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Fast ein Heiliger: Roman von Anne Tyler
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Fast ein Heiliger: Roman (Original 1991; 1995. Auflage)

von Anne Tyler (Autor)

MitgliederRezensionenBeliebtheitDurchschnittliche BewertungDiskussionen
2,806415,098 (3.88)125
Die erfolgreiche amerikanische Autorin (Jg. 1941) erweist mit ihrer in Baltimore angesiedelten Familiengeschichte eine Reverenz vor der Vaterschaft schlechthin..
Mitglied:Wicki72
Titel:Fast ein Heiliger: Roman
Autoren:Anne Tyler (Autor)
Info:FISCHER Taschenbuch (1995), 352 pages
Sammlungen:Deine Bibliothek
Bewertung:
Tags:Keine

Werk-Informationen

Fast ein Heiliger von Anne Tyler (1991)

  1. 00
    Ask Again, Yes von Mary Beth Keane (BookshelfMonstrosity)
  2. 00
    This Is the Life von Alex Shearer (BookshelfMonstrosity)
    BookshelfMonstrosity: In both books, men put their own lives aside to help with events surrounding their brothers' deaths. Struggling with heavy emotional and practical burdens as well as grief, they find peace through reconciliation.
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Why have I not been on to Anne Tyler before now? Best book I've read in ages. Going to start reading another of hers tomorrow. There is not one thing I didn't like about this book. ( )
  nogomu | Oct 19, 2023 |
Von Anne Tyler habe ich schon einiges gelesen, insofern waren die Erwartungen hier sehr hoch. Für mich ist dieses Buch definitiv nicht eins ihrer besten, trotzdem hat es mir gut gefallen.
Der siebzehnjährige Ian versucht mit seinem schlechten Gewissen klarzukommen, als sein Bruder nach einer Bemerkung von ihm wütend aus dem Haus stürmt und in einem Autounfall stirbt. Er versucht mithilfe einer Kirche, auf die er eher zufällig stößt, gelebte Widergutmachung zu betreiben, indem er für dessen Kinder die Rolle eines Ersatzvaters übernimmt.

Die Autorin zeichnet ein gelungenes Bild einer ungewöhnlichen Familie, die nach einem Verlust versucht, die Schäden zu begrenzen und Einschränkungen in Kauf nimmt, um den schwächsten Familienmitgliedern zu helfen. Die Kirchengemeinde, der Ian sich anschließt, wirkte auf mich ein wenig bizarr und streng, aber durchaus praxisorientiert. Das letzte Viertel des Buches wirkte auf mich deutlich flacher als der Reste des Buches, gerade die hier neu eingeführten Figuren blieben mir fremd. ( )
  Ellemir | May 25, 2022 |
It’s interesting that I read this right after Ladder of Years (unintentional). Whereas Delia ran away from her life, Ian Bedloe leaned into his…desperately…sacrificially…to atone…to be forgiven. In the process of learning to live with himself, he created a life and established a family for children who needed one. It’s a story about family, love, tragedy, sacrifice, strength and so far, my second favorite of Tyler’s (after Accidental Tourist).

I’m short on time, so this will have to suffice for my usually lengthy reviews, but brevity is definitely not an indication of how much I liked this book.

I read someone’s 2 star review, stating the characters were “flat” – One of the reasons I’m afraid of recommending books is because reading is so subjective and situational, that it’s hard to know what anyone would or wouldn’t like based on what I like. Heck…I’ve liked books now that I would have hated younger and vice-versa. However, to me, Tyler’s characters are far from “flat” - to me they’re so well fleshed out that I can’t stop thinking about them and want to know more about them the longer I read. I love how she makes no judgments…it leaves me pondering…was it wrong of Delia (In Ladder of Years) to do what she did? Can it be justified? Is it wrong of Ian (Saint Maybe) to have sacrificed so much? Can it be justified? I like that.

Off topic…maybe…I was a little befuddled by the star ratings in Goodreads, so had to actually look it up. See…people gave Anna Karenina and The Awakening ONE star ratings because they didn’t like the character, and I’m over here all judgey thinking “that’s not a good enough reason,” but it turns out that yes, it is a good enough reason (subjectivity here again!LOL) because the one star just means “did not like it,” and who am I to judge you for not liking Anna Karenina….except I’m low-key judging….I’m working on this!LOL
  Eosch1 | Dec 30, 2021 |
Review of 'Saint Maybe' and 'Stigmata'

There were clues in the titles, I realise retrospectively, that these were both books about God: ‘Saint’ in one, ‘Stigmata’ in the other…a complete coincidence that I read them back to back.

