The Marriage Plot: A Novel und über 1 Million weitere Bücher verfügbar für Amazon Kindle . Erfahren Sie mehr


oder
Loggen Sie sich ein, um 1-Click® einzuschalten.
oder
Mit kostenloser Probeteilnahme bei Amazon Prime. Melden Sie sich während des Bestellvorgangs an. Erfahren Sie mehr
Alle Angebote
Möchten Sie verkaufen? Hier verkaufen
The Marriage Plot
 
 
Beginnen Sie mit dem Lesen von The Marriage Plot: A Novel auf Ihrem Kindle in weniger als einer Minute.

Sie haben keinen Kindle? Hier kaufen oder eine gratis Kindle Lese-App herunterladen.

The Marriage Plot [Englisch] [Gebundene Ausgabe]

Jeffrey Eugenides
3.5 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (2 Kundenrezensionen)
Preis: EUR 18,95 kostenlose Lieferung. Siehe Details.
  Alle Preisangaben inkl. MwSt.
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
Auf Lager.
Verkauf und Versand durch Amazon.de. Geschenkverpackung verfügbar.
Nur noch 8 Stück auf Lager - jetzt bestellen.
Lieferung bis Mittwoch, 30. Mai: Wählen Sie an der Kasse Morning-Express. Siehe Details.

Weitere Ausgaben

Amazon-Preis Neu ab Gebraucht ab
Kindle Edition EUR 11,27  
Gebundene Ausgabe EUR 18,95  
Broschiert EUR 5,99  
Audio CD, Audiobook, CD, Ungekürzte Ausgabe EUR 23,99  

Wird oft zusammen gekauft

Kunden kaufen diesen Artikel zusammen mit The Sense of an Ending EUR 12,95

The Marriage Plot + The Sense of an Ending
Preis für beide: EUR 31,90

Verfügbarkeit und Versanddetails anzeigen

  • Dieser Artikel: The Marriage Plot

    Auf Lager.
    Verkauf und Versand durch Amazon.de.
    Kostenlose Lieferung bei einem Bestellwert ab EUR 20. Details

  • The Sense of an Ending

    Auf Lager.
    Verkauf und Versand durch Amazon.de.
    Kostenlose Lieferung bei einem Bestellwert ab EUR 20. Details


Kunden, die diesen Artikel gekauft haben, kauften auch


Produktinformation

  • Gebundene Ausgabe: 406 Seiten
  • Verlag: Macmillan Us (11. Oktober 2011)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 0374203059
  • ISBN-13: 978-0374203054
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 27,3 x 2,5 x 28,6 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 3.5 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (2 Kundenrezensionen)
  • Amazon Bestseller-Rang: Nr. 44.593 in Englische Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Englische Bücher)

Mehr über den Autor

Jeffrey Eugenides
Entdecken Sie Bücher, lesen Sie über Autoren und mehr

Besuchen Sie die Seite von Jeffrey Eugenides auf Amazon

Produktbeschreibungen

Pressestimmen

Praise for The Marriage Plot:

“Wry, engaging and beautifully constructed.” —William Deresiewicz, The New York Times Book Review

“[The Marriage Plot] is sly, fun entertainment, a confection for English majors and book lovers . . . Mr. Eugenides brings the period into bright detail—the brands of beer, the music, the affectations—and his send-ups of the pretensions of chic undergraduate subcultures are hilarious and charmingly rendered . . . [His] most mature and accomplished book so far” —Sam Sacks, Wall Street Journal

“No one’s more adept at channeling teenage angst than Jeffrey Eugenides. Not even J. D. Salinger . . . It’s in mapping Mitchell’s search for some sort of belief that might fill the spiritual hole in his heart and Madeleine’s search for a way to turn her passion for literature into a vocation that this novel is at its most affecting, reminding us with uncommon understanding what it is to be young and idealistic, in pursuit of true love and in love with books and ideas.” —Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times

 

