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Jonathan Meades

    Jonathan Meades est un essayiste célèbre connu pour ses explorations incisives de la nourriture, de la culture et du paysage. Son écriture, souvent comparée à des géants littéraires tels que Sterne et Dickens, se caractérise par un style sophistiqué et une analyse profonde. À travers ses essais et ses films, Meades explore les complexités de l'identité anglaise et l'état du monde, tout en conservant une voix unique et souvent provocatrice. Sa contribution littéraire réside dans sa capacité à tisser la réflexion personnelle avec des commentaires culturels plus larges, offrant aux lecteurs une expérience riche et stimulante.

    Obrazový atlas největších staveb světa
    Empty Wigs
    The Plagiarist in the Kitchen
    Museum Without Walls
    Pompey
    Pedro and Ricky Come Again
    • "Thirty years ago Jonathan Meades published a hefty collection of reportorial journalism, essays, criticism, squibs, fictions called Peter Knows What Dick Likes. It quickly acquired cult status. The critic James Woods was moved to write: 'When journalism is like this, journalism and literature become one.' This new collection is every bit as rich and every bit as catholic. Hence its title: Pedro and Ricky Come Again. Thirty years older, so no longer boys, but no wiser, and still impervious to good taste and good manners. From the inexcusability of nationalism and the ubiquitous abuse of the word 'iconic', to John Lennon's shopping lists and the wine they call 'Black Tower', the work assembled here demonstrates Meades's unparalleled range and erudition, with pieces on cities, artists, sex, England, concrete, politics and much, much more."

      Pedro and Ricky Come Again
    • A paperback reissue of Jonathan Meades's savage masterpiece

      Pompey
    • In this widely acclaimed collection, Jonathan Meades proves there is no such thing as a boring place

      Museum Without Walls
    • This 'anti-cookbook' collects of 125 of Meades's favourite recipes, combining polemic with indispensable culinary advice

      The Plagiarist in the Kitchen
    • Empty Wigs

      • 1008pages
      • 36 heures de lecture

      Set against the backdrop of the twentieth century, this novel offers a surreal journey that showcases Jonathan Meades' unique literary style. Blending reality with hallucination, it promises to challenge perceptions and immerse readers in a vivid exploration of history and imagination. Meades' distinctive voice and narrative approach aim to establish him as a significant figure in contemporary literature.

      Empty Wigs