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Jour de sélection : Un roman d'Aravind Adiga (anglais) livre de poche

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Caractéristiques de l'objet

État
Neuf: Livre neuf, n'ayant jamais été lu ni utilisé, en parfait état, sans pages manquantes ni ...
ISBN-13
9781501150845
Type
Does not apply
ISBN
9781501150845

À propos de ce produit

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Scribner
ISBN-10
1501150847
ISBN-13
9781501150845
eBay Product ID (ePID)
234945864

Product Key Features

Book Title
Selection Day : a Novel
Number of Pages
304 Pages
Language
English
Publication Year
2017
Topic
Cultural Heritage, General, Coming of Age, Media Tie-In
Genre
Fiction
Author
Aravind Adiga
Format
Trade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height
0.8 in
Item Weight
8.1 Oz
Item Length
8 in
Item Width
5.2 in

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
Trade
Reviews
"A compelling tale of cricket and corruption... A finely told, often moving, and intelligent novel... Adiga has grown in his art since his Booker prizewinning debut,  The White Tiger." , A master class in integrating character and landscape... Peppered with dashes of humor, this dark and unflinching story is an unqualified triumph., "The best novel I read this year... In its primal triangle of rival brothers and a maniacal father, hell-bent on success in cricket in India, Adiga grips the passions while painting an extraordinary panorama of contemporary sports, greed, celebrity, and mundanity. As a literary master, Adiga has only advanced in his art since his Booker Prize-winning  The White Tiger."  , This is a novel with a broad sweep, accomplished with commendable economy and humor, in a sinewy, compact prose that has the grace and power of a gifted athlete. And it pulses with affection for Mumbai itself; the effortless sociological dissection recalls Katherine Boo's Behind the Beautiful Forevers ... Selection Day transcends sport. This is a book about choice and destiny, smothering family ambition and the pull of a young person's nascent identity. You're just going to have to trust me that the cricket is worth it., A captivating and sensitive coming-of-age story that tackles various new themes: the confounding nature of sexuality; the darkness that accompanies excellence and achievement... Adiga's characters, like his settings, are getting more complex with each book, and this complexity makes his indictment of the contemporary world all the more urgent and convincing., Spirited...the elements of Selection Day are strong throughout : a dramatic, readable arc; satire glinting with hints of tragedy; a witty, vibrant voice., A captivating and sensitive coming-of-age story that tackles various new themes: the confounding nature of sexuality; the darkness that accompanies excellence and achievement... Adiga's characters, like his settings, are getting more complex with each book, and this complexity makes his indictment of the contemporary world all the more urgent and convincing., Adiga writes a prose of crazed energy, bright color and acrobatic logic...  comical and searing...  Selection Day brings a family, a city and an entire country to scabrous and antic life., A compelling tale of cricket and corruption... A finely told, often moving, and intelligent novel... Adiga has grown in his art since his Booker prizewinning debut, The White Tiger., Adiga is an exceptionally talented novelist, and the subtlety with which he presents the battle between India's aspirants and its left-behind poor is exceptional., Exuberant and incisive...Each sentence flickers like a match with life. Adiga swoops in and out of his characters' inner voices with frightening precision and speed, laying out the paranoia, obsessions, tokens, idols, and self-made prisons of each man in a few bright, laserlike sentences...Richness and rot, decadence and decay, cricket and corruption: These make up Adiga's Mumbai. Selection Day asks: Amidst all this, is there any such thing as freedom?, "An engrossing and nuanced coming-of-age novel... Adiga has succeeded in composing a powerful individual story that, at the same time, does justice to life's (and India's) great indeterminacies."--The Sunday Times (UK), "Selection Day  is, by any judgment, top-rate fiction from a young master... Adiga's plot is gripping." , This is a novel with a broad sweep, accomplished with commendable economy and humor, in a sinewy, compact prose that has the grace and power of a gifted athlete. And it pulses with affection for Mumbai itself; the effortless sociological dissection recalls Katherine Boo's Behind the Beautiful Forevers ... Selection Day transcends sport. This is a book about choice and destiny, smothering family ambition and the pull of a young person's nascent identity. You're just going to have to trust me that the cricket is worth it., Energetic... Adiga's barbed prose deftly skewers India's tangled religious and class dynamics, and its literary stereotypes., Exuberant and incisive...Each sentence flickers like a match with life. Adiga swoops in and out of his characters' inner voices with frightening precision and speed, laying out the paranoia, obsessions, tokens, idols, and self-made prisons of each man in a few bright, laserlike sentences...Richness and rot, decadence and decay, cricket and corruption: These make up Adiga's Mumbai.  Selection Day  asks: Amidst all this, is there any such thing as freedom?, Adiga seems boundlessly gifted once again. He makes beautiful sentences; creates wonderfully eccentric, original characters; and moves his plot along at a brisk pace. There's energy and wit on every page... Adiga superbly captures the intimacy between the two brothers, as they bicker, tease and protect each other...  