|
Showing 1 - 12 of
12 matches in All Departments
Displaying his characteristic penchant for the macabre, the
tender and the comic, Michael Tournier presents the traditional
Magi describing their personal odysseys to Bethlehem--and
audaciously imagines a fourth, "the eternal latecomer"' whose story
of hardship and redemption is the most moving and instructive of
all. Prince of Mangalore and son of an Indian maharajah, Taor has
tasted an exquisite confection, "rachat loukoum," and is so taken
by the flavor that he sets out to recover the recipe. His quest
takes him across Western Asia and finally lands him in Sodom, where
he is imprisoned in a salt mine. There, this fourth wise man learns
the recipe from a fellow prisoner, and learns of the existence and
meaning of Jesus.
Jean and Paul are identical twins. Outsiders, even their
parents, cannot tell them apart, and call them Jean-Paul. The
mysterious bond between them excludes all others; they speak their
own language; they are one perfectly harmonious unit; they are, in
all innocence, lovers.
For Paul, this unity is paradise, but as they grow up Jean
rebels against it. He takes a mistress and deserts his brother, but
Paul sets out to follow him in a pilgrimage that leads all around
the world, through places that reflect their separation--the
mirrored halls of Venice, the Zen gardens of Japan, the newly
divided city of Berlin. The exquisite love story of Jean-Paul is
set against the ugliness and pain of human existence. " Gemini" is
a novel of extraordinary proportions, intricate images, and
profound thought, in which Michel Tournier tells his fascinating
story with an irresistible humor.
If not by nature, then by habit, people tend to match one thing
with another--man and woman, laughter and tears, sickness and
health, fire and water, master and servant--thereby accentuating
similarities and contrasts and opening a field of relations. In
"The Mirror of Ideas," Michel Tournier examines these pairs and a
host of others to demonstrate how pairing one object or idea with
another generates the work of imagination, philosophy, and creative
thinking of all kinds.
Tournier treats pairs both lowly and exalted--moving from fork and
spoon, horse and bull, cat and dog, to fear and anguish, poetry and
prose, body and soul, being and nothingness. Hardly an exhaustive
inventory of traditional pairs, his selection nonetheless opens the
door to patterns deeply embedded in culture and civilization,
speech and writing, memory and habit. Possessed of both brilliant
surfaces and surprising depths, Tournier's myriad reflections on
the mirror of language reveal why his works have generated
international attention and acclaim.
An international bestseller and winner of the Prix Goncourt,
France's most prestigious literary award, "The Ogre" is a masterful
tale of innocence, perversion, and obsession. It follows the
passage of strange, gentle Abel Tiffauges from submissive schoolboy
to "ogre" of the Nazi school at the castle of Kaltenborn, taking us
deeper into the dark heart of fascism than any novel since "The Tin
Drum." Until the very last page, when Abel meets his mystic fate in
the collapsing ruins of the Third Reich, it shocks us, dazzles us,
and above all holds us spellbound.
|
You may like...
Lies He Told Me
James Patterson, David Ellis
Paperback
R395
R353
Discovery Miles 3 530
|