Titre : | Animal dreams | Type de document : | texte imprimé | Auteurs : | Barbara Kingsolver | Mention d'édition : | First HarperPerennial edition. | Importance : | viii, 342 pages | Format : | 21 cm | ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-0-06-092114-9 | Note générale : | Originally published: 1990. | Mots-clés : | Literary Fiction Literature Romance | Index. décimale : | 813 Fiction-théâtre et roman | Résumé : | In this skillfully told novel by the author of The Bean Trees, a young woman returns to her hometown to care for her father and, without knowing it, herself. As usual, Codi is seeking to avoid life, but instead she finds plenty of it. She begins a complicated romance with a former boyfriend, corresponds with her sister, Hallie, who is kidnapped and then murdered in Nicaragua, tries to convince her father that his declining mental abilities are interfering with his work as a physician, and attempts to save the town from the evil Black Mountain Mining Company, which is poisoning the river and threatening the region's future. In alternating chapters, Kingsolver gives us Codi and her father, Homer, adroitly melding two viewpoints of one history. The book's southwestern setting proves particularly evocative: lush hot springs, dramatic vistas, and ancient pueblos are ideal envelopes for characters in deep introspection or loving embrace. The mixed Anglo and native American culture is equally colorful and unusually well developed. It's hard to find fault with this book--it manages to push all our emotional buttons without sacrificing fine craftsmanship. |
Animal dreams [texte imprimé] / Barbara Kingsolver . - First HarperPerennial edition. . - [s.d.] . - viii, 342 pages ; 21 cm. ISBN : 978-0-06-092114-9 Originally published: 1990. Mots-clés : | Literary Fiction Literature Romance | Index. décimale : | 813 Fiction-théâtre et roman | Résumé : | In this skillfully told novel by the author of The Bean Trees, a young woman returns to her hometown to care for her father and, without knowing it, herself. As usual, Codi is seeking to avoid life, but instead she finds plenty of it. She begins a complicated romance with a former boyfriend, corresponds with her sister, Hallie, who is kidnapped and then murdered in Nicaragua, tries to convince her father that his declining mental abilities are interfering with his work as a physician, and attempts to save the town from the evil Black Mountain Mining Company, which is poisoning the river and threatening the region's future. In alternating chapters, Kingsolver gives us Codi and her father, Homer, adroitly melding two viewpoints of one history. The book's southwestern setting proves particularly evocative: lush hot springs, dramatic vistas, and ancient pueblos are ideal envelopes for characters in deep introspection or loving embrace. The mixed Anglo and native American culture is equally colorful and unusually well developed. It's hard to find fault with this book--it manages to push all our emotional buttons without sacrificing fine craftsmanship. |
| |