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Der goldene Hahn & andere Schriften Softcover Buch Juan Rulfo mexikanischer Autor

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Artikelmerkmale

Artikelzustand
Neuwertig: Buch, das wie neu aussieht, aber bereits gelesen wurde. Der Einband weist keine ...
Brand
Unbranded
MPN
Does not apply
ISBN
9781941920589

Über dieses Produkt

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Deep Vellum Publishing
ISBN-10
1941920586
ISBN-13
9781941920589
eBay Product ID (ePID)
236622676

Product Key Features

Book Title
Golden Cockerel and Other Writings
Number of Pages
228 Pages
Language
English
Publication Year
2017
Topic
Hispanic & Latino, Fantasy / General, Magical Realism, Literary
Illustrator
Yes
Genre
Fiction
Author
Juán Rulfo
Format
Trade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height
0.6 in
Item Weight
8.8 Oz
Item Length
8.2 in
Item Width
5.2 in

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
Trade
LCCN
2016-959432
TitleLeading
The
Dewey Edition
23
Reviews
"To read Rulfo''s stories is to inhabit Mexico and, in the process, to have Mexico inhabit you." -- Oscar Casares, NPR "You can read Rulfo''s slight but dense body of work in a couple of days, but that represents only a first step into territories that are yet to be definitively mapped. Their exploration is one of the more remarkable journeys in literature." -- Chris Power, The Guardian "Rulfo, through his photographs and his books, seems to be saying, Look! See! This world is here before us, it lacerates us with the anguished and ill-fated weight of its tangible reality. Come look!" -- BOMB Magazine "My profound exploration of Juan Rulfo's work was what finally showed me the way to continue with my writing." -- Gabriel Garca Mrquez "The only Mexican novelist who has given us an image--instead of just a description--of our landscape." -- Octavio Paz "Rulfo's work is at its core about people who do their best to unburden themselves of the stories they never stop telling." -- Peter Orner, The Rumpus "His is a text in which meaning is subsumed into an architecture of shadows and whispers, and into the ebb and flow of the vernacular." -- Suhayl Saadi, The Independent "Far from the simple imitative realism of earlier Latin American novels, his essentialist work is on the level of myth and archetype." -- Rockwell Gray, The Chicago Tribune "[Rulfo's] work is built on an intricate lattice of time and space, but it doesn''t seem planned so much as grown, something natural, inevitable, efficient, and effortless. All its paradoxes are innate." -- Jim Lewis, Slate "Octavio Paz has said that Juan Rulfo ''is the only Mexican novelist who has given us an image--instead of just a description--of our landscape.'' By the same token we could say that Josephine Sacabo is the only photographer who has given us an image of that most elusive of landscapes conceived by Juan Rulfo--Cosala." -- Buenos Aires Herald "...This is a book that is valuable in itself for its expression of the narrative talent of Juan Rulfo...Apart from the first images, which are truly cinematic and serve to introduce the protagonist...the reader soon forgets that he is reading a storyline written for the cinema." -- Evodia Escalante, Casa Del Tiempo "The work of Juan Rulfo is not only the highest expression which the Mexican novel has attained until now: through Pedro Pramo we can find the thread that leads us to the new Latin American novel." -- Carlos Fuentes (on Pedro Pramo ) "His is a text in which meaning is subsumed into an architecture of shadows and whispers, and into the ebb and flow of the vernacular." -- Suhayl Saadi, The Independent (on Pedro Pramo ) "[Rulfo's] work is built on an intricate lattice of time and space, but it doesn''t seem planned so much as grown, something natural, inevitable, efficient, and effortless. All its paradoxes are innate." -- Jim Lewis, Slate (on Pedro Pramo ) "A simplicity and profundity worthy of Greek tragedy ... Wuthering Heights located in Mexico and written by Kafka" -- The Guardian (on Pedro Pramo ) "What is remarkable about these sketches is that the characters are rendered with deep honesty; their faults are highlighted, celebrated in a way that is reminiscent of Chekhov''s peasants." -- Publishers Weekly (on The Plain in Flames ) "As a masterclass in the short story, The Burning Plain is a joy, but it is also a vivid historical document of a terrible and remote historical era." -- Andy Thatcher, The Short Review (on The Burning Plain ) "The feeling that one gets while reading is of a smoky, dark night filled with suspicious shadows hiding still darker secrets that pour out of the words and sentences of the stories." -- Bhupinder Singh, A Reader's Words (on The Burning Plain ), "To read Rulfo's stories is to inhabit Mexico and, in the process, to have Mexico inhabit you." -- Oscar Casares, NPR "You can read Rulfo's slight but dense body of work in a couple of days, but that represents only a first step into territories that are yet to be definitively mapped. Their exploration is one of the more remarkable journeys in literature." -- Chris Power, The Guardian "Rulfo, through his photographs and his books, seems to be saying, Look! See! This world is here before us, it lacerates us with the anguished and ill-fated weight of its tangible reality. Come look!" -- BOMB Magazine "Rulfo's work is at its core about people who do their best to unburden themselves of the stories they never stop telling." -- Peter Orner, The Rumpus "His is a text in which meaning is subsumed into an architecture of shadows and whispers, and into the ebb and flow of the vernacular." -- Suhayl Saadi, The Independent "[Rulfo's] work is built on an intricate lattice of time and space, but it doesn't seem planned so much as grown, something natural, inevitable, efficient, and effortless. All its paradoxes are innate." -- Jim Lewis, Slate "Octavio Paz has said that Juan Rulfo 'is the only Mexican novelist who has given us an image--instead of just a description--of our landscape.' By the same token we could say that Josephine Sacabo is the only photographer who has given us an image of that most elusive of landscapes conceived by Juan Rulfo--Cosala." -- Buenos Aires Herald "...This is a book that is valuable in itself for its expression of the narrative talent of Juan Rulfo...Apart from the first