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Hanif Kureishi

    5 décembre 1954

    Hanif Kureishi est célèbre pour ses explorations incisives de l'identité, de la sexualité et des chocs culturels, se concentrant souvent sur la vie des jeunes naviguant dans les espaces entre les cultures britannique et asiatique. Sa prose se caractérise par une honnêteté brute et une critique sociale acerbe qui dissèque les complexités de la vie moderne. Kureishi entrelace magistralement l'expérience personnelle avec des thèmes sociétaux plus larges, créant des œuvres à la fois provocatrices et profondément humaines. Son écriture reflète sa perspective unique en tant que fils d'un père pakistanais et d'une mère anglaise, ayant grandi à Londres.

    Hanif Kureishi
    Outskirts and Other Plays: The King and Me, Borderline, Birds od Passage
    Music at the Limits
    Le don de Gabriel
    Domaine étranger: Quelque chose à te dire
    Black Album
    Contre son coeur
    • Contre son coeur

      • 247pages
      • 9 heures de lecture

      À l'origine de ces mémoires: la découverte par Hanif Kureishi d'un manuscrit abandonné qui raconte l'enfance de son père à Bombay alors que le monde s'effondre et que l'Inde se sépare en deux selon des lignes religieuses. La dissolution de l'Empire britannique, les conflits religieux, l'exil, la quête d'identité de ces familles au destin partagé entre trois terres et trois cultures. Comme un écho, c'est la mémoire du fils que son récit vient réveiller. La petite enfance en Angleterre, le regard des Blancs, le destin tortueux d'un enfant d'apatride devenu romancier à succès. Entre les deux, ce même désir d'être fidèle à ses racines tout en se construisant soi-même. Et cette même méthode: écrire. L'un ne fut jamais publié. L'autre en vit. Étranges destins croisés que ceux d'Hanif et de Shannoo, si différents, si proches et finalement réunis dans un même ouvrage.

      Contre son coeur
      3,6
    • Black Album

      • 368pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      Ce roman constitue une sorte de pendant au "Bouddha de banlieue", avec ses évocations du Londres nocturne et souterrain et un héros naïf et comique, Shahid, écartelé entre la luxure et la pauvreté musulmane, entre la femme pécheresse et l'imam vertueux.

      Black Album
      3,5
    • Jamal, brillant psychiatre d'origine pakistanaise, mène une vie tranquille, auréolée de succès, dans la banlieue de Londres. Une façade de réussite qui ne laisse rien transparaître des troubles profonds qui le hantent. Jusqu'au jour où un ancien compagnon de route ravive la mémoire d'un amour perdu, brisé par le crime et la honte. Brillant, profond et drôle, Hanif Kureishi radiographie comme personne la société anglaise des années 1970 à nos jours et fait preuve d'une acuité hors du commun pour décrire les tourments d'une génération en conflit perpétuel avec ses origines et son passé, ses désirs et ses regrets.

      Domaine étranger: Quelque chose à te dire
      3,3
    • Le don de Gabriel

      • 301pages
      • 11 heures de lecture

      Gabriel a quinze ans. Depuis que son père, Rex, un improbable rocker bohème qu'il adore, a été banni de la maison, il vit entre une mère débordée qui tente de subvenir à leurs besoins, une fille au pair vorace, Hannah, " sorte de boite aux lettres aux jambes courtes " chargée de le surveiller, et Archie, son frère jumeau mort, qui vit en lui et avec qui il dialogue. Mais soudain, Gabriel se découvre un don. Passionné par les images, il fait apparaître dans le monde réel les objets qu'il dessine. Ce talent insolite et le cadeau d'un guitariste, ami de Rex, vont-ils lui permettre de rapprocher ses parents ? L'adolescent, protecteur de son père, va cheminer avec nous à la rencontre de sa vie. Dans un Londres cosmopolite en pleine transformation, Kureishi compose avec humour et tendresse le parcours initiatique d'un adolescent, ange gardien de ses parents et artiste en devenir.

