HomeLib
Книги по жанру: Современная проза
Une pluie sans fin
Smith Michael Farris
fb2
ENTRE MAD MAX 2 ET LA ROUTE : LE NOUVEAU CHEF-D'ŒUVRE POST-APOCALYPTIQUE.L'ouragan Katrina n'était qu'un signe avant-coureur ; après des années de catastrophes écologiques, le sud des États-Unis, de l'Alabama au Texas, s'apparente désormais à un véritable no man's land. Plutôt que de reconstruire sans cesse, le gouvernement a tracé une frontière et ordonné l'évacuation de la zone. Le sud de la Limite est devenu une terre de non-droit ravagée en permanence par les tempêtes et les orages diluviens — un royaume sans électricité, sans ressources et sans lois.Cohen fait partie de ceux qui, envers et contre tout, ont choisi de rester. Terrassé par la mort de sa femme et de l’enfant quelle portait, il s’efforce de panser ses blessures, seul avec son chien et son cheval.Mais nul ne peut vivre éternellement dans les brumes du passé. Bientôt forcé de sortir de chez lui, il découvre une colonie de survivants menée par Aggie, un prêcheur fanatique hanté de visions mystiques. L'homme retenant contre leur gré des femmes et des enfants, Cohen les libère, et se met en tête de leur faire franchir la Limite. Commence alors, à travers un paysage dévasté, un étrange et terrible périple avec, pour horizon principal, l'espoir d’une humanité peut-être retrouvée.Comparé par une critique américaine dithyrambique à La Route de McCarthy et aux âpres chefs-d'œuvre de Faulkner, Une pluie sans fin orchestre avec une étourdissante maestria les noces du conte métaphysique et de l'épopée funèbre, porté par une langue incantatoire.Michael Farris Smith vit à Columbus, Mississippi. Une pluie sans fin est son premier roman.Traduit de l'anglais (États-Unis) par Michelle Charrier« De temps à autre apparaît un auteur amoureux de soir art du langage écrit […] et des grands mystères gui résident de l'autre côté du monde physique. Il y avait William Faulkner Cormac McCarthy ou Annie Proulx. Vous pouvez maintenant ajouter Michael Farris Smith à la liste. »James Lee Burke
Une seconde de toute beauté
Dard Frédéric
fb2
Ceci est l'histoire de la mort d'Héléna.Seulement pour bien comprendre sa mort, il nous faut auparavant parler de sa vie. Laquelle des deux fut la plus mystérieuse, la plus secrète ?Mais au fait : qui était Héléna ?
Une vie sans fin
Beigbeder Frédéric
fb2
« La vie est une hécatombe. 59 millions de morts par an. 1,9 par seconde. 158 857 par jour. Depuis que vous lisez ce paragraphe, une vingtaine de personnes sont décédées dans le monde — davantage si vous lisez lentement. L’humanité est décimée dans l’indifférence générale.Pourquoi tolérons-nous ce carnage quotidien sous prétexte que c’est un processus naturel ? Avant je pensais à la mort une fois par jour. Depuis que j’ai franchi le cap du demi-siècle, j’y pense toutes les minutes.Ce livre raconte comment je m’y suis pris pour cesser de trépasser bêtement comme tout le monde. Il était hors de question de décéder sans réagir. »F. B.Contrairement aux apparences, ceci n’est pas un roman de science-fiction.
Unfinished: stories finished by Lily Hoang
Hoang Lily
fb2
"Hoang invited over twenty adventurous writers to submit unfinished stories that she then completed. Story fragments ranged from a few sentences to a few pages, and manifested in wildly different styles."
