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Loading... Braziliëdoor John Updike
This is one of Updike's least appealing novels, both from the point of view of obsessive personal preoccupations as well as from its ill-advised attempt to cater to contemporary critical fashions that were far removed from his literary strengths. ( )I read it since it was a retelling of the Tristan and Isolde legend. I have not read any other Updike novels. This one is interesting and bizarre, and utilizes magic realism fairly successfully. Of course it is literary and far-fetched --- it's a magical realism-infused retelling of an old legend. sehr lesenswert I'd not read any Upike before this so I thought I'd give him a try. I found the story interesting to the extent that it gave me a feel for the size and sweep of Brazil, and the extent to which it is ignored in the west. But beyond that it was rather too much of a literary story, my same complaint as with The Dying Animal, so I don't think I'll be reading much more Updike. Only a writer with as many accolades under his belt as John Updike could write a book like Brazil, the sixteenth novel by the New England writer and certainly one of his most daring. All at once, Brazil seeks to be an interracial love story, a time-shattering fable, and a sociological treatise. Remarkably, Updike nearly succeeds in all three. Full review: http://www.davidlouisedelman.com/revi... |
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