Auf ein Miniaturbild klicken, um zu Google Books zu gelangen.
Lädt ... The Human Comedy (Original 1943; 1966. Auflage)von William Saroyan (Autor), Don Freeman (Illustrator)
Werk-InformationenMenschliche Komödie von William Saroyan (1943)
Lädt ...
Melde dich bei LibraryThing an um herauszufinden, ob du dieses Buch mögen würdest.
Homer Macauley is a 14-year-old boy growing up fatherless in the San Joaquin Valley of California during World War II. His oldest brother, Marcus, is off fighting the war, and Homer feels he needs to be the man of the family. To make money, he takes an evening job as a telegraph boy, meaning sometimes he has to deliver the news to a family that a son has died in the War. Yet Homer keeps up his normal life, going to school, to church, and to the movies. He is encouraged by his home environment and his loving family, including a very young brother and a mother who plays the harp. His roots and an almost instinctive sense of right and wrong keep him honest and hopeful This was Saroyan's own novelisation of a screenplay he'd written for MGM, which perhaps accounts for its almost unbearably decent, optimistic, American-Dream-celebrating tone. It's 1943, and the small town of Ithaca in California's San Joaquin Valley is a place where the locals are happy to lecture you on profound truths of human nature at a moment's notice at any time of day or night, whilst ev'ry prospect pleases and only sports teachers are vile. The young men are away fighting a distant and seemingly endless war (it's not called Ithaca by accident, evidently), and child-labour is a lesser evil than the unspeakable thought that women and girls might be forced to go out to work, so fourteen-year-old Homer (!) is working nights delivering telegrams whilst his even younger friend August sells newspapers on street corners. Long live the free market! There are a lot of lovely little scenes in this book — the raid on the unripe apricot tree, the scene where Homer's little brother Ulysses (!!) gets caught in a patent trap and no-one knows how to release him, and best of all Homer's impromptu lecture on noses in Ancient History. But it's not really enough to defeat the unrelenting niceness and the dead hand of narrative inevitability: we know from the start that there's only one way a story about a telegram boy whose brother is away in the war can end. keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen
Ist enthalten inBearbeitet/umgesetzt inIst gekürzt inHat eine Studie überEin Kommentar zu dem Text findet sich inHat als Erläuterung für Schüler oder StudentenPrestigeträchtige AuswahlenBemerkenswerte Listen
Erzählt wird die Geschichte des 14jährigen Homer, der in einer kalifornischen Kleinstadt aufwächst und als Ernährer seiner vaterlosen Familie am Ernst und Unernst des Lebens zum Mann heranreift.
Auch in seinem populärsten Roman "Menschliche Komödie" erweist sich Saroyan als "ein sympathischer Flausenmacher. Er treibt Humbug und Tiefsinn mit der Realität. Er will nichts beweisen, es sei denn, wie absonderlich, wie kraus, komisch und überraschend, wie rührend und heimlich poetisch doch die Welt ist. (Friedrich Luft) Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
Aktuelle DiskussionenKeineBeliebte Umschlagbilder
Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Klassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
Bist das du?Werde ein LibraryThing-Autor. |
USA, Californien, Ithaca, 1940'erne
En familie, hvor tre brødre, Ulysses, Homer og Marcus Macauley, er vokset op sammen. De bor ved deres mor, der er enke og anden verdenskrig har gjort at Marcus er indkaldt til krigstjeneste. ???
??? ( )