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The Crime of Olga Arbyelina Andrei Makine

The Crime of Olga Arbyelina par Andrei Makine

The Crime of Olga Arbyelina Andrei Makine


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État - Très bon état
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Résumé

The stunning new novel by the author of the international bestseller Le Testament Francais, a dramatic, sensuous tale set in a Russian emigre community in post-war France.

The Crime of Olga Arbyelina Résumé

The Crime of Olga Arbyelina Andrei Makine

In the summer of 1947, a small town outside Paris is rocked by scandal when a member of its Russian emigre community drowns in a boating incident and the woman with him, an enigmatic White Russian princess, is charged with his murder. But Olga Arbyelina is acquitted. Then the story unfolds of the preceding year and gradually a different, secret and more shocking crime emerges - Olga, separated from her husband, exiled from her homeland and convinced her life has reached a dead end, has allowed her adolescent son to commit incest with her, believing he has drugged her to sleep. Horrified at her own complicity yet oddly paralysed, she does nothing to halt it. Until she thinks they have been observed.

The Crime of Olga Arbyelina Avis

'Beautifully observed and lyrically exptressed, the novel slowly ... pieces together the mosaic of Olga's inner life as she begins to lose her mind. Returning obsessively to the tiny details of domestic life, the creak of a door, the gap in the curtains and the texture of the surface of a cup the effect is hauntingly claustophobic. But the greatest achievement is in the portrayal of Olga's son, a nameless youth with translucent skin and blood that will not clot, whose spectral presence is sensed, but never captured, in this tragic story of misplaced erotic love.' Natasha Fairweather, The Times, August 99 'this is an intriguing novel about a Russian immigrant woman who lives in a small French town with her only son just after the second word war...the novel is neatly framed...Makine's meticulous, lyrical prose- served well by this sensitive translation- is all the more impressive because his first language is Russian (he writes in French)...he charges space with tension and the inanimate with meaning until the curtain rings are sinister, the position of a shoe is shocking and a lamp base causes a significant turning-point...Makine deserves our full attention: he exerts impressive control over these themes, hops back and forwards through time with ease, and ultimately neverforgets the value of a simple and compelling story.' Lucy Atkins, The Sunday Times 'The intricate thoughts and fears of a Russian emigre mother take center stage in this elaborately haunting work...Olga's involuted, tormented conciousness becomes a sophisticated pleasure in its own right...That same consciousness, and the events that destroy it, invoke larger mythic patterns- Cupid and Psyche, Beauty and the Beast. Makine's novel possesses the feverish beauty ofa hot-house culture in its final efflorescence.' Publishers Weekly, 26.7.99 'The effect of reading this is akin to lucid dreaming...Makine [is a] writer to watch' Anita Brookner, Spectator 'Impressionistic, in the manner, to some extent, of Conrad or Ford. That is to say, it is wonderfully vivid. The descriptions of the terrible, in more ways than one, winter of 1946-7 are glittering. Even readers normally bored by descriptions of scenery will find these compelling...[A] remarkable book ...The French novel is alive again, in the hands of a Russian' Allan Massie, Scotsman 'We move between an intensely lived present and an evanescent past. Makine is dreamy and suggestive one minute and painfully observant the next...Makine manages plot and atmosphere so cleverly that the reader is desperate to know what happens next, but is held when the action is suspended for arresting and minute descriptions. In his evocation of a golden age long past and his delicate, sensual handling of Olga's relationship with her son, he writing brings Nabokov to mind, but there is no doubt that Makine has his own voice' The Times Literary Supplement 'The book's fascination, and enormous power, is in the nuanced process by which Olga discovers (and we do with her) what this son, whom she thinks of as a boy in need of protection, has been doing to her at night. Monstrous and delicate, convincing and nightmarish, the process challenges your ideas about madness, self-delusion and mother-love in glowing, gauze-silk prose' Daily Telegraph 'This searing and poetic mystery novel is a worthy successor [to Le Testament Francais]' Good Book Guide 'Makine's writing is unfailingly powerful. While The Crime of Olga Arbyelina is a good thriller, it is the intermingling of moods that dominates the story.' 'the evocation of Olga's descent into madness is affecting' Francis Welch, Literary Review, July 1999 'Makine seduces us with the language of a fairytale bef'Beautifully observed and lyrically exptressed, the novel slowly ... pieces together the mosaic of Olga's inner life as she begins to lose her mind. Returning obsessively to the tiny details of domestic life, the creak of a door, the gap in the curtains and the texture of the surface of a cup the effect is hauntingly claustophobic. But the greatest achievement is in the portrayal of Olga's son, a nameless youth with translucent skin and blood that will not clot, whose spectral presence is sensed, but never captured, in this tragic story of misplaced erotic love.' Natasha Fairweather, The Times, August 99 'Another treasure ... Superb, overwhelming, tragic, a typically Russian novel sculpted in dazzling French' -- La Vie NEW REVIEW

À propos de Andrei Makine

Andrei Makine was born in Siberia in 1957, and taught at the University of Novgorod. In 1987 he left the Soviet Union and sought asylum in Paris, where he lived rough before finding teaching work. His first novel was published in France in 1990, once he'd pretended he'd only translated it from another Russian's original. His third was published under his own name and Olga Arbelina's Crime is his fifth.

Informations supplémentaires

GOR004853816
9780340728147
0340728140
The Crime of Olga Arbyelina Andrei Makine
Occasion - Très bon état
Relié
Hodder & Stoughton
19990715
304
N/A
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