Contes d'hiver
- 319pages
- 12 heures de lecture
Karen Blixen était une conteuse au sens traditionnel et oral du terme. Son œuvre mêle habilement des éléments surnaturels, l'esthétisme et des tonalités érotiques à une vision aristocratique du monde. Puisant son inspiration dans une riche palette de sources, dont la Bible, Les Mille et Une Nuits, Homère et les sagas islandaises, elle a créé des récits qui explorent les profondeurs de l'expérience humaine. Sa voix unique et son art littéraire continuent de captiver les lecteurs, offrant une perspective intemporelle sur le conte et la vie.
" J'ai possédé une ferme en Afrique, au pied du Ngong. La ligne de l'Equateur passait dans les montagnes, à vingt-cinq milles au Nord. " Ainsi commence Karen Blixen, qui, en dévidant simplement ses souvenirs, est parvenue à écrire le livre le plus dense, le plus nourri, le plus vivant qu'aucun Européen ayant vécu en Afrique ait rapporté sur ce continent. Une immense chronique africaine, pleine de bonhomie et de poésie, l'évocation d'un monde brûlant, violent, naïf et passionnant.
Mr Clay, vieux bonhomme aigri et très riche, n'aime que les livres de comptes, les faits, il déteste les rêves et les prophéties. Malade et insomniaque, il se souvient d'une histoire qu'on lui a racontée, l'histoire d'un marin qui reçoit cinq guinées en échange d'une nuit d'amour avec une jeune et belle dame. Le vieil homme décide de la transformer en réalité avec la complicité de son jeune secrétaire. Mais parfois la réalité peut dépasser la fiction..
Here is a rich new biographical perspective on the brilliant storyteller whose sophisticated romantic fiction...made her an international success and a perpetual candidate for the Nobel Prize for Literature..._these letters+ contain the raw material that was later transformed into her classic memoir Out Of Africa.
Isak Dinesen takes up the absorbing story of her life in Kenya begun in the unforgettable Out of Africa, which she published under the name of Karen Blixen. With warmth and humanity these four stories illuminate her love both for the African people, their dignity and traditions, and for the beauty and wildness of the landscape. The first three were written in the 1950s and the last, 'Echoes from the Hills', was written especially for this volume in the summer of 1960 when the author was in her seventies. In all they provide a moving final chapter to her African reminiscences.
In her memoir, Out of Africa, and in short stories, Danish-born writer Dinesen evoked a timeless Africa distilled from her 18 years on a Kenya coffee plantation. This lovely-looking but ultimately shallow picture book, a tie-in with the film based on Out of Africa, splices excerpts from Dinesen's autobiographical writings, stories and letters with color photographs of Africa's land, people and wildlife. For readers familiar with her works, the album is pleasant enough, though readers expecting visual signs of today's real, changing, troubled Africa will be disappointed. In an almost apologetic introduction, Judith Thurman, Dinesen's biographer, notes that the writer was not a conservationist, enjoyed big game hunting and had paternalistic, feudal relationships with Africans. Nevertheless, Dinesen upheld the dignity and value of African culture, and her rhythmic prose captured the complex poetry of Africa's landscape.
Last Tales is a collection of twelve of the last tales that Isak Dinesen wrote before her death in 1962. They include seven tales from Albondocani, a projected novel that was never completed; "The Caryatids," an unfinished Gothic tale of a couple bedeviled by an old letter and a gypsy's spell; and three tales of winter, including "Converse at Night in Copenhagen," a drunken, all-night conversation between a boy-king, a prostitute, and a poor young poet.
Romantics, adventurers, sensualists, melancholics and dreamers inhabit the bizarre and exotic world conjured up in these seven intricately interwoven tales, whose settings range from Tuscany and Elsinore, to a dhow on its way from Lamu to Zanzibar.Proclaimed a masterpiece on its publication in 1934, this collection is shot through with themes of love and desire - from the maiden lady who now believes herself to have been the grand courtesan of her time, to the Count whose wife is so jealous that she cannot bear him to admire her jewels, and Lincoln Forsner, an Englishman whose search for a woman he met in a brothel leads him into many strange adventures.
In 1937, Karen Blixen published 'Out of Africa', her remarkable chronicle of life on an African Farm, from which this account is taken.
Karen Blixen, author of the acclaimed memoir Out of Africa, was also a master of the short story form- her tales offer luminous meditations on rebirth and redemption, on the mystery and unexpectedness of human behaviour. Alongside 'Babette's Feast', this selection also includes 'Sorrow-Acre', often thought to be one of her finest stories.