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No hay artículos en el carroGreen acres
Reseñado en Australia el 25 de enero de 2017
This is a wonderful book, such full characters. It's amazing how some expect so much from life and some accept so little.The writing is as always beautiful and humbling.
Bob B
Reseñado en Canadá el 4 de diciembre de 2015
Intelligent, very readable, and easily comparable to Mitchener, who wrote Hawaii, and numerous other best sellers.A really good story. I definitely recommend Arthur and George to any who are ardent readers of well written, fascinating books. I have to agree the centre section is overly long, an introspection by Arther about his honour to his wife and his love of another held in abeyance. However, I am so glad I persevered past that part.Be prepared to use your Kindle or kindle app on other devices as you will often do the instant dictionary look-up, not because you have to, but because you will want to
PlantBirdWoman
Reseñado en Estados Unidos el 19 de septiembre de 2015
I did not grow up in a house full of books. In fact, there were few on our bookshelves other than the ubiquitous King James Bible. I loved comic books, especially the Tarzan of the Apes ones. I read and reread them, and later, when I was around twelve I think, I began to discover REAL books.The first ones that I found on my own were the Sherlock Holmes novels. I was drawn to them because I knew the name Sherlock Holmes. Even virtual illiterates could not escape the name of the great "first consulting detective" or the knowledge of his story.The first book that I bought by myself was a volume of the complete Sherlock Holmes stories. He was my first literary love and I have remained true to him all these years later. He still fascinates me as he still fascinates much of the world, as evidenced by the popularity of modern movies, television shows, and literary pastiches featuring him.What must it have taken to conjure up such a character? How much of his creator, Arthur Conan Doyle, is inherent in the fictional man? I get the feeling from reading Julian Barnes' Arthur & George that there is quite a bit of Doyle in Holmes.Of course, Barnes is such an exceptional writer and such a perceptive observer of human nature that it must have been easy for him to make those connections and then to convey them to his readers. Or perhaps not. His writing seems to flow so effortlessly that the reader intuits that it was easy for him to produce it. But maybe we are not giving him enough credit. Maybe he struggles to make it all look easy. Just as there was hard work and a lot of research and experimentation behind Sherlock Holmes' brilliant deductions about complicated crimes. Or behind Arthur Conan Doyle's writing of them.But I digress.The Arthur in Arthur & George is, of course, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. The George is the much less well-known George Edalji, a native-born Englishman of Indian and Scottish descent. His father was a Parsee out of India who became vicar of a South Staffordshire church where he served for some forty years. His mother was from Scotland. George was the oldest of three children and much was expected of him.The book is based on true events that took place at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century. It was a time when Arthur was married with two children, but his wife had been diagnosed with consumption. There was no cure, but Arthur threw himself into the fight to delay the inevitable as long as possible.In the middle of this fight, he met and fell in love with Jean Leckie. He loved her - and she him - from afar for many years before the inevitable did, in fact, happen, and they were free to marry.Meantime, George Edalji and his family were involved in their own fight. They were being harassed and tormented by an unknown persecutor, or persecutors, in the village. This progressed to the point that George, now a licensed solicitor, was framed for the mutilation of farm animals. The investigation and prosecution was a travesty of justice but he was sent to prison for eight years. However, he was released after three years.After his release, he sent a letter with all the newspaper clippings about his case to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and asked for the great man's help in clearing his name. As it happened, Doyle received this missive at a low point in his life, after the death of his wife. He needed something to bring him out of himself. George Edalji's case was just the ticket.Once again, he wholeheartedly threw himself into a fight - this time the fight to find justice for a wrongly convicted man. In some ways, the fight was the salvation of Arthur as much as George.Julian Barnes tells this engrossing story from the alternating perspectives of George, then Arthur, and occasionally of other characters as well. From the beginning, we can see that a great wrong has been committed but that there is hope for redemption and redress. How could one not love such a story?Barnes weaves various themes through this tale. There is the obvious one (to everyone except George and his family) of racism. It seems apparent that the contempt and disdain with which George is dealt throughout his ordeal has its basis in rampant racism, and yet, he refuses to ever consider that as an explanation. He is seriously in denial regarding the attitudes of his neighbors.Ancillary to the racist attitudes is the theme of just how easy it is to instill ideas into the receptive minds of listeners or readers or viewers. And once those ideas are lodged there, how difficult it is to get them out.An overarching theme for much of the book, and especially for the last third, is death. Conan Doyle became a true believer in spiritualism and the talents of mediums and uses of the seance, and he was a powerful proselytizer for his belief that death is not the end. It is merely a transition from one plane of life to another.This is a book that is packed with ideas. They reveal themselves slowly, which might be a problem for an impatient reader. But for those who can take the time to absorb the complexity of Barnes' themes, the rewards are great.
Ms. K. Judge
Reseñado en el Reino Unido el 19 de octubre de 2013
I had only ever read one previous novel by Julian Barnes, and loved his writing, and this one has confirmed to me what a superb writer and wordsmith he is. It is a most original and unusual story, based on real events, but written as a novel.Impeccably researched and with a very authentic feel for the period, the story is about two young men who grow up under very different family circumstances, but whose lives coincide when George is wrongfully imprisoned for a series of horrific and brutal attacks on animals, which he did not commit. It is only at this point, when 'Arthur' steps in to investigate the case, that you realise that this is Sir Arthur Conan-Doyle. It is absolutely spellbinding, and I can highly recommend it for anyone who is a fan of great writing. However, it is not a 'Sherlock Holmes' story, though at the time the newspaper reports pretty much equated the fictitious character with the author, in the public's mind.The book is a delight and was a wonderful surprise to me!
Ernst Friedrich Stahl
Reseñado en Alemania el 29 de octubre de 2012
Diese Buch ist gut zu lesen - eine fortlaufende Geschichte. Überraschend ist die Idendität von Arthur, warum möchte ich aber nicht verraten!
MTS
Reseñado en España el 3 de enero de 2012
Novela en la que Barnes se convierte en Conan Doyle y Conan Doyle en Sherlock Holmes, es una obra ambiciosa y rica en la que el autor no comete ningún error. Tiene una trama que te envuelve y que no te permite dejar de leerla hasta que la has terminado y una perfecta recreación del ambiente.
David Arroyo Fernandez
Reseñado en España el 10 de octubre de 2011
Un clásico de este autor y solo puedo decir que se lee sin querer , un gran libro que sin duda es un gran acierto para quien lo lea
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