Unformed Landscape
Stamm Peter
fb2
Unformed Landscape begins in a small village on a fjord in the Finnmark, on the northeastern coast of Norway, where the borders between Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Russia lie covered in snow and darkness, where the real borders are between day and night, summer and winter, and between people. Here, a sensitive young woman like Kathrine finds few outlets for her desires. Half Norwegian, half Sami (an indigenous people), Kathrine works for the customs office inspecting the fishing boats arriving regularly in the harbor. She is in her late 20s, has a son from an early marriage, and has drifted into a second loveless marriage to a man whose cold and dominating conventionality forms a bold stroke through the unformed landscape of her life. After she makes a discovery about her husband that deeply wounds her, Kathrine cuts loose from her moorings and her confusion and sets off in search of herself.Her journey begins aboard a ship headed south, taking her below the Arctic Circle for the first time in her life. Kathrine makes her way to France and has the bittersweet experience of a love affair that flares and dies quickly, her starved senses rewarded by the shimmering beauty of Paris. Through a series of poignant encounters, Kathrine is led to the richer life she was meant to have and is brave enough to claim.Using simple words strung together in a melodic alphabet, Peter Stamm introduces us, through a series of intimate sketches, to the heart of an unforgettable woman. Her story speaks eloquently about solitude, the fragility of love, lost illusions, and self-discovery.
Union Atlantic
Haslett Adam
fb2
The eagerly anticipated debut novel from the author of the Pulitzer Prize finalist You Are Not a Stranger Here: a deeply affecting portrait of the modern gilded age, the first decade of the twenty-first century.At the heart of Union Atlantic lies a test of wills between a young banker, Doug Fanning, and a retired schoolteacher, Charlotte Graves, whose two dogs have begun to speak to her. When Doug builds an ostentatious mansion on land that Charlotte's grandfather donated to the town of Finden, Massachusetts, she determines to oust him in court. As a senior manager of Union Atlantic bank, a major financial conglomerate, Doug is embroiled in the company's struggle to remain afloat. It is Charlotte's brother, Henry Graves, the president of the New York Federal Reserve, who must keep a watchful eye on Union Atlantic and the entire financial system. Drawn into Doug and Charlotte's intensifying conflict is Nate Fuller, a troubled high-school senior who unwittingly stirs powerful emotions in each of them.Irresistibly complex, imaginative, and witty, Union Atlantic is a singular work of fiction that is sure to be read and reread long after it causes a sensation this spring.
United States of Banana
Braschi Giannina
fb2
Giannina Braschi explores the cultural and political journey of nearly 50 million Hispanic Americans living in the United States in this explosive new work of fiction, her first written originally in English. United States of Banana takes place at the Statue of Liberty in post-9/11 New York City, where Hamlet, Zarathustra, and Giannina are on a quest to free the Puerto Rican prisoner Segismundo. Segismundo has been imprisoned for more than one hundred years, hidden away by his father, the king of the United States of Banana, for the crime of having been born. But when the king remarries, he frees his son, and for the sake of reconciliation, makes Puerto Rico the fifty-first state and grants American passports to all Latin American citizens. This staggering show of benevolence rocks the global community, causing an unexpected power shift with far-reaching implications. In a world struggling to realign itself in favor of liberty, United States of Banana is a force to be reckoned with in literature, art, and politics.“The best work of art on the subject of September 11th that I have ever experienced!” — Mircea Cartarescu“Revolutionary in subject and form, United States of Banana is a beautifully written declaration of personal independence. Giannina Braschi’s take on U.S. relations with our southern neighbors in Latin America and the Caribbean, most especially Puerto Rico, is an eye-opener. The ire and irony make for an explosive combination and a very exciting read.”— Barney Rosset, The Evergreen Review“Good poets write great poems. Great poets create a new language. Giannina Braschi is a brilliant artist who has invented a syntax that reveals how we think, suffer, and take delight in the twenty-first century. Though the tone can be playful, her work has deep roots in the subversive side of classical literature. The scale is epic.” — D. Nurkse
Unless
Shields Carol
fb2
Unlikely Stories Mostly
Gray Alasdair
fb2
‘Too clever for its own good in parts, but otherwise a damned good read.’ Col. Sebastian Moran in the Simla Times.‘This anthology may be likened to a vast architectural folly imblending the idioms of the Greek, Gothic, Oriental, Baroque, Scottish Baronial and Bauhaus schools. Like one who, absently sauntering the streets of Barcelona, suddenly beholds the breathtaking grandeur of Gaudi’s Familia Sagrada, I am compelled to admire a display of power and intricacy whose precise purpose evades me. Is the structure haunted by a truth too exalted and ghostly to dwell in a plainer edifice? Perhaps. I wonder. I doubt.’ Lady Nicola Stewart, Countess of Dunfermline in The Celtic Needlewoman.Alasdair Gray’s most playful book earned a place in this Classic Series by being in print since first published by Canongate in 1983. This completely amended edition has two new stories; also a postscript by the author and Douglas Gifford.
