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The Robber Bride
 
 

The Robber Bride (Taschenbuch)

von Margaret Atwood (Autor)
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Produktinformation

  • Taschenbuch: 528 Seiten
  • Verlag: Anchor; Auflage: Anchor Books. (20. Januar 1998)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 0385491034
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385491037
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 19,8 x 13,2 x 2,8 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 4.2 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (33 Kundenrezensionen)
  • Amazon.de Verkaufsrang: Nr. 142.053 in Englische Bücher (Die Bestseller Englische Bücher)

Produktbeschreibungen

From Publishers Weekly

The author of Cat's Eye depicts a femme fatale's malevolent role in the lives of three women; a seven-week PW bestseller.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc. -- Dieser Text bezieht sich auf eine vergriffene oder nicht verfügbare Ausgabe dieses Titels.

From Kirkus Reviews

Antonia (Tony), Karen (Charis), and Roz are three 50-ish Toronto friends, pals since college, all of whom have had to negotiate (and none too well) the treacheries of another friend, Zenia--someone who in the past has stolen a significant man from each of the others. But Zenia, they are led relievedly to understand, has been dead for some years--blown up in a Beirut bomb blast; they had carefully attended, together, her memorial service to make doubly sure. Yet why does the very selfsame Zenia now appear across the room one afternoon at a restaurant where the three women are lunching? It creates turmoil. Tony--a college military historian with a milquetoasty composer husband and an annoying tic of spelling words backwards; doggedly hippie Charis, New Age-y survivor of incest, and lover of a US draft-dodger; and Roz, power-businesswoman despite herself, wife of a sad-sack philanderer--all of the massed trio views Zenia not only as a communal threat, but as a chastening, changeable contrast to the courses of their own lives. Atwood (Wilderness Tips, 1991; Cat's Eye, 1989, etc.) does a professionally tidy job with the outline of this social comedy, but apart from some poetic turbocharging around Charis's memories of abuse, plus a nice capture of modern manners most of the time, the book lacks luster: it could be a more brittle, smarter Rona Jaffe novel. Atwood seems to want to make the three unlikely friends both representative of their age, place, and times--but also not: the flaky names and square-peg lifestyles argue for an individualism none of the women quite achieves. And Zenia, the fox among these chickens, is utterly cloudy, a trope instead of a character. Amusing sometimes, but flogged and padded--hardly one of Atwood's better efforts. -- Copyright ©1993, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. -- Dieser Text bezieht sich auf eine vergriffene oder nicht verfügbare Ausgabe dieses Titels.

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33 Rezensionen
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3 von 3 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich:
5.0 von 5 Sternen None Better on Love, 1. Mai 2000
I come back to The Robber Bride as one returns to a dear friend no longer nearby. This delicious book, with its sharp-eyed sanity about the lunatic nature of love, may be my favorite in all the piles of my library.

Read it for the prose, elegant, ironic, and rich. Read it for the wonderful twins, and the grand letdown of the secret Roz's son is hiding. ("Oh is THAT all!" his mother sighs with relief.) Read it for the brilliantly three-dimensional picture of what it was to be an adult and female in the Americas of the eighties.

Read it for the tour-de-force point of view. I'll never forget the first time I read it. I loved Tony and found Roz crude and Charis silly. Then Roz began to tell the story and I discovered she was fascinating beneath the bourgois surface. Tony seemed boring and Charis slightly mad. Then Charis stepped forward and the magic trick happened again, truly magic as we saw how little Tony and Roz understood "crazy Charis" and the Karen who became her.

I crawled to the end of the book terrified that Atwood had in store one last tap of the wand, to give Zenia her day at the podium and convince me, against my will, that she too was wonderful.

Atwood writes gloriously about love; here and in Alias Grace she renders so well the insanity it reduces us to, for all its necessary role in our lives. It is, finally, the inability to love that makes Zenia incomplete. And it love itself, not the objects of their love, that makes Tony, Roz, and Charis great and good.

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2 von 2 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich:
5.0 von 5 Sternen A treat., 30. Juli 2001
Von K. Mallory - Alle meine Rezensionen ansehen
(REAL NAME)   
The Robber Bride follows the lives of three women who have been injured by a mutual friend, Zenia, a sociopath whose only joy is hurting people. Each of them--Tony, Roz, and Charis--is a weakling in some vulnerable way, insecure in their love and their self-esteem; and Zenia, glib and beautiful, befriends them long enough to determine what loss would hurt most deeply, then takes that possession, breaks it, and discards it. She seduces and steals the man each one loves, then casts each victim aside. With Roz and Charis, the effect is not merely to take the man, but to destroy him. She fails to destroy Tony's beloved West, but only after her most intense efforts.

Where Atwood excels is in the irony (sarcasm?) she employs to balance the trivialness of the three women's possessions against the mean-spirited cruelty of their 'friend.' Tony the scholar, a historian in a "man's field" (the history of warfare), a mouse of passivity whose secret pleasure is envisioning the brutality of men at war, loves her huge, bungling West beyond even her own reason. Roz is a scatterbrained monster of middle-class rectitude and her husband a mediocre lawyer who took her as a suburban trophy wife. Charis, a flower-child and perennial waif, takes into her life a worthless vagrant on the lam from his American draft board and would be well rid of him, were it not for the humiliating way that Zenia takes him.

