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Run
 
 

Run (Taschenbuch)

von Ann Patchett (Autor)
3.0 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (3 Kundenrezensionen)
Preis: EUR 9,99 Kostenlose Lieferung. Siehe Details.
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Produktinformation

  • Taschenbuch: 352 Seiten
  • Verlag: Bloomsbury Publishing; Auflage: 1., Aufl. (2. Juni 2008)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 0747593221
  • ISBN-13: 978-0747593225
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 19,3 x 13 x 2,5 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 3.0 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (3 Kundenrezensionen)
  • Amazon.de Verkaufsrang: Nr. 433.757 in Englische Bücher (Die Bestseller Englische Bücher)

Produktbeschreibungen

From Publishers Weekly

SignatureReviewed by Andrew O'HaganNovelists can no longer take it as an insult when people say their novels are like good television, because the finest American television is better written than most novels. Ann Patchett's new one has the texture, the pace and the fairy tale elegance of a half dozen novels she might have read and loved growing up, but the magic and the finesse of Run is really much closer to that of Six Feet Under or ER or The Sopranos, and that is good news for everybody, not least her readers.Bernadette and Bernard Doyle were a Boston couple who wanted to have a big lively family. They had one boy, Sullivan, and then adopted two black kids, Teddy and Tip. Mr. Doyle is a former mayor of Boston and he continues his interest in politics, hoping his boys will shape up one day for elected office, though none of them seems especially keen. Bernadette dies when the adopted kids are just four, and much of the book offers a placid requiem to her memory in particular and to the force of motherhood in lives generally. An old statue from Bernadette's side of the family seems to convey miracles, and there will be more than one before this gracious book is done. One night, during a heavy snowfall, Teddy and Tip accompany their father to a lecture given by Jessie Jackson at the Kennedy Centre. Tip is preoccupied with studying fish, so he feels more than a little coerced by his father. After the lecture they get into an argument and Tip walks backwards in the road. A car appears out of nowhere and so does a woman called Tennessee, who pushes Tip out of the car's path and is herself struck. Thus, a woman is taken to hospital and her daughter, Kenya, is left in the company of the Doyles. Relationships begin both to emerge and unravel, disclosing secrets, hopes, fears. Run is a novel with timeless concerns at its heart—class and belonging, parenthood and love—and if it wears that heart on its sleeve, then it does so with confidence. And so it should: the book is lovely to read and is satisfyingly bold in its attempt to say something patient and true about family. Patchett knows how to wear big human concerns very lightly, and that is a continuing bonus for those who found a great deal to admire in her previous work, especially the ultra-lauded Bel Canto. Yet one should not mistake that lightness for anything cosmetic: Run is a book that sets out inventively to contend with the temper of our times, and by the end we feel we really know the Doyle family in all its intensity and with all its surprises.Andrew O'Hagan's novel Be Near Me has just been published by Harcourt.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. -- Dieser Text bezieht sich auf eine andere Ausgabe: Gebundene Ausgabe .

From Booklist

*Starred Review* The question of what makes a family is central to this luminous novel, Patchett's first since her award-winning Bel Canto (2001). Boston lawyer and ex-politician Bernard Doyle has nurtured his three sons—Sullivan, 33, and African American Tip, 21, and Teddy, 20, brothers adopted 20 years earlier—since the death of his beloved wife, Bernadette, some 15 years ago. Then, one snowy evening, Tip, inattentive and annoyed at his father, is pushed out of the way of an oncoming vehicle by a woman, herself hit and badly injured, who turns out to be the boys' birth mother and who's been watching the boys for years, along with her 11-year-old daughter, Kenya. The drama of a single day is given an unreal quality by the snow that curtails normal activity, as these vividly portrayed characters struggle with their circumstances: Sullivan, the prodigal whose mistake his father lied about; smart Tip; sweet Teddy; speedy runner Kenya; and her mother, Tennessee, whose dreamlike sequence in her hospital room reveals another twist in the family muddle. In extraordinarily fluid prose, Patchett unfolds this story to its epiloguelike final chapter as she illuminates issues of race, religion, duty, and desire. Leber, Michele -- Dieser Text bezieht sich auf eine andere Ausgabe: Gebundene Ausgabe .

