Birchwood A Novel
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- Taschenbuch
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Form:Einzelkauf Download
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Sprache:Englisch
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Verlag:Hanover Square Press
Fr. 7.94
inkl. gesetzl. MwSt.Beschreibung
Produktdetails
Format
ePUB
Kopierschutz
Nein
Family Sharing
Ja
Text-to-Speech
Ja
Erscheinungsdatum
21.11.2023
Verlag
Hanover Square PressSeitenzahl
208 (Printausgabe)
Sprache
Englisch
EAN
9780369749734
A classic novel of family, isolation and a blighted Ireland from the Booker Prize-winning author of The Sea depicts the end of innocence for a boy and his country. Once the big house on an Irish estate, Birchwood has turned into a dilapidated family manor filled with memories and despair. One disaster succeeds another, until young Gabriel Godkin runs away to join a traveling circus and look for his long-lost twin sister. Soon he discovers that famine and unrest stalk the countryside, and Ireland is ruined too. Told with lyrical prose, John Banville's Birchwood is the elegiac story of the aristocratic decline of an eccentric family riddled with dark secrets. "John Banville is one of the greatest masters of the English language." -The Scotsman
Kundinnen und Kunden meinen
Laughter in the Ashes
Benedikt am 11.01.2026
Bewertungsnummer: 2898051
Bewertet: eBook (ePUB)
Jon Banville’s Birchwood is a novel where language itself seems to breathe, shimmer, and bruise. Every sentence is carefully wrought, lyrical without indulgence, and charged with an intelligence that delights even as it unsettles. Banville’s prose turns the decaying Big House and its memories into something almost musical, a score of loss played with wicked precision.
What makes Birchwood especially striking is its audacious fusion of comedy and tragedy. Grotesque figures, absurd situations, and darkly playful narration coexist with scenes of genuine horror and deprivation. Banville allows humor to flicker at the edge of despair, not to diminish suffering, but to reveal its strange, human resilience. Laughter here is nervous, cruel, and necessary.
Through this tonal balancing act, Banville approaches the Great Irish Famine obliquely, refusing solemn monumentality. Instead of grand historical explanation, he offers a fractured, intimate vision of starvation, dislocation, and moral erosion. The famine appears less as an event than as an atmosphere, seeping into bodies, houses, and language itself.
Birchwood is not a historical novel, but a stylistic revelation. It reminds us that beauty can coexist with ruin, and that tragedy, when filtered through wit and imagination, can expose truths history cannot reach fully.