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Lädt ... Adam, One Afternoon (1957)von Italo Calvino
Italian Literature (122) Lädt ...
Melde dich bei LibraryThing an um herauszufinden, ob du dieses Buch mögen würdest. Keine aktuelle Diskussion zu diesem Buch. "The Argentine Ant', one of the stories in this collection, is not a bad story. It is a very good story, but one that leaves you with your skin crawling, and total paranoia about ants. I was severely tempted to rip the whole story out of the book, so that I should never have to catch sight of it again if I happened to want to re-read the other stories. This collection includes translations of stories originally published in Calvino's second book Ultimo viene il corvo (1949) together with the title story of La formica Argentina (1952), and was first published in English in 1957. This is a book that has been languishing forgotten in my TBR piles for years: I somehow got the idea that Calvino is "difficult". When I actually picked it up at last, I found it very engaging and finished it within the day. The stories are rather short, and often violate the Humpty-Dumpty rule of narrative by having only a middle, with no beginning or end in the conventional sense. We are thrown into the world of each story without any introduction or explanation, and have to work out for ourselves who, what, where and why. When whatever it is that is going to happen has happened, the story stops with everything unresolved, leaving us to work out the conclusions. This pared-down approach to narrative probably reflects Calvino's interest in traditional folk-tales and fables, where characters and locations are generic and we get no redundant information. Like folk-tales, they are far from innocent, and especially those that draw on Calvino's experience as a partisan during the war can be grim and violent. On the other hand, there is plenty of Italian atmosphere to soak up. Zeige 4 von 4 keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen
The world of Calvino is a world of fable, but he uses its mechanisms to focus with unerring precision on human reality. Nature in these stories has a magical quality in the flight of a crow, the iridescent track of a snail, the sideways leap of a stray cat - but the magic can encompass both enchantment and terror. Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)853.914Literature Italian Italian fiction 1900- 20th Century 1945-1999Klassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
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At times, I found the empathy with his poor and marginal characters engaging, such as the itinerants sleeping at the railway station in 'Sleeping like Dogs'. At other times, the ideology of the former communist partisan leads the writer to produce simplistic stereotypes of good and evil. 'A Judgement' springs to mind here. It's entirely understandable that a man who'd witnessed atrocities carried out under fascism/Nazism, often supported by 'old money', would feel this resentment but it sometimes lends the reading experience all the joy of a propagandist pamphlet. I was reminded of the clumsier writing of British fellow travellers of the 1930s - Auden, Upward and Warner. Fragments of partisan life presented in 'Fear on the Footpath' and 'Hunger at Bevera' worked much better, I felt.
'The Argentine Ant' is tremendous fun and left this reader groping after allegorical interpretations, and enjoying their eluding him too. So while this book isn't in the same league as 'Invisible Cities', say, or 'Mr Palomar', it's an enjoyable insight into the development of one of the twentieth century's finest writers. ( )