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Anita Desai

    24 juin 1937

    Anita Desai est une romancière indienne célébrée dont les œuvres plongent dans le paysage psychologique de l'expérience humaine. Sa prose se caractérise par une observation délicate et un aperçu perspicace des émotions et de la vie intérieure de ses personnages. Desai explore magistralement les thèmes de l'aliénation, de la recherche d'identité et des relations complexes qui façonnent nos vies. Son style, à la fois poétique et pénétrant, offre aux lecteurs un voyage littéraire profondément résonnant et stimulant.

    Anita Desai
    The Artist of Disappearance
    Baumgartner's Bombay
    Diamond Dust and Other Stories
    The Village by the Sea
    Clear Light of Day
    Le jeûne et le festin
    • Le jeûne et le festin

      • 254pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      3,3(289)Évaluer

      " Elles se retrouvaient parfois dans d'autres villes, à des mariages familiaux auxquels accouraient les parents des quatre coins du pays, ravies d'exhiber leurs saris et leurs bijoux les plus somptueux... On aurait dit que leurs mères avaient soigné toutes ces jeunes filles comme des fleurs en pot jusqu'au moment où leurs joues seraient assez pleines, leurs lèvres assez brillantes ; petits rires et chuchotements aboutissaient à cette grande décision : le mariage. " Mais il s'agit presque toujours d'une union arrangée où l'amour ne joue aucun rôle. Possessive, autoritaire, étouffante, la famille indienne se révèle être ici un univers de violence, de cruauté et d'angoisse. Ravissante et intelligente, Anamika doit accepter le mari qu'on lui impose et qui sera son bourreau. Uma, laide et sotte et donc impossible à marier, est condamnée à devenir la vieille fille au service de tous. Quant à Arun, le fils, le préféré, celui à qui tout est dû, il se heurtera, aux États-Unis où il croyait pouvoir respirer un air de liberté, à d'autres contraintes. Dur, lourd de sensualité inexprimée, Le jeûne et le festin est peut-être le plus beau livre d'Anita Desai.

      Le jeûne et le festin
    • Clear Light of Day

      • 182pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      3,7(3050)Évaluer

      Set in India's Old Delhi, CLEAR LIGHT OF DAY is Anita Desai's tender, warm, and compassionate novel about family scars, the ability to forgive and forget, and the trials and tribulations of familial love. At the novel's heart are the moving relationships between the members of the Das family, who have grown apart from each other. Bimla is a dissatisfied but ambitious teacher at a women's college who lives in her childhood home, where she cares for her mentally challenged brother, Baba. Tara is her younger, unambitious, estranged sister, married and with children of her own. Raja is their popular, brilliant, and successful brother. When Tara returns for a visit with Bimla and Baba, old memories and tensions resurface and blend into a domestic drama that is intensely beautiful and leads to profound self-understanding.

      Clear Light of Day
    • The Village by the Sea

      • 157pages
      • 6 heures de lecture
      3,7(3608)Évaluer

      A classic of our time Untouched by the twentieth century, Thul, the small fishing village near Bombay, is still ruled by the age-old seasonal rhythms. Hari and Lila have lived in the village all their lives, but their family is now desperately down on its luck. Their father drinks; their mother is seriously ill; and there is no money to keep them fed and clothed. Delicately and exquisitely executed, Anita Desaiýs gentle and probing story traces the evolution of Hari and Lila into adults as each of them faces the familyýs predicamentýjust as the first signs of industrial India creep into their villages.

      The Village by the Sea
    • Diamond Dust and Other Stories

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      3,4(40)Évaluer

      This is a collection of stories where the protagonists set out on journeys and find themselves suddenly beyond the pale, or back where they started from. A beloved dog brings chaos, and a businessman sees his own death.

      Diamond Dust and Other Stories
    • Matteo and Sophie join the 1970s flight of young Europeans to India. Matteo - Italian, raised in the luscious countryside around Lake Como, restless since childhood - has been introduced by a tutor to Hermann Hesse's The Journey to the East, and it opens in him a desperate longing. Sophie - German, practical, worldly - is willing to follow him to the ends of the earth. In India, together they visit swamis, gurus, ashrams - always searching. Matteo is seeking spiritual enlightenment, but for Sophie fulfillment lies in earthly love. And when they meet a holy woman known as the Mother, the differences between them seem to explode. When we learn the Mother's story, we see it as an earlier version of their own - the story of a young girl growing up in Cairo and finding her way East by joining a troupe of Indian dancers she has met in Europe. Her journey, a young woman's daring progress through Paris and Venice and New York, until she finds her moment of transcendence in India, comments on, and gives added breadth to, the young couple's quest.

      Baumgartner's Bombay
    • The Artist of Disappearance

      • 156pages
      • 6 heures de lecture
      3,3(44)Évaluer

      Features such novellas as "The Museum of Final Journeys" and "Translator, Translated". In "The Museum of Final Journeys", an unnamed government official is called upon to inspect a faded mansion of forgotten treasures, each sent home by the absent, itinerant master. As he is taken through the estate, he reaches the final - greatest - gift of all.

      The Artist of Disappearance
    • Asked to interview India's greatest poet, Nur, Deven sees a way to escape the miseries of life as a small-town scholar. But the old man he finds deep in the bazaars of Old Delhi bears no resemblance to the idol of his youth. Deven is fooled, bullied and cheated, and drawn into a new captivity.

      In custody
    • The Zigzag Way

      • 192pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      3,0(396)Évaluer

      Eric is an uncertain, awkward young man, a would-be writer, and a traveller in spite of himself. Happy to follow his more confident girlfriend to Mexico, he is overwhelmed with sensory overload, but gradually seduced - by the strangeness, the colour, the mysteries of an older world. He finds himself on a curious quest for his own family in a 'ghost' mining town, now barely inhabited, where almost a hundred years earlier young Cornish miners worked the rich seams in the earth. On the D-a de los Muertos, the feast day when the locals celebrate and remember their dead, the various strands of the novel come together hauntingly, bringing together past and present in a moment of quiet, powerful epiphany.

      The Zigzag Way
    • Calcutta

      A Cultural and Literary History

      In the popular imagination, Calcutta is a packed and pestilential sprawl, made notorious by the Black Hole and the works of Mother Teresa. Kipling called it a City of Dreadful Night, and a century later V.S. Naipaul, Gunter Grass and Louis Malle revived its hellish image. This is the place where the West first truly encountered the East. Founded in the 1690s by East India Company merchants beside the Hugli River, Calcutta grew into India's capital during the Raj and the second city of the British Empire. Named the City of Palaces for its neoclassical mansions, Calcutta was the city of Clive, Hastings, Macaulay and Curzon. It was also home to extraordinary Bengalis such as Rabindranath Tagore, the first Asian Nobel laureate, and Satyajit Ray, among the geniuses of world cinema. Above all, Calcutta (renamed Kolkata in 2001) is a city of extremes, where exquisite refinement rubs shoulders with coarse commercialism and political violence. Krishna Dutta explores these multiple paradoxes, giving personal insight into Calcutta's unique history and modern identity as reflected in its architecture, literature, cinema and music. CITY OF ARTISTS: Modern India's cultural capital; home city of

      Calcutta
    • From three times Booker-shortlisted writer Anita Desai, Rosarita is an exquisite story of art, memory and what happens when the past threatens to re- write the present.

      Rosarita