“This is a story about being young and bright and lost, a story Americans have been telling since Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises. Our exceptionally well-read but largely untested graduates still wonder: How should I live my life? What can I really believe in? Whom should I love? Literature has provided a wide range of answers to those questions—Lose Lady Brett! Give up on Daisy! Go with Team Edward!—but in the end, novels aren’t really very good guidebooks. Instead, they’re a chance to exercise our moral imagination, and this one provides an exceptionally witty and poignant workout.” —Ron Charles, The Washington Post

“If there is a writer to whom Eugenides appears connected, it is not Wallace but Jonathan Franzen. They are less than a year apart in age, and while Franzen got a head start, the two, who are both with the same publisher, are on similar publishing schedules. Last year, Franzen's Freedom was a bestseller; like The Marriage Plot, it's a robust, rich story of adults in a love triangle. Eugenides benefits by the comparison: This book is sweeter, kinder, with a more generous heart. What's more, it is layered with exactly the kinds of things that people who love novels will love.” —Carolyn Kellogg, Los Angeles Times

“Eugenides steers effortlessly through the intertwining tales of his three protagonists, shifting seamlessly among their three viewpoints and overlapping their stories in a way that's easy to follow and never labored. His prose is smooth but never flashy, and his eye for the telling detail or gesture is keen. Slowly but confidently he fleshes out his characters, and as they slowly accrue weight and realism, readers will feel increasingly opinionated about the choices they make . . . It's heavy stuff, but Eugenides distinguishes himself from too many novelists who seem to think a somber tone equates to a serious purpose. The Marriage Plot is fun to read and ultimately affirming.” —Patrick Condon, San Francisco Chronicle

“Eugenides, a master storyteller, has a remarkable way of twisting his narrative in a way that seems effortless; taking us backward and forward in time to fill in details . . . For these characters, who don't live in Jane Austen's world, no simple resolution will do for them in the world. And yet you close this book with immense satisfaction—falling in love just a bit yourself, with a new kind of marriage plot.” —Moira Macdonald, Seattle Times

“Jeffrey Eugenides, in his glorious new novel, mines our thrall and eternal unease around sex, love and marriage . . . At its core, The Marriage Plot is besotted with books, flush with literary references. It seems coyly designed to become the volume all former English majors take to their breasts.” —Karen Long, The Plain Dealer

“There has been a storybook quality to much American fiction recently—larger-than-life, hyper-exuberant, gaudy like the superhero comics and fairy tales that have inspired it. By sticking to ordinary human truth, Eugenides has bucked this trend and written his most powerful book yet.” —Zachary Lazar, Newsday

“Befitting [Eugenides’s] status as that rare author who bridges both highbrow book clubs and best-seller lists, his third novel is a grand romance in the Austen tradition—one that also deconstructs the very idea of why we'd still find pleasure in such a timeworn narrative style. It's a book that asks why we love to read, yet is so relentlessly charming, smart and funny that it answers its own question.” —David Daley, USA TODAY

“There are serious pleasures here for people who love to read.” —Leah Greenblatt, Entertainment Weekly

“Eugenides's first novel since 2002's Pulitzer Prize–winning Middlesex so impressively, ambitiously breaks the mold of its predecessor that it calls for the founding of a new prize to recognize its success both as a novel—and as a Jeffrey Eugenides novel. Importantly but unobtrusively set in the early 1980s, this is the tale of Madeleine Hanna, recent Brown University English grad, and her admirer Mitchell Grammaticus, who opts out of Divinity School to walk the earth as an ersatz pilgrim. Madeleine is equally caught up, both with the postmodern vogue (Derrida, Barthes)—conflicting with her love of James, Austen, and Salinger—and with the brilliant Leonard Bankhead, whom she met in semiotics class and whose fits of manic depression jeopardize his suitability as a marriage prospect. Meanwhile, Mitchell winds up in Calcutta working with Mother Theresa's volunteers, still dreaming of Madeleine. In capturing the heady spirit of youthful intellect on the verge, Eugenides revives the coming-of-age novel for a new generation The book's fidelity to its young heroes and to a superb supporting cast of enigmatic professors, feminist theorists, neo-Victorians, and concerned mothers, and all of their evolving investment in ideas and ideals is such that the central argument of the book is also its solution: the old stories may be best after all, but there are always new ways to complicate them.” —Publisher’s Weekly (starred review)

