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Cargando... Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry (2012 original; edición 2012)por Rachel Joyce
Información de la obraEl insólito peregrinaje de Harold Fry por Rachel Joyce (2012)
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Una mañana cualquiera, mientras su mujer pasa el aspirador en el piso de arriba, Harold Fry sale de casa para echar una carta al buzón. Recién jubilado, Harold está lejos de imaginar que acaba de iniciar un viaje a pie de un extremo a otro del país. No lleva calzado ni ropa adecuada, ni siquiera un teléfono móvil, y mucho menos un mapa o una brújula. ¿Para qué iba a llevarlos? Tan sólo va al buzón de la esquina para responder a la misiva de Queenie Hennessy, una vieja amiga y compañera de trabajo quien, tras un silencio de casi veinte años, acaba de comunicarle que está ingresada en un hospital del norte a punto de morir de cáncer. Sin embargo, cuando Harold se dispone a enviar la carta, un impulso repentino lo conmina a llevar él mismo el mensaje a su destinataria. Por una vez en su vida, Harold toma una decisión sin pensar, pero su intuición le dice que su amiga Queenie hará algo igualmente impensable y se curará. Una mañana cualquiera, mientras su mujer pasa el aspirador en el piso de arriba, Harold Fry sale de casa para echar una carta al buzón. Recién jubilado, Harold está lejos de imaginar que acaba de iniciar un viaje a pie de un extremo a otro del país. No lleva calzado ni ropa adecuada, ni siquiera un teléfono móvil, y mucho menos un mapa o una brújula. ¿Para qué iba a llevarlos? Tan sólo va al buzón de la esquina para responder a la misiva de Queenie Hennessy, una vieja amiga y compañera de trabajo quien, tras un silencio de casi veinte años, acaba de comunicarle que está ingresada en un hospital del norte a punto de morir de cáncer. Sin embargo, cuando Harold se dispone a enviar la carta, un impulso repentino lo conmina a llevar él mismo el mensaje a su destinataria. Por una vez en su vida, Harold toma una decisión sin pensar, pero su intuición le dice que su amiga Queenie hará algo igualmente impensable y se curará. Así comienza un largo peregrinaje que dará un vuelco total a su existencia. El prootagonista, Harold Fry, recibe una carta de una antigua compañera comunicándole su grave enfermedad. Este redacta una breve respuesta y sale a echarla al correo, pero una vez en la calle no puede dejar de caminar e inicia una imprevista peregrinación al encuentro con esa persona que le ayudó en el pasado. El camino es un camino de reflexión sobre su vida y de conocimiento del dolor de otras personasl
That marvelous note of absurdity tempers the pain that runs beneath this whole novel. Joyce has no interest in mocking Harold; she just describes his quixotic trek in a gentle, matter-of-fact voice, mile after mile. At 65, he’s never walked farther than his own driveway. He has no map, cellphone or change of clothes, and his thin yachting shoes couldn’t be less appropriate for such a journey across England. “Harold would have been the first to admit that there were elements to his plan that were not finely tuned,” Joyce writes. But when the idea of saving Queenie blooms in the fallow soil of his mind, he can’t be stopped. “I will keep walking,” he declares, “and she must keep living.” Very rarely, you come upon a novel that feels less like a book than a poignant passage of your own life, and the protagonist like an acquaintance who has gently corrected your path. Never mind that the protagonist possesses all the realism of a painted clown and his tale the moral fibre of a fable. Rachel Joyce’s The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry starts off in just this way. A rumpled retiree determines to walk 500 miles, believing his hope-filled steps will keep his dying friend alive. The premise seems quaint and predictable, but morphs gracefully into a smart, subtle, funny, painful, weirdly personal novel. The unlikely but lovable hero of Rachel Joyce's remarkable debut novel, The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, doesn't call his walk a pilgrimage. He never even calls it a hike, which would suggest planning, a map and hiking boots, all of which Harold lacks....Pilgrimage, one of the 12 novels just long-listed for the Man Booker Prize, Britain's top literary award, is a gentle adventure with an emotional wallop. It's a smart, feel-good story that doesn't feel forced. “The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry” is not just a book about lost love. It is about all the wonderful everyday things Harold discovers through the mere process of putting one foot in front of the other. “The world was made up of people putting one foot in front of the other,” ........The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry” takes its opening epigraph from John Bunyan’s “Pilgrim’s Progress.” It takes the stirring spirituality of its ending from Bunyan too. In between Ms. Joyce’s book loosely parallels “The Pilgrim’s Progress” at times, but it is very much a story of present-day courage. She writes about how easily a mousy, domesticated man can get lost and how joyously he can be refound. Joyce slowly reveals what he has to walk away from, and there are some surprises. His progress is measured in memories as well as miles; memories of parents who didn’t want him, and of the early days of his marriage and his only son David’s childhood. There are a few lapses in the story—events and characters that come along at convenient moments—but Joyce captures Harold’s emotions with a tidiness of words that is at times thrilling. It’s a trip worth taking. PremiosDistincionesListas de sobresalientes
Harold Fry is convinced that he must deliver a letter to an old love in order to save her, meeting various characters along the way and reminiscing about the events of his past and people he has known, as he tries to find peace and acceptance. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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