      Le don de Gabriel
      3,1
    • Music at the Limits

      Three Decades of Essays and Articles on Music

      • 352pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      With a foreword by Daniel BarenboimMusic at the Limits is the first book to bring together three decades of Edward Said's essays and articles on music.

      Music at the Limits
      4,2
    • Hanif Kureishi was voted the Most Promising Playwright of the Year in 1981 by the London Theatre Critics for his plays "Borderline" and "Outskirts". This selection of plays shows his development as a writer from his own perspective and from the perspective of the British theatre of the 1970s.

      Outskirts and Other Plays: The King and Me, Borderline, Birds od Passage
      3,7
    • The Mother

      • 128pages
      • 5 heures de lecture

      'Kureishi's screenplay is one of his most focused and engaging since My Beautiful Laundrette.' Allan Hunter, Screen International At sixty-five years of age, May fears that life has passed her by - that she has become just another invisible old lady whose days are more or less numbered. When she and her husband travel down from the north to visit their grown-up children in west London, she finds them characteristically inattentive. But then her husband's unexpected death pulls the ground from under her, and she subsequently embarks on a passionate affair with Darren, a man half her age, who is renovating her son's house and sleeping with her daughter, Paula. In the midst of this tumultuous situation, May begins to understand that it can take a lifetime to feel truly alive.

      The Mother
      3,9
    • Shattered

      • 336pages
      • 12 heures de lecture

      The book is characterized by its blend of humor and emotional depth, showcasing remarkable storytelling that resonates with readers. It captures poignant moments while also delivering laughter, making it a compelling read that balances light-heartedness with significant themes. The narrative is crafted to evoke a range of emotions, leaving a lasting impression on its audience.

      Shattered
      4,0
    • The Faber Book of Pop

      • 896pages
      • 32 heures de lecture

      This acclaimed collection charts the course of Pop from its underground origins through its low and high art phases to its current omnipresence; it takes in fiction, reportage, fashion, art and fantasy as filtered through pop music and includes work by Michael Bracewell, Angela Carter, Nick Cohn, Bob Dylan, Simon Garfield, Nelson George, Germaine Greer, Peter Guralnick, John Lennon, Norman Mailer, Greil Marcus, Iggy Pop, Neil Tennant, Lou Reed, Simon Reynolds, Hunter S. Thompson, Nick Tosches, Andy Warhol, Tom Wolfe and Malcolm X, amongst others. Covering more than 50 years of writing from 1942 on, The Faber Book of Pop is the most stimulating collection of writing on popular music ever published.

      The Faber Book of Pop
      3,9
    • Collected Stories

      • 688pages
      • 25 heures de lecture

      The essential collection from one of Britain's most celebrated and controversial writers.

      Collected Stories
      3,8
    • A new paperback edition of Hanif Kureishi's wide-ranging and thought-provoking essays.

      Collected Essays
      3,6
    • The Buddha of Suburbia

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture

      An anarchic coming-of-age novel that explores and celebrates Britain in the seventies.

      The Buddha of Suburbia
      3,8
    • Intimacy and Other Stories

      • 187pages
      • 7 heures de lecture

      Intimacy - now a film - analyzes the agonies and joys of being connected to another person. Jay, who is leaving his partner and their two sons, reflects on the vicissitudes of his relationship with Susan. This volume includes two short stories from Love in a Blue Time and Midnight All Day.

      Intimacy and Other Stories
      3,6
    • The Word and the Bomb

      • 100pages
      • 4 heures de lecture

      The outbreak of the Iraq war and its aftermath, plus the bombings in London, have stimulated Hanif Kureishi to write about the great divide between the East and the West - the gulf between fundamentalist Islam and Western values. This book is a collection of his controversial writings.