“In Eugenides’ first novel since the Pulitzer Prize–winning Middlesex (2002), English major and devotee of classic literature Madeleine Hanna is a senior at Reagan-era Brown University. Only when curiosity gets the best of her does she belly up to Semiotics 211, a bastion of postmodern liberalism, and meet handsome, brilliant, mysterious Leonard Bankhead. Completing a triangle is Madeleine’s friend Mitchell, a clear-eyed religious-studies student who believes himself her true intended. Eugenides’ drama unfolds over the next year or so. His characteristically deliberate, researched realization of place and personality serve him well, and he strikes perfectly tuned chords by referring to works ranging from Barthes’ Lovers’ Discourse to Bemelmans’ Madeline books for children. The remarkably à propos title refers to the subject of Madeleine’s honors thesis, which is the Western novel’s doing and undoing, in that, upon the demise, circa 1900, of the marriage plot, the novel ‘didn’t mean much anymore,’ according to Madeleine’s professor and, perhaps, Eugenides. With this tightly, immaculately self-contained tale set upon pillars at once imposing and of dollhouse scale, namely, academia (‘College wasn’t like the real world,’ Madeleine notes) and the emotions of the youngest of twentysomethings, Eugenides realizes the novel whose dismantling his characters examine.” Annie Bostrom, Booklist (starred review)

“A stunning novel—erudite, compassionate and penetrating in its analysis of love relationships. Eugenides focuses primarily on three characters, who all graduate from Brown in 1982. One of the pieces of this triangle is Madeleine Hanna, who finds herself somewhat embarrassed to have emerged from a “normal” household in New Jersey (though we later find out the normality of her upbringing is only relative). She becomes enamored with Leonard, a brilliant but moody student, in their Semiotics course, one of the texts being, ironically, Roland Barthes’ A Lover’s Discourse, which Madeleine finds disturbingly problematic in helping her figure out her own love relationship. We discover that Leonard had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder during his first year at Brown, and his struggle with mood swings throughout the novel is both titanic and tender. The third major player is Mitchell, a Religious Studies major who is also attracted to Madeleine but whose reticence she finds both disturbing and incomprehensible. On graduation day, Leonard has a breakdown and is hospitalized in a mental-health ward, and Madeleine shows her commitment by skipping the festivities and seeking him out. After graduation, Leonard and Madeleine live together when Leonard gets an internship at a biology lab on Cape Cod, and the spring after graduation they marry, when Leonard is able to get his mood swings under temporary control. Meanwhile Mitchell, who takes his major seriously, travels to India seeking a path—and briefly finds one when he volunteers to work with the dying in Calcutta. But Mitchell’s road to self-discovery eventually returns him to the States—and opens another opportunity for love that complicates Madeleine’s life. Dazzling work—Eugenides continues to show that he is one of t...

Kurzbeschreibung

Madeleine Hanna, dutiful English major, while everyone else in the early 1980s was reading Derrida, she was happily absorbed with Jane Austen and George Eliot: purveyors of the marriage plot at the heart of the greatest English novels. In the spring of her senior year she enrols in a semiotics course to see what all the fuss is about, as a result, life and literature will never be the same.

Welche anderen Artikel kaufen Kunden, nachdem sie diesen Artikel angesehen haben?


In diesem Buch (Mehr dazu)
Nach einer anderen Ausgabe dieses Buches suchen.
Ausgewählte Seiten ansehen
Buchdeckel | Copyright | Auszug | Rückseite
Hier reinlesen und suchen:

Vorgeschlagene Tags zu ähnlichen Produkten

 (Was ist das?)
Setzen Sie den ersten relevanten Tag hinzu (ein Schlüsselwort, das mit diesem Produkt in engem Zusammenhang steht).
 

