Produktbild: Lost Children Archive
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Lost Children Archive A novel

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14,99 € UVP 18,50 €

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

04.02.2020

Verlag

Penguin Random House

Seitenzahl

384

Maße (L/B/H)

20/13,3/2,5 cm

Gewicht

390 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-525-43646-1

Beschreibung

Rezension

ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR: THE WASHINGTON POST   TIME MAGAZINE  NPR   CHICAGO TRIBUNE  GQ   O, THE OPRAH MAGAZINE  THE GUARDIAN  VANITY FAIR THE ATLANTIC THE WEEK THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS   LIT HUB   KIRKUS REVIEWS  THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY  BOSTON.COM  PUREWOW

ONE OF BARACK OBAMA'S FAVORITE BOOKS OF THE YEAR

WINNER OF THE ANDREW CARNEGIE MEDAL FOR EXCELLENCE IN FICTION
WINNER OF THE FOLIO PRIZE

FINALIST FOR THE NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS CIRCLE AWARD 
FINALIST FOR THE KIRKUS PRIZE FOR FICTION
LONGLISTED FOR THE BOOKER PRIZE
LONGLISTED FOR THE ASPEN WORDS LITERARY PRIZE


Impossibly smart, full of beauty, heart and insight. Everyone should read this book.
Tommy Orange, author of There There

A Great American Novel for our time.
Vanity Fair
 
Unforgettable, down to its explosive final sentence. . . . [Luiselli] audaciously stretches the bounds of storytelling.
Entertainment Weekly

Virtuosic. . . . The brilliance of the writing stirs rage and pity. It humanizes us.
The New York Times Book Review

This is a novel that challenges us, as a nation, to reconcile our differences. . . . [The] writing shimmers like its desert setting.
The Washington Post

Electric, elastic, alluring, new.
The New York Times
 
  A remarkable feat of empathy.
NPR
 
[A] brilliantly intricate and constantly surprising book.
The New Yorker
 
[Luiselli s] language is so transporting, it stops you time and again.  
O, The Oprah Magazine

Like all great novels. . . . Lost Children Archive is unquestionably timely, [but] it also approaches a certain timelessness.
Los Angeles Times
 
Stunning. . . . Uniquely rewarding and even life-changing.
The Seattle Times
 
Delicate, funny, effortlessly poetic.
The Guardian
 
Passionate.
The New York Review of Books
 
Rollicking. . . A highly imaginative and politically deft portrait of childhood within a vast American landscape.
Harper s Magazine

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

04.02.2020

Verlag

Penguin Random House

Seitenzahl

384

Maße (L/B/H)

20/13,3/2,5 cm

Gewicht

390 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-525-43646-1

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

Kundinnen und Kunden meinen

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Valeria Luiselli – Lost Children Archive

Miss.mesmerized am 09.05.2019

Bewertungsnummer: 1210330

Bewertet: eBook (ePUB)

A typical patchwork family: mother with daughter and father with son form a new unit after the parents got to know each other through work. For a new professional project of the father, they leave New York and their cosy home for the southern states close to the Mexican border. A very unique road trip of a family which is educating for their young children, but also brings them closer to the hot political topic: thousands of children are on their way to the border to come to the USA. As the family gets closer, the radio news become more and more a part of their life, too. Valeria Luiselli’s novel was nominated on the long list for the 2019 Women’s Prize for Fiction and you can quickly understand why it definitely earned a place there: the author masterly combines fact and fiction, mixes different types of materials to for something new and she has an outstanding capacity of using language. There is so much one could say about the novel which makes it difficult to make a selection for a short review. The largest part is narrated from the mother’s point of view, a character who is highly poetic in describing especially her family relationships and who thoroughly analyses not only how the dynamics within the family shift but also how they interact with the outside world. I also liked this idea of having boxes in which each of the characters collects things with a certain meaning for them. Then, you have the American history – the past with the stories of the Native Americans which is contrasted with the present and its train of children moving towards the country. The characters are not given any names, they are just mother and father, son and daughter. They could be anybody. They are you and me confronted with the real world and forced to understand that we live in a kind of multi-layered reality in which you repeatedly have to adjust yourself and your opinion depending on your current point of view and knowledge and experiences. The novel does not provide definitive answers, but it provides you with masses of questions to ponder about.

