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John McGahern

    12 novembre 1934 – 30 mars 2006

    Cet auteur a acquis une renommée pour ses romans pénétrants, qui explorent souvent les relations interpersonnelles complexes et les dilemmes moraux de la société irlandaise. Son style se caractérise par une langue précise et une profonde perspicacité psychologique des personnages, offrant aux lecteurs un regard sans compromis sur la nature humaine. Les œuvres de cet auteur invitent à la réflexion, abordant des thèmes tels que la culpabilité, la rédemption et la recherche d'identité dans des conditions sociales difficiles. Son écriture se distingue par une honnêteté brute et une capacité à saisir l'essence de la vie quotidienne.

    John McGahern
    Collected Stories
    Memoir
    Stoner
    Love of the World
    Creatures of the Earth
    Entre toutes les femmes
    • Creatures of the Earth

      • 416pages
      • 15 heures de lecture
      4,5(23)Évaluer

      McGahern's command of the short story places him among the finest practitioners of the form, in a lineage that runs from Chekhov through Joyce and the Anglo-American masters.

      Creatures of the Earth
    • Love of the World

      • 496pages
      • 18 heures de lecture
      4,5(11)Évaluer

      In them his canon of great writers - Tolstoy, Chekhov, James, Proust and Joyce - is cited many times, with deep and subtle appreciation. His interventions on issues he felt strongly about - sectarianism, women's rights, the power of the church in Ireland - are lucid and far-sighted.

      Love of the World
    • Stoner

      • 320pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      4,4(144802)Évaluer

      This is the story of a quiet man, destined to be a farmer but who becomes an academic. It is book in which nothing and everything happens and is possibly the greatest novel you've never read. 'It's simply a novel about a guy who goes to college and becomes a teacher. But its one of the most fascinating things that you've ever come across' Tom Hanks, Time William Stoner enters the University of Missouri at nineteen to study agriculture. A seminar on English literature changes his life, and he never returns to work on his father's farm. Stoner becomes a teacher. He marries the wrong woman. His life is quiet, and after his death, his colleagues remember him rarely. Yet with truthfulness, compassion and intense power, this novel uncovers a story of universal value - of the conflicts, defeats and victories of the human race that pass unrecorded by history - and in doing so reclaims the significance of an individual life. 'A beautiful, sad, utterly convincing account of an entire life' Ian McEwan 'A brilliant, beautiful, inexorably sad, wise and elegant novel' Nick Hornby INTRODUCED BY JOHN McGAHERN

      Stoner
    • Memoir

      • 272pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      4,2(85)Évaluer

      This is the story of John McGahern's childhood; of his mother's death, his father's anger and bafflement, and his own discovery of literature and his ambition to become a writer. Memoir includes McGahern's memories of Dublin in the 1960s, his time as a schoolteacher, and his sacking for writing a banned book (his second novel, The Dark). It ends with his return to live in Leitrim with his wife and the death of his father, difficult to the last.

      Memoir
    • Collected Stories

      • 416pages
      • 15 heures de lecture
      4,0(14)Évaluer

      This remarkable volume brings together all of John McGahern's short fiction, fully revised, in a definitive text. McGahern has long been recognized as a contemporary master of the short story; The Collected Stories confirms his reputation as Ireland's leading prose writer.

      Collected Stories
    • The stories in High Ground are set in ordinary places, in the streets and suburbs and dancehalls of Dublin, the small towns and fields of the midlands, the big houses of the beleaguered Anglo-Irish in the aftermath of their ascendancy, the whole changing country propelled in a generation from the nineteenth into the late twentieth century.

      High Ground
    • All Will Be Well

      A Memoir

      • 304pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      3,8(17)Évaluer

      Exploring the author's formative years, this memoir delves into his childhood experiences in the Irish countryside and the early influences that shaped his writing career. Through vivid storytelling, it reflects on the complexities of family life, the beauty of rural landscapes, and the struggles of growing up in a changing world, offering a poignant glimpse into the roots of his literary journey.

      All Will Be Well
    • John McGahern is widely considered to be one of Ireland's greatest writers, with fans including John Updike, Hilary Mantel, Colm Tóibín and John Banville. Often hailed as his greatest work, Amongst Women is a poignant novel of family and togetherness.Once an officer in the Irish War for Independence, Moran is now a widower, eking out a living on a small farm where he raises his two sons and three daughters. Adrift from the structure and security of the military, he keeps control by binding his family close to him. But as his children grow older and seek independence, and as the passing years bring with them bewildering change, Moran struggles to find a balance between love and tyranny. 'A masterpiece . . . It is the sort of book which you can give anyone of any age and know that they will be changed by it.' Colm Tóibín

      Amongst Women. Unter Frauen, englische Ausgabe
    • The Dark

      • 192pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      4,0(117)Évaluer

      Set in rural Ireland, John McGahern's second novel is about adolescence and a guilty, yet uncontrollable sexuality that is contorted and twisted by both puritanical state religion and a strange, powerful and ambiguous relationship between son and widower father. číst celé

      The Dark