Unraveling Oliver
Nugent Liz
fb2
In this “compelling, clever, and dark” (Heat magazine) thriller, a man’s shocking act of savagery stuns a local community—and the revelations that follow will keep you gripped until the very last page. This work of psychological suspense, a #1 bestseller in Ireland, is perfect for fans of Patricia Highsmith and Ruth Ware.“I expected more of a reaction the first time I hit her.”So begins Liz Nugent’s astonishing debut novel—a chilling, elegantly crafted, and psychologically astute exploration of the nature of evil.Oliver Ryan, handsome, charismatic, and successful, has long been married to his devoted wife, Alice. Together they write and illustrate award-winning children’s books; their life together one of enviable privilege and ease—until, one evening after a delightful dinner, Oliver delivers a blow to Alice that renders her unconscious, and subsequently beats her into a coma.In the aftermath of such an unthinkable event, as Alice hovers between life and death, the couple’s friends, neighbors, and acquaintances try to understand what could have driven Oliver to commit such a horrific act. As his story unfolds, layers are peeled away to reveal a life of shame, envy, deception, and masterful manipulation. With its alternating points of view and deft prose, Unraveling Oliver is “a page-turning, one-sitting read from a brand new master of psychological suspense” (Sunday Independent) that details how an ordinary man can transform into a sociopath.
Unspeakable Things
Spivack Kathleen
fb2
A wild, erotic novel — a daring debut — from the much-admired, award-winning poet, author of Flying Inland, A History of Yearning, and With Robert Lowell and His Circle: Sylvia Plath, Anne Sexton, Elizabeth Bishop, Stanley Kunitz, and Others. A strange, haunting novel about survival and love in all its forms; about sexual awakenings and dark secrets; about European refugee intellectuals who have fled Hitler’s armies with their dreams intact and who have come to an elusive new (American) “can do, will do” world they cannot seem to find. A novel steeped in surreal storytelling and beautiful music that transports its half-broken souls — and us — to another realm of the senses.The setting: the early 1940s, New York — city of refuge, city of hope, with the specter of a red-hot Europe at war.At the novel’s center: Anna (known as the Rat), an exotic Hungarian countess with the face of an angel, beautiful eyes, and a seraphic smile, with a passionate intelligence, an exquisite ugliness, and the power to enchant. . Her second cousin Herbert, a former minor Austrian civil servant who believes in Esperanto and the international rights of man, wheeling and dealing in New York, powerful in the social sphere yet under the thumb of his wife, Adeline. . Michael, their missing homosexual son. . Felix, a German pediatrician who dabbles in genetic engineering, practicing from his Upper East Side office with his little dachshund, Schatzie, by his side. . The Tolstoi String Quartet, four men and their instruments, who for twenty years lived as one, playing the great concert halls of Europe, escaping to New York with their money sewn into the silk linings of their instrument cases. .And watching them all: Herbert’s eight-year-old granddaughter, Maria, who understands from the furtive fear of her mother, and the huddled penury of their lives, and the sense of being in hiding, even in New York, that life is a test of courage and silence, Maria witnessing the family’s strange comings and goings, being regaled at night, when most are asleep, with the intoxicating, thrilling stories of their secret pasts. . of lives lived in Saint Petersburg. . of husbands being sent to the front and large, dangerous debts owed to the Tsar of imperial Russia, of late-night visits by coach to the palace of the Romanovs to beg for mercy and avoid execution. . and at the heart of the stories, told through the long nights with no dawn in sight, the strange, electrifying tale of a pact made in desperation with the private adviser to the Tsar and Tsarina — the mystic faith healer Grigory Rasputin (Russian for “debauched one”), a pact of “companionship” between Anna (the Rat) and the scheming Siberian peasant — turned — holy man, called the Devil by some, the self-proclaimed “only true Christ,” meeting night after night in Rasputin’s apartments, and the spellbinding, unspeakable things done there in the name of penance and pleasure. .