That odd glance in the mirror concludes the last twenty pages of the novel, in which each woman reflects on her personal contest with Zenia and each, in her own way, comprehends the debt she owes Zenia (a debt summed up in the epigraph from Jessamyn West: "A rattlesnake that doesn't bite teaches you nothing"). I remember telling someone, while explaining what I consider the greatest excellence of the book, that I was terrified, as we got closer to the end, lest Atwood might try a final magic trick and make this despicable bitch as human and sympathetic as she had each of the others. Instead, she lets her heroines forgive Zenia and then, in closing, this sudden image, the alien eye looking back.

This extraordinary book, about the passion of love in ordinary people, and the damage that can be caused by a person who seems extraordinary only because she defines herself entirely by contraries. Zenia loves no one. Not even for the brief moment when she is taking possession of each man does she feel any affection for him. She makes nothing; her creative act is to destroy what others have made. She is free only in the sense that she lives on the labor and property of others: the freedom of thieves. There is nothing admirable about her. Even, as Roz points out, her breasts are fake.

It is easy to mistake Atwood's clear-eyed objectivity for cynicism. No one, in Atwood's world, is worthy of love, it falls upon us like God's redeeming grace. And there is so little of it that we can understand stealing it. But Zenia doesn't steal; she spoils. Therein is her evil and this makes her so much less than her three adversaries with their meagre treasures. Atwood offers, at one point, a brilliant definition of love, when Tony says of her husband, "He was boring, like our own children." This is the love that ignores merit and measure and worth. This is the love that survives bad breath in the morning and infidelity. The terrible mystery of love, that it is fragile, misplaced, at once nurturing and poisonous, is the key to this book.

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1 von 1 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich:
1.0 von 5 Sternen A complete waste of time, 3. Juni 2000
Von Linda A. Slott "Ladyslott" (Oceanside, NY) - Alle meine Rezensionen ansehen
(REAL NAME)   
The story of Zenia, a character with no redeeming qualities and her impact on three women. Only you never find out anything about Zenia. And Roz, Tony and Charis are not people I cared very much about. I think there characters were pretty well defined, but I kept wondering about the men in their lives and what these women saw in them, and what Zenia wanted with them. When I got to the end all I thought was is that it? I felt like I had wasted a week of my life.
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Die neuesten Kundenrezensionen

5.0 von 5 Sternen Wie immer bei Atwood ein Vergnügen zu lesen
Wie so viele Atwood-Romane, ist auch dieser ein Vergnügen zu lesen - unkonventionell, spannend, mit einer faszinierenden Hauptfigur. Hat mir sehr gut gefallen.
Vor 1 Monat von Margarete Rubik veröffentlicht

5.0 von 5 Sternen Packender Thriller zum Thema Frauenfreundschaft und Frauenfeindschaft
Zenia ist wunderschön, intelligent und skrupellos. Sie ist die Art Frau, die man als Frau aus der Ferne bewundert, vor der man sich selbst minderwertig fühlt und die einen in den... Lesen Sie weiter...
Vor 21 Monaten von Pj veröffentlicht

5.0 von 5 Sternen Wonderful
I love this book very much! M.A. writes so amazingly suspense-packed about these women. It is excining to read and never gets boring. I just can recommend it!
Am 21. März 2000 veröffentlicht

5.0 von 5 Sternen Wonderful, Captivating
This is a wonderfully written novel. I was completely captivated by the lives of the three women in the book. I almost couldn't put it down!
Veröffentlicht am 25. Februar 2000 von Bijal Shah

5.0 von 5 Sternen Exceptional book
This is one of the best books I've ever read. Margaret Atwood's writing style never ceases to amaze me, and the intelligence that comes through is astounding. Lesen Sie weiter...
Veröffentlicht am 17. Februar 2000 von nmwy

5.0 von 5 Sternen I loved it so much I named a cat after a character
When I first started reading this book I was a little bit leary. But after a few chapters I was completely engrossed in the story. Lesen Sie weiter...
Veröffentlicht am 23. Januar 2000 von dhersh@commissioner.com

4.0 von 5 Sternen Touching
It's been a while since I read this but I just had to comment. This was the first book I read after my husband left me for another woman. Lesen Sie weiter...
Veröffentlicht am 19. Januar 2000 von Robin

5.0 von 5 Sternen Dazzling, a haunting story
_The Robber Bride_ is one of my favorite books of all time, perhaps because I have one had a Zenia in my own past. Lesen Sie weiter...
Veröffentlicht am 13. Januar 2000 von Catherine Page

4.0 von 5 Sternen The Robber Bride
I really enjoyed this book. Never having read anything by Margaret Atwood, and just picking this off the shelf at the library, I was thrilled with her excellent writing style,... Lesen Sie weiter...
Veröffentlicht am 10. Januar 2000 von Christina L. Sarlo

3.0 von 5 Sternen Not one of her best
Zenia is not a character, she is a mannequin, a hollow shell. There is no attempt to explain or her to probe her motivations. Lesen Sie weiter...
Veröffentlicht am 23. Dezember 1999 von derbyram@hotmail.com

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