 

Kundenrezensionen

5 Sterne
0
2 Sterne
0
1 Sterne
0
Die hilfreichsten Kundenrezensionen
27 von 28 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
nostalgischer Schmöker 20. Oktober 2011
Format:Broschiert
Die klassische "Liebeshandlung" wie in den von Madeline so heiß geliebten englischen Romanen des 19. Jahrhunderts, scheint es in der heutigen Literatur, ja im heutigen Leben, nicht mehr zu geben. Was tut Eugenides? Er erzählt genau das, die Geschichte der jungen Literaturstudentin Madeline, die - ganz verkürzt ausgedrückt- zwischen zwei Verehrern, Mitchell und Leonard, zu wählen hat. Schauplatz ist ein mittelprächtiges amerikanisches College in den 1980er Jahren. Madeline wirkt zunächst recht oberflächlich, untentschlossen, verwöhnt und naiv, wird aber im Verlauf des Romans unter dem Eindruck ihres Studiums, den Irrläufen der Gefühle, feministischem Zeitgeist und der Lektüre französischer Dekonstruktivisten noch reifen. Mitchell ist ein eher unauffälliger Typ, jedoch offenbar ziemlich begabt, sensibel, und spirituell auf der Suche. Leonard kommt aus einem schwierigen Elternhaus und ist psychisch krank, fasziniert aber als "womanizer" und brillianter Unterhalter, mit klugen, oft auch altklugen Gedanken sein Umfeld. Das ist die gegebene Konstellation. Von hier aus entwickelt Eugenides seine Charaktere, manövriert sie durch wichtige Jahre, in die er sich offenbar besonders gut hineinversetzen kann (wie schon bei "Middlesex"): Jahre, in denen man die Macht und Faszination des Wissens entdeckt, sich aus dem schulischen Wissenskanon emanzipiert und seine eigenen Interessensgebiete erforscht. Jahre der Selbstfindung, der gesunden kritischen Distanzierung vom Elternhaus, der sexuellen Identitätsfindung, der Suche nach dem Lebenssinn usw. Am Ende dieser jugendlichen Selbsterforschung steht Madelines Entscheidung - welche, wird hier natürlich nicht verraten.

Eugenides outet sich mit der "Liebeshandlung" endgültig als Nostalgiker: Er schwelgt. In den 1980er Jahren, in seiner eigenen Studienzeit, seinen eigenen Jugend- und Reisejahren - in einem Interview hat er "bekannt", sich am stärksten mit Mitchell identifizieren zu können; auch er ist durch Indien gereist, auch er hat im Stift von Mutter Teresa Freiwilligenarbeit geleistet -; und er bemüht sich, ein bedrohtes literarisches Motiv wiederzubeleben. Das ist alles sympathisch, flüssig geschrieben und fesselnd: Auch die Leser werden sich gern durch dieses Milieu jugendlicher Leidenschaft bewegen.

Und trotzdem kam mir beim Lesen immer wieder der Gedanke: Das ist trivial! Nach "Middlesex" hatte ich so viel mehr erwartet. Natürlich hat da schon allein das "exotische" Thema Hermaphroditismus fasziniert, aber es war auch gut unterfüttert, mit der genetischen Geschichte Calliopes, der Vernichtung der Stadt Smyrna, dem griechischen Erbe der Familie, der Geschichte Detroits, und und und.... All diese Handlungsfäden wurden am Ende aufgenommen und hatten Bedeutung für Calliopes Geschichte. Anders in der "Liebeshandlung":