Unterderseaboat Doktor
Bradbury Raymond Douglaa
fb2
Until I Find You
Irving John
fb2
Until I Find You is the story of the actor Jack Burns — his life, loves, celebrity and astonishing search for the truth about his parents.When he is four years old, Jack travels with his mother Alice, a tattoo artist, to several North Sea ports in search of his father, William Burns. From Copenhagen to Amsterdam, William, a brilliant church organist and profligate womanizer, is always a step ahead — has always just departed in a wave of scandal, with a new tattoo somewhere on his body from a local master or “scratcher.”Alice and Jack abandon their quest, and Jack is educated at schools in Canada and New England — including, tellingly, a girls’ school in Toronto. His real education consists of his relationships with older women — from Emma Oastler, who initiates him into erotic life, to the girls of St. Hilda’s, with whom he first appears on stage, to the abusive Mrs. Machado, whom he first meets when sent to learn wrestling at a local gym.Too much happens in this expansive, eventful novel to possibly summarize it all. Emma and Jack move to Los Angeles, where Emma becomes a successful novelist and Jack a promising actor. A host of eccentric minor characters memorably come and go, including Jack’s hilariously confused teacher the Wurtz; Michelle Maher, the girlfriend he will never forget; and a precocious child Jack finds in the back of an Audi in a restaurant parking lot. We learn about tattoo addiction and movie cross-dressing, “sleeping in the needles” and the cure for cauliflower ears. And John Irving renders his protagonist’s unusual rise through Hollywood with the same vivid detail and range of emotions he gives to the organ music Jack hears as a child in European churches. This is an absorbing and moving book about obsession and loss, truth and storytelling, the signs we carry on us and inside us, the traces we can’t get rid of.Jack has always lived in the shadow of his absent father. But as he grows older — and when his mother dies — he starts to doubt the portrait of his father’s character she painted for him when he was a child. This is the cue for a second journey around Europe in search of his father, from Edinburgh to Switzerland, towards a conclusion of great emotional force.A melancholy tale of deception, Until I Find You is also a swaggering comic novel, a giant tapestry of life’s hopes. It is a masterpiece to compare with John Irving’s great novels, and restates the author’s claim to be considered the most glorious, comic, moving novelist at work today.
Until the Dawn's Light
Appelfeld Aharon
fb2
From the award-winning, internationally acclaimed writer (“One of the best novelists alive” —Irving Howe): a Jewish woman marries a gentile laborer in turn-of-the-century Austria, with disastrous results.A high school honor student bound for university and a career as a mathematician, Blanca lives with her parents in a small town in Austria in the early years of the twentieth century. At school one day she meets Adolf, who comes from a family of peasant laborers. Tall and sturdy, plainspoken and uncomplicated, Adolf is unlike anyone Blanca has ever met. And Adolf is awestruck by beautiful, brilliant Blanca — even though she is Jewish. When Blanca is asked by school administrators to tutor Adolf, the inevitable happens: they fall in love. And when Adolf asks her to marry him, Blanca abandons her plans to attend university, converts to Christianity, and leaves her family, her friends, and her old life behind.Almost immediately, things begin to go horribly wrong. Told in a series of flashbacks as Blanca and her son flee from their town with the police in hot pursuit, the tragic story of Blanca’s life with Adolf recalls a time and place that are no more but that powerfully reverberate in collective memory.
Untraceable
Лебедев Сергей Сергеевич
fb2

“One of Russia’s most interesting young novelists takes on Putin, poison and power in this unique novel; Lebedev provides a fascinating window on modern Russia.”