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Run
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22 Short Shorts 22 kurze Kurzgeschichten: 22 Short Stories
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22 Short Shorts 22 kurze Kurzgeschichten: 22 Short Stories 5.0 von 5 Sternen (1)
EUR 8,90

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3 von 3 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich:
5.0 von 5 Sternen Sacrificial Love Triumphs Over All, 5. Oktober 2007
Diese Rezension stammt von: Run (Gebundene Ausgabe)
Run is one of the most satisfying family novels I've read in some time. I was very impressed by the many ways that Ann Patchett gently portrayed love among family members within a smooth, comfortable story-telling flow. At another level, the book provides a subtle allegory for the ways that God's love is portrayed in the New Testament. The writing shines with a caring outlook for everyone that provided me with much joy, even among the sadness that will be any reader's natural reaction to parts of the book.

What is a family? Most people define that as a mother and father and some kids. Those from cultures where extended families are more important will include grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins. Ann Patchett clearly feels that wherever the family feeling is present there is a family. The book will give you much room for thought on that point.

Bernard Doyle and his sons aren't typical in some ways of most nuclear families, but in other ways they are. Sullivan is Bernard's oldest son, the surviving memory of his great love for his deceased wife, Bernadette. Wanting a larger family than God gave them biologically, Bernard and Bernadette sought to adopt. Because they didn't specify sex or race, a beautiful African-American baby boy, Teddy, joined the family. In an unexpected surprise, Teddy's mother asked if the Doyles would like to also adopt Teddy's brother, Tip. They did and the family was blessed with one more son.

Bernard had three loves, his political career in Boston (which led him to become mayor), his wife, and his boys. But due to Bernadette's death, his loves fell to two areas . . . and then to one as his political career evaporated. But he still wanted political success for his sons, much like Joe Kennedy once plotted for Joe Jr., Jack, Bobby, and Teddy.

But like all sons, the three boys developed loves of their own, none of which included politics. As the book opens, that tug of war is illustrated by a missing Sullivan, Tip reluctantly leaving his fish specimens at Harvard, and Teddy absent-mindedly leaving his priest uncle's side to join their father at a talk by Jesse Jackson at Harvard.

You can see their future spread out ahead of them . . . as they will inevitably grow further apart. But fate steps in, and none of them will ever be the same.

I felt like Run is one of the best new novels of 2007, and I definitely encourage you to read and enjoy it. I couldn't put the book down and didn't finish it until 1:27 last night. The character development is wonderfully done, even for the characters on which the story pays less attention like brother Sullivan and Father Sullivan. You'll feel like you know and like these people. What could be nicer?

After you read the book, ask yourself where and what you would be willing to sacrifice for those you love.
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2.0 von 5 Sternen Booooring, 17. November 2009
Diese Rezension stammt von: Run: A Novel (P.S.) (Taschenbuch)
I can't recommand this novel. During the whole book I wasn't able to built sympathy with anyone of the characters. The story is simply about a mystical statue and I couldn't believe it. What's the sense of that novel? I thought about other books by this author, but after reading "Run", I will definetly buy nothing else from her. Though the first chapters seem interesting, you lose interest very fast in this boring novel!
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0 von 1 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich:
2.0 von 5 Sternen Boring characters, weak storyline , 29. September 2008
Diese Rezension stammt von: Run (Taschenbuch)
This is one of the most boring, unengaging books I have read in the last 10 years. There are way too many poorly drawn characters and too little of a story to really create a fictional world the reader wants to be a part of. The plot is a very conventional family tale that - albeit spiced up a little with the racial issue - doesn't really go anywhere. I ended it not really understanding what the author's point in writing this book was.

What doesn't help is that the novel begins with a very enthralling story about a mysterious statue that is handed down in this family from generation to generation. The author then proceeds to open up a conflict between members of the family who want to obtain said statue - and then neither the statue nor the family members who want to have it are ever mentioned again. The story just switches to the next generation with extremely boring, non-descript characters. What the point of the whole first chapter was remains beyond me. None of the people mentioned have any impact on what happens in the rest of the book.

The only reason I gave two points is that the author does have an agreeable writing style. Next time she just needs a better story with stronger characters.
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