Alles, womit Eugenides hier "Fleisch bei die Fische bekommt", wirkt aufgesetzt. Weder Madelines Semiotikseminar, noch Mitchells religiöse Studien, Leonards Genexperimente mit Hefe oder aber die Analyse seiner Krankheit werden ausreichend in die Entwicklungsgeschichte der drei Protagonisten eingeflochten. Diese Themen haben zwar eine offensichtliche, oberflächliche Symbolik, aber Eugenides macht sie nicht wirklich zu seinen Themen bzw. zu denen seiner Figuren. Klar, dem Leser soll auch noch Raum zur eigenen Interpretation bleiben, mich hat das aber nicht überzeugt. Auch die nicht-lineare Erzählweise - Eugenides springt in regelmäßigen Abständen ein paar Schritte nach vorn, um dann anschließend die Handlung von hinten aufzurollen - wirkte auf mich sehr mechanisch und diente weder der Handlung noch den Figuren. Und dann der Schluss! Spätestens im letzten Drittel ist Madelines Entscheidung vorauszusehen. Die Wendung, die Eugenides noch auf den letzten Seiten hineinbringt, ist aus der vorangegangenen Figurenzeichnung heraus überhaupt nicht schlüssig. Das hätte XY nie getan! Da kommt plötzlich ein Edelmut ins Spiel, den es seit Jane Austen wohl tatsächlich nicht mehr gibt.
War diese Rezension für Sie hilfreich?
3 von 3 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Von Kathy
Format:Broschiert
Middlesex is one of my favourite novels, so I've been waiting ages for a new Eugenides to come out. While the Marriage Plot is certainly highly readable, well-crafted, intelligent and charming, it just doesn't quite live up to his last book. Let's face it - the subject just isn't as interesting. It is still good, I've just not been forcing all my friends to read it like I did with the last one.
War diese Rezension für Sie hilfreich?
Die hilfreichsten Kundenrezensionen auf Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  321 Rezensionen
164 von 181 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
More Knot than Plot 17. Oktober 2011
Von JSC Siow - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
One is led to expect it - a new novel by a much-hyped author following on a earlier success. For a number of reasons, I'm glad I read and finished this novel; at the same time however, I'm left dissatisfied and disappointed.

This novel seemed a pale shadow of his earlier work Middlesex - both in the writing and the plot. Young female protagonist gets saddled with an infirm fiance/husband and who then lives in a quandary - sounds a lot like Ann Packer's The Dive from Clausen's Pier. But that's where the resemblance ends. While Packer packed (!) an emotional punch with her deeply nuanced rendering of her protagonist's emotional life and in the process humanized her despite her evident flaws, Eugenides' rendering and characterization of HIS protagonist as well as the other characters by contrast revealed rather thin silhouettes.

It may be an effect of the novel's overall tone and voice; Eugenides assumes a chipper and distantly objective voice in dissecting his characters' inner voices and emotional turmoil, mental lives and activities. His cool, shrink-like/God-like stance however keeps us at a distance and thus from empathizing with their travails despite at times sympathetic portrayals; instead of being drawn into the felt hurts and rawness of their dilemmas, there was a constant underlying thrum reminding me of who they were in the times they lived in (early 1980s) i.e. privileged and self-absorbed college graduates without especially great financial concerns or obligations other than to themselves and what they felt entitled to. There was a diffuse sense of their sophomoric attitudes, jejune concerns and overall busy-ness in tending to themselves and nursing their mental images of each other, such that when reality intruded in a big way, they were all hugely unmatched. It was hard to feel like I actually cared very much what happened to these people one way or another, unlike the protagonist in Packer's novel (as irritating as she was in her own way).

I'd even go so far as to say that The Marriage Plot is a misnomer; Eugenides claimed in a radio interview that he was attempting to traffic in the tropes found in Victorian novels but as I see it, there was something flippant and even subtly snide and derisive in his treatment and approach to his characters playing at adulthood. The notion of marriage and its crucial implications on the economic and social status for women in the past certainly did not apply in the novel's setting; by contrast, what we have here is merely a mildly convoluted case of trite boy-girl relations heightened only by dint of the microscopic lens the author put them under. To that end, perhaps an alternative title to the novel might more aptly reference the knots and entanglements they all twist themselves into rather than any notion of marriage at all.

Incidentally, Eugenides also employed an interesting Rashomon-esque device (riffing off the Eng Lit discussions of the characters) in the later chapters which I'd rarely encountered elsewhere, where specific encounters and events told from a character's perspective in a chapter were subsequently retold from another's perspective. It's a small thing to highlight in a review but for what it's worth, I enjoyed it and it certainly helped to break up growing sense of blandness and predictability as the narrative wore on.
599 von 685 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Kind of Annoying 4. November 2011
Von Mom of Sons - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Wow. I consider myself fairly intelligent and with at least an average knowledge of books and authors. But reading The Marriage Plot made me realize how dumb I really am. Every other sentence contains an obscure literary or philosophical reference of which I have never heard. I'm quite interested in the three main characters--the woman and two men in the "love triangle" that begins in their 1980s college years at Brown University--but I can barely get through the constant allusions to philosophical and fictional literary "tropes" (I looked it up.)

