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Cargando... To The Is-Land (1982)por Janet Frame
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. Janet Frame had written at least ten novels and a series of poetry over the course of her career before it seemed the natural next step to tell her autobiography. Her life story gave perspective to the fiction she had been writing for so many years. Why else does one assume his or her life story would be interesting to someone else, a complete stranger, if only to explain their actions or, in Frame's case, her craft? To the Is-Land starts when Frame is a very young child in Dunedin, New Zealand. She recounts the trials and tribulations of growing up poor and longing to fit in. She found solace in writing and at the the end of To the Is-Land a poet starts to emerge. This is the first volume in Janet Frame's autobiography. In language startling for its freshness and clarity, she tells of her childhood as the daughter of an impoverished railway worker and a mother who aspired to write poetry. Amongst superb evocations of New Zealand landscape and the sharp recall of childhood perceptions, we learn of the tragic death by drowning of her sister Myrtle, her brother's epilepsy - and begin to feel the dark undercurrents that were to suck her under in the years before she found herself as a writer. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
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The first part of Janet Frame's three-volume autobiography, this text chronicles her childhood and adolescence, spent in a materially poor but intellectually intense railway family in the 1920s and 1930s. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Born in 1924 in New Zealand, the author came from a relatively poor railway family; yet one which valued study and literature, with a mother who wrote poems, and a father who generally encouraged his children's efforts.
And so the author pursued her high school career, her reading, and early attempts at getting her poems published in children's magazines. And yet while she and her sisters embark on stories and verse, their home life is traumatic at times with the death of one sister and the poorly understood epilepsy of her brother.
I thought Janet Frame's portrayal of childhood was very evocative as she describes the excitement of the adolescent discovering the possibilities of the world around them. ( )