But what different takes – well, they would be different, wouldn’t they? Tyler and Dick. Not two authors one would typically mention in the same breath.

Saint Maybe deals with a person who needs God. He has planned a hot date with his girlfriend, when suddenly he is asked to babysit his brother’s children – two older step, one just born, arguably not his brother’s either. His brother’s at a bucks night, his wife has supposedly gone out with a friend, but he knows better. His brother’s wife is cheating on him. He has put all the evidence together over a period of time, it is circumstantial, but. So, when his brother turns up drunk he insists on his driving him to his girlfriend’s place and tells him along the way what he thinks about the wife. His brother drops him off and drives into a wall, killing himself. Then the wife goes downhill and dies soon after as well. He finds out that the wife wasn’t two-timing his brother, but it is all too late. He has created this situation and it determines the rest of his life. God, in the form of the pastor of a very odd little church, the kind that are dotted all over the US, saves him. He seeks God and God comes to him.

The Three Stigmata also deals with people who need God, but they take drugs instead. In a complete turnabout of how we usually see the Human-God relationship, typified by Tyler, Dick considers the notion that God’s been on his own since the beginning of – well, you know, the beginning of whatever he created – and he’s sick of being a lonely fucker. So he seeks others, in a radical role-reversal. The stigmata show that a person is inhabited by God….

Of course these books are about other things, the things that preoccupy each author’s work. Tyler writes again of ordinary lives, ordinary events – and she does make what happens in this book utterly ordinary, there is nothing the least melodramatic about it. Dick is again concerned with the nature of reality. Again he makes a future world setting incredibly believable, not least because although written in the early sixties, this one describes an Earth in its last throes due to global warming. The physical setting, the socio-economic setting, rich people getting to spend time in the coolest places on Earth, rich people getting to speed up evolution so that they create physical defences to the impact of life in a place that is too hot. It isn’t just believable, it is real.

Rich people go to Antarctica as a sanctuary, of course. Rushes off to check – thank heavens Australia owns a big chunk of it. English friends who wish to prevail upon my generous nature, please drop me a line. I expect there’ll be a queue soon enough.

Meanwhile, there is a draft system to force humans to live on Mars, a desolate life made bearable by drugtaking, a substitute for God. Rich people can be drafted too, but they are more likely to have ways to dodge it. Nothing changes.

But the backdrop to both is always there. God and his relationship to humankind. Tyler does one of those jobs – not prosletysing, she never does that – that make you see what can be good and necessary about God. Dick opens up your eyes to an incredible vision of a God which could not be more different to Tyler’s. I read them in that order, Tyler and then Dick. I recommend that, but would be curious in the impressions of anybody who did the opposite. One might ask who on earth WOULD be reading these chalk and cheese authors? But maybe they aren’t. Maybe for both of them the really big preoccupation is ordinary people struggling through life. Maybe it is only the settings of Dick that obscure this. Maybe they are more alike than one might first think….
( )
  bringbackbooks | Jun 16, 2020 |
Review: Saint Maybe by Anne Tyler.

The story captivated the religious aspect of a family’s life, interpersonal relationships and the struggles they went through. Tyler also wrote with realistic suitable words that celebrate family life without erasing the pain and boredom that sometimes inflicts other family members.

It starts off with an average family of five living in a small town where it is ideal for newlyweds, foreigners, elderly people that get along with no scandalous behavior. This story is about the Bedloes and their three children. Bee and Doug are happily married , their daughter Claudia is also happily married and on there own, the older son Danny works at the post office and planning on marring Lucy Dean, who is divorced with two children. Their son Ian is the main character in the novel and has suspicions about an issue and talks to Danny and after Danny hears the news he dies, which starts a chain of irreversible events that changes Ian and his family life.

No time lapse before Lucy dies from an overdose of pills. Her three children are now considered orphaned. Ian struggles with guilt over the tragedies and also feels burdened with the responsibly and decides to take over the upbringing of Lucy children, Tommy, Agatha and Daphne. Ian is depressed but perseveres despite his doubts and struggles. Not long after Ian comes across “The Church of the Second Chance”, a small congregation of slightly peculiar views and opinions….What has Ian got himself into…? ( )
  Juan-banjo | Jan 26, 2020 |
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AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Anne TylerHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Flothuis, MeaÜbersetzerCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt

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Die erfolgreiche amerikanische Autorin (Jg. 1941) erweist mit ihrer in Baltimore angesiedelten Familiengeschichte eine Reverenz vor der Vaterschaft schlechthin..

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