as Adiga explores themes of ambition, failure, homophobia and threats to freedom -- whether on a personal or national level -- he has produced a nearly flawless novel, and further proof that he is among our finest contemporary novelists., Adiga seems boundlessly gifted once again. He makes beautiful sentences; creates wonderfully eccentric, original characters; and moves his plot along at a brisk pace. There's energy and wit on every page... Adiga superbly captures the intimacy between the two brothers, as they bicker, tease and protect each other... as Adiga explores themes of ambition, failure, homophobia and threats to freedom -- whether on a personal or national level -- he has produced a nearly flawless novel, and further proof that he is among our finest contemporary novelists., Adiga writes a prose of crazed energy, bright color and acrobatic logic... comical and searing... Selection Day brings a family, a city and an entire country to scabrous and antic life., Selection Da y, Mr. Adiga's third novel, supplies further proof that his Booker Prize, won for The White Tiger in 2008, was no fluke. He is not merely a confident storyteller but also a thinker, a skeptic, a wily entertainer, a thorn in the side of orthodoxy and cant... Powerful... Soulful... What this novel offers is the sound of a serious and nervy writer working at near the top of his form. Like a star cricket batter, Mr. Adiga stands and delivers, as if for days., Sensually told and unpredictably plotted... Adiga's prose has a bustling energy that makes it highly readable., Mr. Adiga writes with customary acerbity and astuteness. Class resentment is the gasoline that fuels the brothers' ambitions and gives this novel its noisy volatility. The gritty urban realism that animated The White Tiger and Last Man in Tower is again on display... Selection Day churns with the same propulsive energy., Many novelists are called Dickensian, but Adiga comes closer than most, albeit with every last speck of Victorian sentimentality suctioned out. His characters are brightly and sharply drawn and animated with great energy; reading about his Mumbai is like taking a double shot of espresso...You need not know anything about cricket in any of its variations to savor Selection Day. In fact, you don't need to have any interest in sports at all. Cricket serves Adiga as a marvelously flexible metaphor: for the (lost) dream of civic integrity, for tradition and authority, for the contest that is life in a rapidly evolving economy...Class is Adiga's great theme, and his depiction of its workings in India ranges from the fondly comical to the savage...[a] ferociously brilliant novel., A master class in integrating character and landscape... Peppered with dashes of humor, this dark and unflinching story is an unqualified triumph., Many novelists are called Dickensian, but Adiga comes closer than most, albeit with every last speck of Victorian sentimentality suctioned out. His characters are brightly and sharply drawn and animated with great energy; reading about his Mumbai is like taking a double shot of espresso...You need not know anything about cricket in any of its variations to savor  Selection Day.  In fact, you don't need to have any interest in sports at all. Cricket serves Adiga as a marvelously flexible metaphor: for the (lost) dream of civic integrity, for tradition and authority, for the contest that is life in a rapidly evolving economy...Class is Adiga's great theme, and his depiction of its workings in India ranges from the fondly comical to the savage...[a]  ferociously brilliant novel., Mr. Adiga writes with customary acerbity and astuteness. Class resentment is the gasoline that fuels the brothers' ambitions and gives this novel its noisy volatility. The gritty urban realism that animated The White Tiger and Last Man in Tower is again on display... Selection Day  churns with the same propulsive energy., "Sensually told and unpredictably plotted... Adiga's prose has a bustling energy that makes it highly readable." , Adiga's wit and raw sympathy will carry uninitiated readers beyond their ignorance of cricket...Adiga's paragraphs bounce along like a ball hit hard down a dirt street. One gets the general direction, but the vectors of his story can change at any moment as we chase after these characters... Selection Day evolves into a bittersweet reflection on the limits of what we can select. Choice -- that most enticing Western ideal -- does not thrive everywhere equally...Adiga's voice is so exuberant, his plotting so jaunty, that the sadness of this story feels as though it is accumulating just outside our peripheral vision., Selection Day is, by any judgment, top-rate fiction from a young master... Adiga's plot is gripping., Selection Da y, Mr. Adiga's third novel, supplies further proof that his Booker Prize, won for The White Tiger in 2008, was no fluke. He is not merely a confident storyteller but also a thinker, a skeptic, a wily entertainer, a thorn in the side of orthodoxy and cant... Powerful... Soulful... What this novel offers is the sound of a serious and nervy writer working at near the top of his form. Like a star cricket batter, Mr. Adiga stands and delivers, as if for days., The best novel I read this year... In its primal triangle of rival brothers and a maniacal father, hell-bent on success in cricket in India, Adiga grips the passions while painting an extraordinary panorama of contemporary sports, greed, celebrity, and mundanity. As a literary master, Adiga has only advanced in his art since his Booker Prize-winning The White Tiger.
Dewey Edition
23
Dewey Decimal
823/.92
Synopsis
From the bestselling, Booker Prize-winning author of The White Tiger and Amnesty , a "ferociously brilliant" ( Slate ) novel about two brothers coming of age in a Mumbai slum, raised by their crazy, obsessive father to be cricket champions. *A NETFLIX ORIGINAL SERIES * AN NPR BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR * A NEW YORK TIMES and WASHINGTON POST NOTABLE BOOK Manjunath Kumar is fourteen and living in a slum in Mumbai. He knows he is good at cricket--if not as good as his older brother, Radha. He knows that he fears and resents his domineering and cricket-obsessed father, admires his brilliantly talented sibling, and is fascinated by curious scientific facts and the world of CSI. But there are many things, about himself and about the world, that he doesn't know. Sometimes it even seems as though everyone has a clear idea of who Manju should be, except Manju himself. When Manju meets Radha's great rival, a mysterious Muslim boy privileged and confident in all the ways Manju is not, everything in Manju's world begins to change, and he is faced by decisions that will challenge his sense of self and of the world around him. Filled with unforgettable characters from across India's social strata--the old scout everyone calls Tommy Sir; Anand Mehta, the big-dreaming investor; Sofia, a wealthy, beautiful girl and the boys' biggest fan-- Selection Day "brings a family, a city, and an entire country to scabrous and antic life" ( Chicago Tribune ). Aravind Adiga's "voice is so exuberant, his plotting so jaunty, that the sadness of this story feels as though it is accumulating just outside our peripheral vision" ( The Washington Post ). It is, simply, "extraordinary" ( The Atlantic ).

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