Die Stadt der gebrochenen Herzen
- 267 Seiten
- 10 Lesestunden
Ethan Canin ist gefeiert für seine fesselnden Kurzgeschichten und eindringlichen Romane, die eine vielfältige literarische Landschaft erkunden. Sein Werk zeichnet sich durch tiefe Weisheit und exquisite Schönheit aus, sei es in prägnanten Novellen oder weitläufigen Erzählungen. Canin wechselte von der Medizin zur Literatur und widmete sich dem Schreiben und Lehren, wo er nun aufstrebende literarische Talente fördert. Seine einzigartige Stimme und seine aufschlussreiche Prosa bieten den Lesern eine besondere Auseinandersetzung mit der menschlichen Verfassung.







Blue River, ein kleiner Ort irgendwo am Mississippi. Edward und Lawrence, zwei Brüder, die auf unheilvolle Weise zueinander hingezogen werden. Eine virtuos erzählte, spannende Geschichte über Bruderliebe und Bruderhass, die eine Atmosphäre beschwört, der man sich nicht entziehen kann. 'Spannend, bewegend, genau beobachtet und absolut überzeugend. Blue River ist das Werk eines hochbegabten Autors.' Sunday Times
Delving into complex family dynamics and personal growth, the stories feature characters grappling with challenges like environmental concerns, marital strife, and self-identity. Cannin's compassionate narrative style captures their transformative moments with keen insight, humor, and elegance, offering readers a profound exploration of human experience.
Searing scenes place Canin in a particular East Coast American tradition of meticulously detailed domestic realism that descends through a line of Johns - Cheever, Updike, Irving . These influences, though, add up to a remarkable achievement of Canin's own. This is big, serious, completely involving fiction of a kind rarely written today ... Canin has achieved a proof of his own high value to American fiction Mark Lawson Guardian
Breathtaking in its suspense and beauty, Carry Me Across the Water is the story of a man’s turbulent journey, with his family, through the central years of the twentieth century. Young August Kleinman escapes from Nazi Germany to America, where his mother’s words—“Take the advice of no one”—fate him to a life of boldness and originality, from the poor streets of New York to the marble mansions of industrial Pittsburgh, from old world Hamburg to the jungle islands of the Pacific. Ultimately, near the end of a long and bountiful life, his resolution of a haunting encounter with a Japanese soldier during World War Two finally illuminates, at the deepest levels, the way authentic lives truly unfold. From the writer hailed as “the most mature and accomplished novelist of his generation” (Alan Cheuse, National Public Radio) comes this “exquisitely modulated short novel” (Los Angeles Times), which “eases its silky-smooth way into a reader’s consciousness even as it plumbs the depths” (Newsday).
From the celebrated author of The Palace Thief and Emperor of the Air, comes this stunning novel about the relationship between two very different men. Orno Tarcher travels from a small town in Missouri to New York City to attend Columbia University, where he begins a new life feeling unsophisticated and insecure. He soon strikes up a friendship with Marshall Emerson, a seductive and brilliant New Yorker whose sophistication dazzles Orno. As time passes, Marshall is revealed to be bent on destruction, and Orno's involvment with Marshall's worldly sister further complicates their friendship. Carefully crafted and skillfully informed by the works of Fitzgerald and Waugh, For Kings and Planets is a remarkable novel. A New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Boston Globe, San Francisco Chronicle, and Minneapolis StarTribune bestseller, and a Publishers Weekly Best Book of 1998.
In the early 1970s, Corey Sifter, the son of working-class parents, becomes a yard boy on the grand estate of the powerful Metarey family. Soon, through the family's generosity, he is a student at a private boarding school and an aide to the great New York senator Henry Bonwiller, who is running for president. Before long, Corey finds himself involved with one of the Metarey daughters as well, and he begins to leave behind the world of his upbringing. As the Bonwiller campaign gains momentum, Corey finds himself caught up in a complex web of events in which loyalty, politics, sex, and gratitude conflict with morality love, and the truth.
Ghana imports $100 million rice a year, mainly from Thailand and the US, which represents an unsustainable burden on the country's trade and exchange balances; and primary cause of devastation to the national economy. This book first provides an account of economic developments in the country since 1920, arguing that this is a period largely characterised by over-dependency on cocoa. It examines the extent to which past Ghanaian governments have succeeded in providing citizens with basic food, water, clothing and shelter; and compares Ghana's economic performance with countries which were in comparable or worse economic positions in the 1960s and 1970s, such as Malaysia, whose economic growth and sustainability have surpassed the performance of Ghana. The author then presents a blueprint or 'Kufuor Plan' addressed directly to the President. The plan, designed for immediate implementation, calls for active, official encouragement for a nation-wide industrial policy based on small-scale agriculture, and which uses local resources to generate profits for the country.