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Margaret Laurence

    18 juillet 1926 – 5 janvier 1987

    Margaret Laurence explore les complexités de l'existence humaine dans les prairies canadiennes à travers la ville fictive de Manawaka. Ses œuvres plongent dans la vie intérieure des personnages avec une profonde profondeur, examinant les thèmes de l'identité, de la mémoire et de la résilience face aux défis de la vie. Laurence aborde son écriture avec une perspicacité psychologique aiguë, capturant habilement les nuances de l'expérience humaine. Sa prose se caractérise par un langage riche et évocateur et un engagement envers le réalisme psychologique.

    Margaret Laurence
    Eine Laune Gottes
    This Side Jordan
    The Stone Angel
    A Jest of God
    The Fire-Dwellers
    The Diviners
    • The Diviners

      • 402pages
      • 15 heures de lecture

      The life of a woman novelist living in a small town in Canada.

      The Diviners
      4,2
    • A vivid portrait of a woman convinced that life has more to offer her than the tedious routine of her days.

      The Fire-Dwellers
      3,9
    • A Jest of God

      • 256pages
      • 9 heures de lecture

      A duty-ridden woman dreams of breaking free from her small-town chains.

      A Jest of God
      4,0
    • In Hagar Shipley, Margaret Laurence has created one of the boldest, most memorable characters in Canadian fiction. Raise according to the stern virtues of her pioneer ancestors, Hagar Shipley leads a life of uncompromising pride--a pride which sustained her during a stormy marriage, but which lost her favourite son. As her story unfolds we are given vividly etched descriptions of Hagar as a young girl in a remote prairie town; of her now estranged husband; of John, her outoing son; and Marvin, the son she never loved. And now, with her life nearly behind her, Hagar makes a bold, last step towards freedom and independence, and in the Process gains a deeper understanding of the meaning of acceptance.

      The Stone Angel
      3,8
    • In 1957, the British colony of the Gold Coast broke free to become the independent nation of Ghana. Margaret Laurence’s first novel, This Side Jordan, recreates that colour-drenched world: a place where men and women struggle with self-betrayal, self-discovery, and the dawning of political pride.This Side Jordan transcends the traditional limits of the first novel. Its powerful and compassionate characterizations and its themes of exile and community anticipate the five later novels that make up Laurence’s acclaimed Manawaka series. A major work of lasting significance, This Side Jordan creates echoes in the mind of the reader as resonant as the drums of Ghana.

      This Side Jordan
      3,3