— Anne Applebaum, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Twilight of Democracy

The terrifying, lengthening list of Russia’s use of lethal poisons against its critics has inspired acclaimed author Sergei Lebedev’s latest novel. With uncanny timing, he examines how and why Russia and the Soviet Union have developed horrendous toxins. At its center is a ruthless chemist named Professor Kalitin, obsessed with developing an absolutely deadly, undetectable and untraceable poison for which there is no antidote. But Kalitin becomes consumed by guilt over countless deaths from his Faustian pact to create the ultimate venom. When the Soviet Union collapses, the chemist defects and is given a new identity in Western Europe. After another Russian is murdered with Kalitin’s poison, his cover is blown and he’s drawn into an investigation of the death by Western agents. Two special forces killers are sent to silence him―using his own undetectable poison.

In this fast-paced, genre-bending tale, Lebedev weaves suspenseful pages of stunningly beautiful prose exploring the historical trajectories of evil. From Nazi labs, Stalinist plots and the Chechen Wars, to present-day Russia, Lebedev probes the ethical responsibilities of scientists supplying modern tyrants and autocrats with ever newer instruments of retribution, destruction and control.

Up Through the Water
Steinke Darcey
fb2
Darcey Steinke's first novel, now back in print, is an unusually assured and lyrical debut. Set on an island resort town off North Carolina, it tells of summer people and islanders, mothers and sons, women and men, love and its dangers. It is the story of Emily, a woman free as the waves she swims in every day, of the man who wants to clip her wings, of her son and the summer that he will become a man. George Garrett called it "clean-cut, lean-lined, quickly moving, and audacious. . [Steinke is] compassionate without sentimentality, romantic without false feelings, and clearly and extravagantly gifted." "Beautifully written. . a seamless and almost instinctive prose that often reads more like poetry than fiction." — Robert Olmstead, The New York Times Book Review; "Dazzling and charged. . Darcey Steinke has the sensuous and precise visions of female and male, and of the light and dark at the edge of the sea." — John Casey.
Upright Beasts
Michel Lincoln
fb2
Praise for Lincoln Michel:"Lincoln Michel is one of contemporary literary culture's greatest natural resources." — Justin Taylor, Vice"Weird, darkly funny stories…Michel ably handles modes from lyrical to ironic.” — New York TimesChildren go to school long after all the teachers have disappeared, a man manages an apartment complex of attempted suicides, and a couple navigates their relationship in the midst of a zombie attack. In these short stories, we are the upright beasts, doing battle with our darker, weirder impulses as the world collapses around us.“Lincoln Michel’s stories are strange, haunting and often very funny beasts. His prose is rich and also spare. He can kill you in two pages or take you for a long, dangerous, kooky ride — and then kill you. And by kill you, I mean thrill you. Savor this book and welcome Mr. Michel.”—Sam Lipsyte“In Upright Beasts, Lincoln Michel uses the unreal and the surreal in ways that allow his readers to understand something about the human condition. Who are we when someone allows us to see ourselves more clearly? We are pitiful, ridiculous, beautiful, sometimes brave and sometimes cowards, but always — in these stories — illuminated.”—Kelly Link“Many first books carry the suggestion of promise, of wonderful things to come, but it is most unusual to encounter a debut as agile and assured and utterly dazzling as Upright Beasts. These stories are mighty surrealist wonders, mordantly funny and fiercely intelligent, and Lincoln Michel is a writer that will leave you in awe.”—Laura van den Berg“Lincoln Michel has created a sinister landscape that feels at once uncomfortably familiar and yet truly strange. This is the post-pastoral as creeping horror story — a kind of secret, alternate history of a forgotten America, a country of half-dead towns and empty streets. There are welcome echoes of Barthelme and others in here, but Michel’s voice carries through, darkly intelligent and unmistakably original. A tremendous debut.”—Charles Yu“The world presented in Michel’s admirable debut collection is similar to our own, yet twisted just enough to feel strange. . Michel frequently knocks his brief bursts of prose out of the park.”—Publishers Weekly“Deadpan and life affirming, the stories in this genre-bending debut veer from an apartment complex for the suicidal to a ghostly artists’ colony to the innards of wild things.”—O Magazine
Upside Down: A Primer for the Looking-Glass World
Galeano Eduardo
fb2
In a series of mock lesson plans and a "program of study" Galeano provides an eloquent, passionate, funny and shocking exposé of First World privileges and assumptions. From a master class in "The Impunity of Power" to a seminar on "The Sacred Car" — with tips along the way on "How to Resist Useless Vices" and a declaration of the "The Right to Rave" — he surveys a world unevenly divided between abundance and deprivation, carnival and torture, power and helplessness.We have accepted a "reality" we should reject, he writes, one where poverty kills, people are hungry, machines are more precious than humans, and children work from dark to dark. In the North, we are fed on a diet of artificial need and all made the same by things we own; the South is the galley slave enabling our greed.
