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Cargando... The Beet Queen: A Novel (P.S.) (1986 original; edición 2006)por Louise Erdrich
Información de la obraLa Reina de la remolacha por Louise Erdrich (1986)
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. I read this one a while ago, and don't recall any details. ( ) Louise Erdrich is an excellent, compelling writer, with a fine sense of the quirks of human psychology, all of which is entirely evident in this early novel. And yet, it also feels a bit... off-kilter. I think it's that so many of the most pivotal events in it have this feeling of absurdity about them. Which I think is deliberate, but maybe it doesn't quite work for me? Most notably, there's the precipitating event of the whole story, in which a woman abandons her children in a strange, almost surreal sort of way: by buying a ticket for a ride in an airplane at a fair, and then just flying off with the pilot, forever. Which just kind of left me going, "huh?" for the rest of the novel. It's not that I have an issue with the absurd or the surreal, but there's something about it that just doesn't quite mesh with the more realistic aspects. And the characters have much the same kind of feel to them, really, that mix of the deeply believable and the weirdly over-the-top. And, while they and their inter-relationships are interesting, they're also often horrible and offputting, and there were times when I found myself getting tired of, or even disgusted with, their company. And yet, even when she's doing things that don't 100% work... man, Erdrich can write. Rating: It's impossible to know how to rate this, because it's either flawed but still really good or rather disappointing, depending on what standards I try to hold it to. I'm giving it a 3.5/5, but I don't know if I feel great about that. In the second of the Love Medicine series, Erdrich brings her German ancestry into the mix, with the story of how the strangely orphaned Adare children arrived in Argus, North Dakota, looking for their Aunt Fritzie, who runs a butcher shop with her husband. Mary Adare clashes with her cousin Sita; inherits the meat business; develops a bit of a crush on Russell Kashpaw, a veteran of two wars and many wounds; and finds unsettling friendship with Russell's half sister, Celestine, the mother of a child Mary would wish to call her own. Again, complex relationships, a mixture of past and present, and hints of untold tales begging to be revealed. The title's relevance does not come clear until very near the end, which I found a bit unsatisfactory. In fact, this one didn't work especially well for me, possibly because it was all new---I hadn't read this one before. I think Erdrich is like Faulkner in this regard...she cannot simply be read, she must be re-read (with a nod to Jay Parini, who made the observation about Uncle Billy in the first place). sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
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«Louise Erdrich es la novelista estadounidense más interesante que ha aparecido en años.»Philip RothUna fría mañana de primavera de 1932, Karl Adare y su hermana Mary llegan en un tren de carga a Argus, un pequeño pueblo de Dakota del Norte cercano a una reserva india; van en busca de su tía Fritzie, casada con el carnicero del pueblo, tras haber sido abandonados por su alocada madre. Al llegar, Karl, asustado, corre de nuevo hacia el vagón; Mary, en sentido contrario, hacia el pueblo. ¿Volverán sus caminos a encontrarse? Así comienza esta cautivadora saga, envuelta en un sutil humor negro y una inaprensible atmósfera mágica, que se extiende a lo largo de cuarenta años en una pequeña comunidad rural unida por lazos de sangre, oscuros secretos, celos y violentas pasiones. La Reina de la Remolacha, con sus variopintos y entrañables personajes -a alguno de los cuales ya conocimos en Filtro de amor-, retrata de manera vibrante y luminosa el misterio de la condición humana y las costumbres de la América más profunda que empezaba a ser transformada por la industrialización. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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