      The Word and the Bomb
      3,6
    • The Body

      • 266pages
      • 10 heures de lecture

      What if you were middle-aged and were offered the chance to trade in your sagging flesh for a much younger and more pleasing model? This is the situation in which the main character of The Body finds himself. Taking the plunge, he embarks on an odyssey of hedonism, but soon finds himself regretting what he has left behind as the responsibilities he thought he had sloughed off now begin to come home to him. Sinister forces are pursuing him, wanting possession of his 'body', and he finds himself in a no-man's-land, uncertain which way to turn. Praise for Hanif Kureishi's previous collection, Midnight All Day:

      The Body
      3,6
    • Intimacy

      • 155pages
      • 6 heures de lecture

      Hanif Kureishi's fourth novel made many reviewers uneasy on its first appearance in the U.K., because it cuts so painfully near to the bone. If a novelist's first duty is to tell the truth, then the author has done his duty with unflinching courage. Intimacy gives us the thoughts and memories of a middle-aged writer on the night before he walks out on his wife and two young sons for of a younger woman. A very modern man, without political convictions or religious beliefs, he vaguely hopes to find fulfillment in sexual love. No one is spared Kureishi's cold, penetrating gaze or lacerating pen. "She thinks she's feminist, but she's just bad-tempered," the unnamed narrator says of his abandoned wife. A male friend advises him, "Marriage is a battle, a terrible journey, a season in hell, and a reason for living." At the heart of Intimacy is this terrible paradox: "You don't stop loving someone just because you hate them." Male readers will wince with recognition at the narrator's hatred of entrapment and domesticity, and his implacable urge towards freedom, escape, even loneliness. Female readers may find it a truly horrific revelation. Kureishi is only telling it like it is, in staccato sentences of pinpoint accuracy. By far the author's best yet: a brilliant, devastating work. --Christopher Hart, Amazon.co.uk

      Intimacy
      3,6
    • My beautiful laundrette

      • 165pages
      • 6 heures de lecture

      Seit Stephen Frears 1985 die Geschichte „über einen schwulen Pakistani, der einen Waschsalon betreibt“, verfilmte, gilt Kureishi als einer der wichtigsten multikulturellen Autoren Großbritanniens. Die Themen Rassenkonflikte, Homosexualität, Klassenschranken, soziale Gegensätze, Jugendarbeitslosigkeit und das vom Thatcherismus gepredigte Streben nach wirtschaft- lichem Erfolg werden innerhalb einer bewegenden Liebesgeschichte unaufdringlich, charmant und fern jeder Schwarzweißmalerei dargestellt. Ungekürzte und unbearbeitete Textausgabe in der Originalsprache, mit Übersetzungen schwieriger Wörter am Fuß jeder Seite, Nachwort und Literaturhinweisen. Sprachen: Deutsch, Englisch

      My beautiful laundrette
      3,3
    • Love + Hate

      • 240pages
      • 9 heures de lecture

      Tells the story of a Pakistani woman who has begun a new life in Paris, an essay about the writing of author's acclaimed film Le Week-End, and an account of Kafka's relationship with his father, readers will find Kureishi also exploring the topics that he continues to make new, and make his own.

      Love + Hate
      3,4
    • The New Uncanny

      • 226pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      Performing a deft metaphorical evisceration of Sigmund Freud’s classic 1919 essay that delved deeply into the tradition of horror writing, this freshly contemporary collection of literary interpretations reintroduces to the world Freud’s compelling theory of das unheimliche —or, the uncanny. Specifically designed to challenge the creative boundaries of some of the most famed and respected horror writers working today—such as A. S. Byatt, Christopher Priest, Hanif Kureishi, Frank Cottrell Boyce, Matthew Holness, and the indomitable Ramsey Campbell—this anatomically precise experiment encapsulates what the uncanny represents in the 21st century. Masterfully narrated with the benefit of unique perspectives on what exactly it is that goes bump in the night, this chilling modern collective is not only an essential read for fans of horror but also an insightful and intriguing introduction to the greats of the genre at their gruesome best.