Upstaged
Jouet Jacques
fb2
A stranger takes over a role in a play, leaving the rest of the cast to ponder his motives.Two minutes into the second act, there is a knock on Nicolas Boehlmer’s dressing-room door, just as he’s smoking his last cigarette before having to go back on stage. . and, without thinking, he says,“Come in,” still in character. He quickly finds himself bound, gagged, and stripped by a man who appears to be his mirror image: costumed in the same wig, make-up, and clothes. Nicolas is powerless to prevent his usurper from going out and playing his role — with increasingly ridiculous consequences. Is this “upstaging” the act of a depraved amateur? Sabotage by a rival? A piece of guerrilla theater? A political statement? Whatever the cause, Nicolas and his fellow actors soon find their play — and their lives — making less and less sense, as the parts they play come under assault by this irrational intruder.
Urbana
Fogwill Rodolfo Enrique
fb2
Fogwill se pregunta en todas sus novelas sobre el amor. `Urbana` no es una excepción. La historia se desarrolla en la soledad de una ciudad. El amor produce, según Fogwill, un bienestar estomacal y neurológico que se traduce en una armonía del hombre con el todo. Como bien indica el título, se habla de la vida en la ciudad, del que llega a un lugar ignorando el nombre de sus calles y la ubicación de los sitios donde suceden los principales acontecimientos. Rodolfo Enrique Fogwill, más conocido como Fogwill, nació en Buenos Aires en 1941. Ha publicado poemarios, libros de relatos y novelas, entre las que destacan `En otro orden de cosas`, `La experiencia sensible` y `Los pichiciegos`.Claro que es redundante llamar urbana a una novela. Hoy toda novela es urbana: la ciudad, que es su agente, compone a la vez el fondo de todo lo que sucede. Más cuando ni se nombra y más aún cuando el relato figura una escenografía sin ciudades ni casas ni más vida colectiva que la que pueda hallarse en los recuerdos y en los diálogos interiores del presunto personaje: al parecer, sólo puede escribirse con las palabras de la ciudad. ¿Cuáles serán…? No está al alcance de una novela determinarlo. Esta era una historia de personajes sin cara y terminó como un relato de personajes sin caras ni nombres. Idealmente debía eludir cualquier acontecimiento, pero en tal caso nadie la habría editado y no habría encontrado un lector. Rimando, puede afirmarse que los lectores acuden a la novela sedientos de acontecimientos. Algo ha de estar indicando esto: quizás haya tanta demanda de que en un texto sucedan cosas porque se descuenta que nada sucederá entre el texto y su lector. Pero los editores dominan el arte de administrar la medida justa que puede definirse como la presencia de un máximo de acontecimientos en el texto y ninguno por efectos de la lectura. Con ello consiguen que el lector termine de consumir manteniendo intactas sus cualidades más preciadas: su poder de compra y el hábito que lo llevará a pagar por algún nuevo título de esa colección. Idealmente, un día la industria terminará por librarse de los autores. Mientras tanto, se insiste en narrar como si nada estuviese ocurriendo.
< 1 1844 1845 1846 1847 1848 1891 >