Go ahead and hate my review if you will. I spent two weeks diligently plowing through 70 pages of this book. I'm sure it is wonderful, will probably win another Pulitzer for its brilliant author. But for me, reading it was like sitting between two members of the literary intelligentsia at a dinner party, as they try to one-up each other with the depth and breadth of their vast knowledge. I was simultaneously bored,lost and annoyed.
266 von 304 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
(3.5 stars) "The way of true love never works out except at the end of an English novel." 11. Oktober 2011
Von Luan Gaines - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
While I accept the premise of "The Marriage Plot" in literature, the claustrophobic world of Rhode Island's Brown University campus, the intimacies of the three protagonists and the endless particulars of the author's descriptions, I struggle throughout the novel to maintain interest in the characters as they act out the author's theme in real life, a formula writ long ago. The story begins with Madeleine Hanna's graduation ceremony, a girl fascinated with Victorian writers Jane Austen, George Eliot and Henry James, the ease and simplicity of regimented society, the men in her life viewed through that romantic prism, the molding of those we love into acceptable roles, a society married its vision of success. Life never delivers the expected, however- sometimes not even the acceptable- but Madeleine finds refuge in Victorian conventions, Eugenides waxing nostalgic for the putative good old days of the eighties, expounding freely on the college experience, laced liberally with the students' penchant for breaching intellectual boundaries, Greek life, a social milieu thriving in a mild political environment.

Daughter of privilege, Madeleine possesses natural beauty in abundance, a senior concentrating on her thesis, lately enamored of theory, philosophy and semiotics. She is helpless to resist the enigmatic Leonard Bankhead, who lives frugally and perhaps harbors deeper secrets. The third element of Eugenides' emotional ménage a trios is Mitchell Grammaticus, a young man deeply inspired by religious studies planning to travel to India, hopelessly in love with Madeleine, who sees only Leonard. Romance blooms with the inevitable heartbreak and dark passages, Madeleine hurling herself into a tormented dance with Leonard, who proves to be vastly more complicated than first appears, a Heathcliff with flaws as seductive as his brilliant mind. In chapters that shift perspective between Madeleine, Leonard and Mitchell, Madeleine embraces Leonard's dark night of the soul, her lover sliding into a morass of gloom, chronic self-examination and psychiatric aids, his relationship with Madeleine seesawing from dominant to dependent and back again. Predictably, Mitchell is the drama's objective witness, even from India and his all-consuming quest for spirituality, or at least his idea of it.

Whatever joy is found in the beginning of this fiction becomes mired in the author's prose, obscure, mind-numbing details that suck the energy from the novel, an exhausting tale that evolves into irrelevancy by the end. Eugenides gets lost along the way, in love with his characters' intellectual pursuits and consummate angst, facilitating their ingrained habit of resolving their problems through agonies of indecision. Rather than inspire, the novel seems a great conceit, a scrapbook of the past collapsing under the burden of the protagonists' experiences, Leonard and Mitchell orbiting Madeleine's moon, doomed to their own spheres of gravity. The author writes with some depth on Leonard's emotional struggles, but none of these characters capture my imagination. Where, oh where is Jane Austen when you need her? Luan Gaines/2011.
Kundenrezensionen suchen
Nur in den Rezensionen zu diesem Produkt suchen

Kunden diskutieren

Das Forum zu diesem Produkt
Diskussion Antworten Jüngster Beitrag
Noch keine Diskussionen

Fragen stellen, Meinungen austauschen, Einblicke gewinnen
Neue Diskussion starten
Thema:
Erster Beitrag:
Eingabe des Log-ins
 


Aktive Diskussionen in ähnlichen Foren
Kundendiskussionen durchsuchen
Alle Amazon-Diskussionen durchsuchen
   
Ähnliche Foren


Lieblingslisten


Ähnliche Artikel finden


Anhand des Sachgebietes nach ähnlichen Produkten suchen:


Ihr Kommentar


Datenschutzerklärung von Amazon.de Versandbedingungen von Amazon.de Umtausch- & Rücknahme bei Amazon.de