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Hubert Selby

    23 juillet 1928 – 26 avril 2004

    Hubert Selby Jr. était un écrivain qui a exploré sans fard les recoins les plus sombres de la psyché et de la société humaines. Ses œuvres, souvent brutes et sans compromis, se concentrent sur des thèmes tels que la dépendance, le désespoir et la lutte pour la survie dans des environnements hostiles. Le style de Selby se caractérise par sa franchise et son authenticité, entraînant les lecteurs dans la vie intérieure de ses personnages et leurs batailles. Son écriture témoigne avec force de la résilience humaine et de l'aspiration à la rédemption.

    Hubert Selby
    The Room
    Song of the Silent Snow
    The Willow Tree
    The Demon
    Requiem for a Dream
    Last Exit to Brooklyn
    • Last Exit to Brooklyn

      • 303pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      4,0(23743)Évaluer

      Consacré à la violence qui déchire une société sans amour mais ivre de sexualité, ce livre a imposé d'emblée Selby parmi les auteurs majeurs de la seconde moitié de ce siècle. D'autres œuvres ont suivi : la Geôle, le Démon, Retour à Brooklyn, toutes parues dans notre " Domaine étranger ". Last Exit reste le point d'orgue de ce Céline américain acharné à nous livrer la vision apocalyptique d'un rêve devenu cauchemar. Où la solitude, la misère et l'angoisse se conjuguent comme pour mieux plonger le lecteur dans ce qui n'est peut-être que le effet de sa propre existence. Implacablement.

      Last Exit to Brooklyn
    • Requiem for a Dream

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      4,1(57729)Évaluer

      In Coney Island, Brooklyn, lonely widow Sarah Goldfarb wants nothing more than to lose weight and appear on a television game show. In her obsessive quest, she becomes addicted to diet pills, while her junkie son, Harry, along with his girlfriend, Marion, and best friend, Tyrone, attempt to secure an illicit shortcut to wealth and leisure by selling heroin.Entranced by the gleaming visions of their futures, these four convince themselves that unexpected setbacks are only temporary. Even as their lives slowly deteriorate around them, they cling to their delusions and become utterly consumed in a spiral of drugs and addiction, refusing to see that they have instead created their own worst nightmares."Selby's place is in the front rank of American novelists . . . To understand Selby's work is to understand the anguish of America." —The New York Times Book Review

      Requiem for a Dream
    • The Demon

      • 276pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      4,0(137)Évaluer

      Harry White is the man other men want to be: admired by his peers, talented, rich, and desired by countless women. His steady rise to a position of unprecedented influence in a New York investment firm seems inevitable to those who know him, and on the way he acquires a beautiful wife and children.

      The Demon
    • The Willow Tree

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      3,9(614)Évaluer

      Set in the Bronx, this novel tells the story of Bobby, a young black man, and his Hispanic friend, Maria. Their lives together are irrevocably shattered when a vicious Hispanic street gang attack leaves Bobby savagely beaten and Maria lying in a hospital bed with a badly burned face.

      The Willow Tree
    • Fat Phil can't lose at dice, even when his friends turn nasty and he's trying his hardest; a salesman finds success comes from fortune cookie mottoes, but panics when these mottoes turn against him; and, a commuter finds himself obsessed with a plain young woman on his train, at the expense of his marriage.

      Song of the Silent Snow
    • The Room

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      3,5(210)Évaluer

      'It is quite an experience to be locked up all by yourself in any size room' says the anonymous narrator of Hubert Selby Jr.'s second novel. What follows is a startling series of recollections and fantasies that illuminate the workings of a prisoner's unhinged mind. He yearns for his violent childhood, rages against obscure authorities, and imagines enacting horrible revenge on those who imprisoned him. The prisoner's remand cell becomes the scene of a surreal mental torture. Disorienting, nightmarish and structurally inventive, "The Room" is a shocking examination of the suffering humans can inflict on each other.

      The Room
    • Driven to desperation by the hand the world has dealt him, a man attempts to buy a gun to end his life. But a computer malfunction causes a delay with the gun license: a life-saving event that sees the man questioning why he should die when there are so many others he believes should go before him.

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