Search results for ""author antonio lobo antunes""
Luchterhand Literaturvlg. Buch der Chroniken
£10.15
btb Taschenbuch Welche Pferde sind das die da werfen ihren Schatten aufs Meer
£12.00
btb Taschenbuch Kommission der Trnen Roman
£11.99
Luchterhand Literaturvlg. Bis die Steine leichter sind als Wasser Roman
£21.60
btb Taschenbuch Vom Wesen der Gtter Roman
£15.00
Luchterhand Literaturvlg. Die letzte Tür vor der Nacht
£25.20
btb Taschenbuch Die Rckkehr der Karavellen Roman
£10.04
Luchterhand Literaturvlg. Vom Wesen der Götter
£23.40
btb Taschenbuch Einblick in die Hlle Roman
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btb Taschenbuch Portugals strahlende Gre Roman
£12.00
btb Taschenbuch Mitternacht zu sein ist nicht jedem gegeben
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Debolsillo Qué caballos son aquellos que hacen sombra en el mar
Esta novela narra la historia de una gran familia ganadera venida a menos. La inminente muerte de la matriarca sirve como excusa para hilvanar las voces, interesadas y contradictorias, que darán cuenta de los conflictos, las desilusiones y las fisuras que han desencadenado su ruina. El padre es un ludópata que ha dilapidado su patrimonio, Francisco se afana por conservar los restos de su herencia cuando muera la madre, João deshonra a la familia al desvelar su homosexualidad, Beatriz está marcada por el fracaso de dos matrimonios, Ana es adicta a las drogas y visitante habitual de los bajos fondos, Rita falleció prematuramente y, finalmente, Mercília, la vieja sirvienta que los ha criado a todos y conoce cada uno de sus secretos.Como cualquier texto que se precie de poseer ese je ne sais quoi que lo eleva a la categoría de literario, esta novela llega en oleadas.Ana Cristina Leonardo, Expresso
£15.18
btb Taschenbuch Der Tod des Carlos Gardel
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Dalkey Archive Press Commission of Tears
António Lobo Antunes’s twenty-fifth novel, Commission of Tears (2011, Comissão das Lágrimas) is set during the Angolan Civil War (1975-2002). Angola attained official independence on November 11, 1975 and, while the stage was set for transition, a combination of ethnic tensions and international pressures rendered Angola’s hard-won victory problematic. As with many post-colonial states, Angola was left with both economic and social difficulties which translated into a power struggle between the three predominant liberation movements. The People’s Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA), formed in December of 1956 as an offshoot of the Angolan Communist Party, had as its support base the Ambundu people and was largely supported by other African countries, Cuba, and the Soviet Union.In this novel, Lobo Antunes delves into this traumatic period of Angola's history through the fragmented memories and dreams of a broken woman. The author drew from the story of the commander of the female battalion MPLA (Popular movement for the liberation of Angola) who was tortured and killed following the state coup of May 1977. It is said that while they tortured her she did not stop singing. This is the story of Cristina, admitted in to a psychiatric clinic in Lisbon. In her torrent of memories, dialogues and traumatic episodes, Cristina remembers her early childhood in Africa, at the time when everything inside her head was intertwined with her father´s voice, who was a former Black priest and became one of the torturers of the “Commission of Tears.” Cristina’s white mother, a cabaret dancer imported from Lisbon to entertain Portuguese farmers in Angola, marries the Black ex-priest because she finds herself pregnant with Cristina by her the man who exploits her, the cabaret manager. The long, twisting narrative weaves together the three voices of daughter, father, and mother as they recall the terrors of their life in Angola, and their own suffering. Their personal tragedies, scarred by racism and abuse, mirror those of the country that is being torn asunder around them.
£14.99
Dalkey Archive Press The Splendor of Portugal
"The Splendor of Portugal"'s four narrators are members of a once well-to-do family whose plantation was lost in the Angolan War of Independence; the matriarch of this unhappiest of clans and her three adult children speak in a nightmarish, remorseless gush to give us the details of their grotesque family life. Like a character out of Faulkner's decayed south, the mother clings to the hope that her children will come back, save her from destitution, and restore the family's imagined former glory. The children, for their part, haven't seen each other in years, and in their isolation are tormented by feverish memories of Angola. The vitriol and self-hatred of the characters know no bounds, for they are at once victims and culprits, guilty of atrocities committed in the name of colonialism as well as the cruel humiliations and betrayals of their own kin. Antunes again proves that he is the foremost stylist of his generation, a fearless investigator into the worst excesses of the human animal.
£14.71
Dalkey Archive Press Warning to the Crocodiles
Set in the aftermath of the “Carnation Revolution” of April 25, 1974, Antonio Lobo Antunes’s Warning to the Crocodiles is a fragmented narrative of the violent tensions resulting from major political changes in Portugal. Told through the memories of four women who spend their days fashioning homemade explosives and participating in the kidnap and torture of communists, the novel details the clandestine activities of an extreme right-wing Salazarist faction resisting the country’s new embrace of democracy. Warning to the Crocodiles (Exortação aos Crocodilos) has won:- Best Novel by the Portuguese Writers Association (Grande Prémio de Romance e Novela da Associação Portuguesa de Escritores) (1999)- The D. Dinis Prize of the Casa de Mateus Foundation (Prémio D. Dinis da Fundação Casa de Mateus) (1999)- The Austrian State Literature Prize (Prémio de Literatura Europeia do Estado Austríaco) (2000)
£12.99
Yale University Press By the Rivers of Babylon
A profound and genre-defying work of literature about love, death, and illness from one of Portugal’s most celebrated writers “One of the essential writers of our tormented times.”—Alberto Manguel, Times Literary Supplement “Little prepares one for this extraordinary book, in which each chapter, covering a single day, and lasting a single sentence, offers a teeming stream of consciousness. . . . Even pain is alive, and alive is the word for this book, alive and enduring.”— Michael Autrey, Booklist Incapacitated after the removal of a malignant tumor, the narrator, António, spends his days in a Lisbon hospital enduring the humiliations of severe illness. As he drifts in and out of consciousness, he revisits fragments of his life and the people who passed through it. He recalls the village where he lived as a child near the Mondego River amid the eucalyptus and pines, his parents and grandparents and their tight-knit community of potato farmers and tungsten miners, and the woman he loved—an unexpected polyphony of voices and places sounding in sharp counterpoint to debilitating pain. By the Rivers of Babylon conjures the past and the present all at once, revealing the power of memory to embolden us in the face of extraordinary suffering. This is António Lobo Antunes’s homage to the beauty of a cherished life in its confrontation with imminent death.
£16.50