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Helen Eustis

    Helen Eustis était une traductrice américaine du français dont l'héritage littéraire repose sur deux romans. Ses œuvres plongent souvent dans les profondeurs psychologiques de ses personnages et les aspects plus sombres de la nature humaine. Eustis a magistralement mêlé suspense et questions existentielles, créant des expériences de lecture troublantes et stimulantes. Son style se caractérise par une observation aiguë et une capacité à dépeindre des dynamiques interpersonnelles complexes dans des situations tendues.

    Die Nacht der bösen Träume
    The Horizontal Man
    • The Horizontal Man

      • 230pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      3,5(24)Évaluer

      A philandering professor on the faculty of an Ivy League school is found murdered, setting off ripple effects of anxiety, suspicion, and panic in this Edgar Award-winning classic from 1946. The Horizontal Man was Helen Eustis's only crime novel, and she won an Edgar Award for it, combining a wildly disparate set of elements into an enduringly fascinating work. In its way it is a classical whodunit that stands comparison with old-school practitioners such as Agatha Christie or Dorothy Sayers. This mystery transpires in the rarefied precincts of the English department of a venerable New England college, one very much of the restless postwar moment, echoing with references to Freud and Kafka. Eustis finds comedy high and low in a cavalcade of characters bursting at the seams with repressed sexual longings and simmering malice. Beyond the satire, she stirs up--with a narrative whose multiple viewpoints give the book a striking modernistic edge--a troubling sense of the mental chaos lurking just beneath the civilized surfaces of her academic setting.

      The Horizontal Man