forty years and won the Nobel Prize in 2008. It is a wonder, not the winning, but the living. ( )
  Banoo | Feb 9, 2009 |
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Nome do autorFunçãoTipo de autorObra?Status
Le Clézio, Jean-Marie Gustaveautor principaltodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Dvořáková, VěraTradutorautor secundárioalgumas ediçõesconfirmado
鉄男, 高山Tradutorautor secundárioalgumas ediçõesconfirmado
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Translated by Daphne Woodward 'The author's verbal felicity is amazing . . . we come away awed' The New York Times In these nine unforgettable and impressionistic 'tales of little madness', the Nobel Prize-winning author Le Clézio explores how the physical sensations we experience every day can be as strong as feelings of love or hate, with their power to bring chaos to our lives. In 'The Day that Beaumont became Acquainted with his Pain', a man with toothache spends the night seeking ways to disown his throbbing jaw; in 'Fever', Roch finds his mind transported by sunstroke; while in 'A Day of Old Age' little Joseph tries to comprehend the physical suffering of a dying old woman. Set in a timeless, spaceless universe, these experimental and haunting works portray the landscape of the human consciousness with dazzling verbal dexterity and power. Winner if the 2008 Nobel Prize for Literature

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