Valeria Luiselli – Lost Children Archive

Miss.mesmerized am 09.05.2019
Bewertungsnummer: 1210330
Bewertet: eBook (ePUB)

A typical patchwork family: mother with daughter and father with son form a new unit after the parents got to know each other through work. For a new professional project of the father, they leave New York and their cosy home for the southern states close to the Mexican border. A very unique road trip of a family which is educating for their young children, but also brings them closer to the hot political topic: thousands of children are on their way to the border to come to the USA. As the family gets closer, the radio news become more and more a part of their life, too. Valeria Luiselli’s novel was nominated on the long list for the 2019 Women’s Prize for Fiction and you can quickly understand why it definitely earned a place there: the author masterly combines fact and fiction, mixes different types of materials to for something new and she has an outstanding capacity of using language. There is so much one could say about the novel which makes it difficult to make a selection for a short review. The largest part is narrated from the mother’s point of view, a character who is highly poetic in describing especially her family relationships and who thoroughly analyses not only how the dynamics within the family shift but also how they interact with the outside world. I also liked this idea of having boxes in which each of the characters collects things with a certain meaning for them. Then, you have the American history – the past with the stories of the Native Americans which is contrasted with the present and its train of children moving towards the country. The characters are not given any names, they are just mother and father, son and daughter. They could be anybody. They are you and me confronted with the real world and forced to understand that we live in a kind of multi-layered reality in which you repeatedly have to adjust yourself and your opinion depending on your current point of view and knowledge and experiences. The novel does not provide definitive answers, but it provides you with masses of questions to ponder about.

A typical patchwork family:…

Bewertung aus Mainz am 09.05.2019

Bewertungsnummer: 2991104

Bewertet: eBook (ePUB)

A typical patchwork family: mother with daughter and father with son form a new unit after the parents got to know each other through work. For a new professional project of the father, they leave New York and their cosy home for the southern states close to the Mexican border. A very unique road trip of a family which is educating for their young children, but also brings them closer to the hot political topic: thousands of children are on their way to the border to come to the USA. As the family gets closer, the radio news become more and more a part of their life, too. Valeria Luiselli’s novel was nominated on the long list for the 2019 Women’s Prize for Fiction and you can quickly understand why it definitely earned a place there: the author masterly combines fact and fiction, mixes different types of materials to for something new and she has an outstanding capacity of using language. There is so much one could say about the novel which makes it difficult to make a selection for a short review. The largest part is narrated from the mother’s point of view, a character who is highly poetic in describing especially her family relationships and who thoroughly analyses not only how the dynamics within the family shift but also how they interact with the outside world. I also liked this idea of having boxes in which each of the characters collects things with a certain meaning for them. Then, you have the American history – the past with the stories of the Native Americans which is contrasted with the present and its train of children moving towards the country. The characters are not given any names, they are just mother and father, son and daughter. They could be anybody. They are you and me confronted with the real world and forced to understand that we live in a kind of multi-layered reality in which you repeatedly have to adjust yourself and your opinion depending on your current point of view and knowledge and experiences. The novel does not provide definitive answers, but it provides you with masses of questions to ponder about.

A typical patchwork family:…

Bewertung aus Mainz am 09.05.2019
Bewertungsnummer: 2991104
Bewertet: eBook (ePUB)

A typical patchwork family: mother with daughter and father with son form a new unit after the parents got to know each other through work. For a new professional project of the father, they leave New York and their cosy home for the southern states close to the Mexican border. A very unique road trip of a family which is educating for their young children, but also brings them closer to the hot political topic: thousands of children are on their way to the border to come to the USA. As the family gets closer, the radio news become more and more a part of their life, too. Valeria Luiselli’s novel was nominated on the long list for the 2019 Women’s Prize for Fiction and you can quickly understand why it definitely earned a place there: the author masterly combines fact and fiction, mixes different types of materials to for something new and she has an outstanding capacity of using language. There is so much one could say about the novel which makes it difficult to make a selection for a short review. The largest part is narrated from the mother’s point of view, a character who is highly poetic in describing especially her family relationships and who thoroughly analyses not only how the dynamics within the family shift but also how they interact with the outside world. I also liked this idea of having boxes in which each of the characters collects things with a certain meaning for them. Then, you have the American history – the past with the stories of the Native Americans which is contrasted with the present and its train of children moving towards the country. The characters are not given any names, they are just mother and father, son and daughter. They could be anybody. They are you and me confronted with the real world and forced to understand that we live in a kind of multi-layered reality in which you repeatedly have to adjust yourself and your opinion depending on your current point of view and knowledge and experiences. The novel does not provide definitive answers, but it provides you with masses of questions to ponder about.

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Lost Children Archive

von Valeria Luiselli

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