      The New Uncanny
      3,4
    • My son the fanatic

      • 174pages
      • 7 heures de lecture

      Hanif Kureishi, selber in einem pakistanisch-englischen Elternhaus geboren, schildert in 'My Son the Fanatic' den bis zum totalen Zerwürfnis führenden Konflikt zwischen dem aus Pakistan stammenden Vater Parvez und seinem Sohn Farid. Der Sohn, der als Sittenwächter auftritt, wirft dem liberal gesinnten Vater Unmoral und Prinzipienlosigkeit vor. Farids Rebellion gegen die westliche Wertewelt lässt ihn zum Fundamentalisten werden. Ungekürzte und unbearbeitete Textausgabe in der Originalsprache, mit Übersetzungen schwieriger Wörter am Fuß jeder Seite, Nachwort und Literaturhinweisen.

      My son the fanatic
      3,4
    • Love in a blue time

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      Love in a Blue Time is Hanif Kureishi's first collection of short fiction, gathering ten stories that explore identity and its relationship to sexuality, ethnicity, and gender. The stories are set in the post-Thatcher Britain of the mid-1990s, presenting a vision of a London depressed by economic stagnation, social disintegration, and the ubiquity of mass-mediated culture. Although Kureishi's exploration of these themes is rooted in a specific space and time, his book has broader resonances. Its exploration of the radicalization of Muslim youth in Britain became particularly pertinent after September 11, 2001, and the subsequent wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Its treatment of relationships would be developed in Kureishi's later work, notably his controversial 1998 novella Intimacy.

      Love in a blue time
      3,5
    • What Happened?

      • 208pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      'No one else casts such a shrewd and gimlet eye on contemporary life.' - William BoydComic, dark and insightful, What Happened? is Hanif Kureishi's new collection of essays and fiction.

      What Happened?
      3,3
    • Midnight all day

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      A collection of stories that depicts a lost generation of men: those shaped by the sixties, disoriented by the eighties and bereft of a personal and political map in the nineties.

      Midnight all day
      3,4
    • The Nothing

      • 176pages
      • 7 heures de lecture

      Hanif Kureishi's short, sharp tale of revenge is diabolical fun Fiona Wilson The Times

      The Nothing
      3,2
    • Mamoon is an eminent Indian-born writer who has made a career in England - but now, in his early 70s, his reputation is fading, sales have dried up, and his new wife has expensive taste.Harry, a young writer, is commissioned to write a biography to revitalise both Mamoon's career and his bank balance. Harry greatly admires Mamoon's work and wants to uncover the truth of the artist's life. Harry's publisher seeks a more naked truth, a salacious tale of sex and scandal that will generate headlines. Meanwhile Mamoon himself is mining a different vein of truth altogether.Harry and Mamoon find themselves in a battle of wills, but which of them will have the last word?The ensuing struggle for dominance raises issues of love and desire, loyalty and betrayal, and the frailties of age versus the recklessness of youth.Hanif Kureishi has created a tale brimming with youthful exuberance, as hilarious as it is touching, where words have the power to forge a world.

      The Last Word
      2,7
    • Souboj

      • 144pages
      • 6 heures de lecture

      Povídka klasika ruské literatury, napsaná roku 1891, je příběhem dvou mužů, jejichž rozdílné názory a postoje je přivedou až k souboji.

      Souboj
      4,3
    • In ›Blau ist die Liebe‹ thematisiert Hanif Kureishi die menschlichen Sehnsüchte und Abgründe, indem er die Suche nach Erfüllung durch Sex und exzessives Leben schildert. Die Protagonisten erreichen jedoch nie die ersehnte Nähe. Kureishi erzählt leidenschaftlich und fesselnd von der paradoxen Natur der Seele.

      Blau ist die Liebe. Erzählungen
    • "Mi chiamo Karim Amir e sono un vero inglese, più o meno." Comincia così "Il Budda delle periferie", romanzo con il quale Hanif Kureishi esordiva nella narrativa nel 1990, dopo aver scritto le sceneggiature di "My beautiful Laundrette" e "Sammy and Rosie Get Laid" e dopo aver scritto e diretto "London Kills Me". Il libro è un racconto di formazione che narra le peripezie sentimentali e le avventure di vita di Karim, adolescente metà inglese e metà indiano nella periferia londinese degli anni Settanta.

      Il Budda delle periferie