images, which are truly cinematic and serve to introduce the protagonist...the reader soon forgets that he is reading a storyline written for the cinema." -- Evodia Escalante, Casa Del Tiempo "The work of Juan Rulfo is not only the highest expression which the Mexican novel has attained until now: through Pedro Pramo we can find the thread that leads us to the new Latin American novel." -- Carlos Fuentes (on Pedro Pramo ) "His is a text in which meaning is subsumed into an architecture of shadows and whispers, and into the ebb and flow of the vernacular." -- Suhayl Saadi, The Independent (on Pedro Pramo ) "[Rulfo's] work is built on an intricate lattice of time and space, but it doesn't seem planned so much as grown, something natural, inevitable, efficient, and effortless. All its paradoxes are innate." -- Jim Lewis, Slate (on Pedro Pramo ), "To read Rulfo''s stories is to inhabit Mexico and, in the process, to have Mexico inhabit you." -- Oscar Casares, NPR "You can read Rulfo''s slight but dense body of work in a couple of days, but that represents only a first step into territories that are yet to be definitively mapped. Their exploration is one of the more remarkable journeys in literature." -- Chris Power, The Guardian "Rulfo, through his photographs and his books, seems to be saying, Look! See! This world is here before us, it lacerates us with the anguished and ill-fated weight of its tangible reality. Come look!" -- BOMB Magazine "My profound exploration of Juan Rulfo''s work was what finally showed me the way to continue with my writing." -- Gabriel Garca Mrquez "The only Mexican novelist who has given us an image--instead of just a description--of our landscape." -- Octavio Paz "Rulfo''s work is at its core about people who do their best to unburden themselves of the stories they never stop telling." -- Peter Orner, The Rumpus "His is a text in which meaning is subsumed into an architecture of shadows and whispers, and into the ebb and flow of the vernacular." -- Suhayl Saadi, The Independent "Far from the simple imitative realism of earlier Latin American novels, his essentialist work is on the level of myth and archetype." -- Rockwell Gray, The Chicago Tribune "[Rulfo''s] work is built on an intricate lattice of time and space, but it doesn''t seem planned so much as grown, something natural, inevitable, efficient, and effortless. All its paradoxes are innate." -- Jim Lewis, Slate "Octavio Paz has said that Juan Rulfo ''is the only Mexican novelist who has given us an image--instead of just a description--of our landscape.'' By the same token we could say that Josephine Sacabo is the only photographer who has given us an image of that most elusive of landscapes conceived by Juan Rulfo--Cosala." -- Buenos Aires Herald "...This is a book that is valuable in itself for its expression of the narrative talent of Juan Rulfo...Apart from the first images, which are truly cinematic and serve to introduce the protagonist...the reader soon forgets that he is reading a storyline written for the cinema." -- Evodia Escalante, Casa Del Tiempo "The work of Juan Rulfo is not only the highest expression which the Mexican novel has attained until now: through Pedro Pramo we can find the thread that leads us to the new Latin American novel." -- Carlos Fuentes (on Pedro Pramo) "His is a text in which meaning is subsumed into an architecture of shadows and whispers, and into the ebb and flow of the vernacular." -- Suhayl Saadi, The Independent (on Pedro Pramo) "[Rulfo''s] work is built on an intricate lattice of time and space, but it doesn''t seem planned so much as grown, something natural, inevitable, efficient, and effortless. All its paradoxes are innate." -- Jim Lewis, Slate (on Pedro Pramo) "A simplicity and profundity worthy of Greek tragedy ... Wuthering Heights located in Mexico and written by Kafka" -- The Guardian (on Pedro Pramo) "What is remarkable about these sketches is that the characters are rendered with deep honesty; their faults are highlighted, celebrated in a way that is reminiscent of Chekhov''s peasants." -- Publishers Weekly (on The Plain in Flames) "As a masterclass in the short story, The Burning Plain is a joy, but it is also a vivid historical document of a terrible and remote historical era." -- Andy Thatcher, The Short Review (on The Burning Plain) "The feeling that one gets while reading is of a smoky, dark night filled with suspicious shadows hiding still darker secrets that pour out of the words and sentences of the stories." -- Bhupinder Singh, A Reader''s Words (on The Burning Plain)
Dewey Decimal
863/.64
Synopsis
This work presents Juan Rulfo's cinematic second novel in English for the first time ever alongside several stories never before translated., "Juan Rulfo is our most important author." -- Yuri Herrera, author of Signs Preceding the End of the World "Among contemporary writers in Mexico today 1959], Juan Rulfo is expected to rank among the immortals." -- The New York Times Book Review The legendary title novella from one of Mexico's most influential writers is published here in English for the first time on the 100th anniversary of his birth. This lost masterwork, collected with his previously untranslated stories, marks a landmark event in world literature. Juan Rulfo (1917-1986), Mexico's most important and influential author of the twentieth century, received numerous awards in his lifetime, including the esteemed Cervantes Prize, and his work served as the literary precursor of "magical realism.", "Juan Rulfo is our most important author." -- Yuri Herrera, author of Signs Preceding the End of the World "Among contemporary writers in Mexico today [1959], Juan Rulfo is expected to rank among the immortals." -- The New York Times Book Review The legendary title novella from one of Mexico's most influential writers is published here in English for the first time on the 100th anniversary of his birth. This lost masterwork, collected with his previously untranslated stories, marks a landmark event in world literature. Juan Rulfo (1917-1986), Mexico's most important and influential author of the twentieth century, received numerous awards in his lifetime, including the esteemed Cervantes Prize, and his work served as the literary precursor of "magical realism."
LC Classification Number
PQ7297.R89A2 2017

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