Bookbot

Still Life

Auteurs

Évaluation du livre

Paramètres

  • 63pages
  • 3 heures de lecture

En savoir plus sur le livre

Confronted with a terminal cancer diagnosis, Jay Hopler--author of the National Book Award-finalist The Abridged History of Rainfall--got to work. The result of that labor is Still Life, a collection of poems that are heartbreaking, terrifying, and deeply, darkly hilarious. In an attempt to find meaning in a life ending right before his eyes, Hopler squares off against monsters real and imagined, personal and historical, and tries not to flinch. This work is no elegy; it's a testament to courage, love, compassion, and the fierceness of the human heart. It's a violently funny but playfully serious fulfillment of what Arseny Tarkovsky called the fundamental purpose of art: a way to prepare for death, be it far in the future or very near at hand.

Édition

Achat du livre

Still Life, Jay Hopler

Langue
Année de publication
2022
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(rigide)
Nous vous informerons par e-mail dès que nous l’aurons retrouvé.

Modes de paiement

4,1
Très bien
209 Évaluations

Il manque plus que ton avis ici.

Langue
Anglais
Auteurs
Jay Hopler
Éditeur
MCSWEENEYS
Publié
2022
Format
rigide
Pages
63
ISBN10
1952119375
ISBN13
9781952119378
Séries
Mots clés
Nonfiction
Titre original
,
Évaluation
4,1 sur 5
Description
Confronted with a terminal cancer diagnosis, Jay Hopler--author of the National Book Award-finalist The Abridged History of Rainfall--got to work. The result of that labor is Still Life, a collection of poems that are heartbreaking, terrifying, and deeply, darkly hilarious. In an attempt to find meaning in a life ending right before his eyes, Hopler squares off against monsters real and imagined, personal and historical, and tries not to flinch. This work is no elegy; it's a testament to courage, love, compassion, and the fierceness of the human heart. It's a violently funny but playfully serious fulfillment of what Arseny Tarkovsky called the fundamental purpose of art: a way to prepare for death, be it far in the future or very near at hand.