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John Burnside

    19 mars 1955 – 29 mai 2024

    John Burnside est célébré pour ses profondes œuvres poétiques et de fiction qui explorent l'expérience humaine avec une sensibilité remarquable. Son écriture se caractérise par un rythme hypnotique et une imagerie évocatrice, plongeant les lecteurs dans des mondes introspectifs. La maîtrise du langage de Burnside et sa capacité à capturer la complexité émotionnelle lui ont valu une large acclamation de la critique. À travers ses écrits, il contemple souvent la connexion de l'humanité avec la nature et la nature changeante de l'identité.

    The sea, the sea
    Learning to Sleep
    A Lie about My Father
    Waking Up In Toytown
    Aurochs and Auks
    The Music of Time
    • The Music of Time

      • 608pages
      • 22 heures de lecture

      Though we might not realise it, our collective memory of the twentieth century was defined by the poets who lived and wrote in it. At every significant turning point we find them, pen in hand, fingers poised at the typewriter, ready to distil the essence of the moment, from the muddy wastes of the Western front to the vast reckoning that came with the end of empire. This is the first and only history of twentieth century poetry, by the acclaimed poet, author and academic John Burnside. Bringing together poets from times and places as diverse as Tsarist Russia, 1960's America and Ireland at the height of the Troubles, The Music of Time reveals how poets engaged with and shaped the most important issues of their times - and were in their turn affected by their context and dialogue with each other. This is a major work of scholarship, that on every page bears witness to the transformative beauty and power of poetry.

      The Music of Time
      4,3
    • Aurochs and Auks

      • 128pages
      • 5 heures de lecture

      Essays on extinction, death, renewal and continuity by the acclaimed writer and poet. Prompted by his own near death experience Burnside reflects on the stories of the auroch, the great auk, and of humanity.

      Aurochs and Auks
      4,1
    • Waking Up In Toytown

      • 272pages
      • 10 heures de lecture

      In the early 80s, after a decade of drug abuse and borderline mental illness, the author resolved to escape his addictive personality and find calm in a 'Surbiton of the mind'. This title tells is an account of a troubled childhood.

      Waking Up In Toytown
      3,9
    • A Lie about My Father

      • 336pages
      • 12 heures de lecture

      A memoir of two lost men: a father and his child. It is about forgiving, about examining the way men are made and how they fall apart, about understanding that in order to have a good son you must have a good father.

      A Lie about My Father
      4,1
    • Lucid, lyrical, and intellectually profound, this poetry collection resonates with themes of life, death, and the charmed darkness in between. Several ghosts haunt the work, including the author's mother, honored in a powerful pastoral elegy, and the poet Arthur Rimbaud, who searches for belonging in an improbable Lincolnshire landscape. The echoes of a lost pagan ancestry emerge unexpectedly, revealing a profound presence amid contemporary life. Central to the collection is Hypnos, the Greek god of sleep, symbolizing the author's struggle with a severe sleep disorder that culminated in a near-death experience, influencing the latter part of the book. Additionally, the poems offer provocative reflections on the harm caused by institutions, such as organized religion and marriage, as well as the societal constructs of gender and romantic love that shape our lives. This collection showcases Burnside at his most elegiac, while also celebrating a radical sense of cultural independence. The work has been praised for its concision and beauty, solidifying Burnside's status as one of the finest British poets of our time.

      Learning to Sleep
      4,0
    • Charles Arrowby, a well-known theatre director, has come to live in a lonely house beside the sea. However, his longed for life of simplicity and solitude is shortlived: the house appears haunted, a strange creature emerges from the sea, women from whom he intended to escape, reappear. The Sea, The Sea is a remarkable book, distinguished by the power and depth of Miss Murdoch's imaginative vision, a novel which has deservedly received high critical and popular acclaim.

      The sea, the sea
      4,0
    • The Dumb House

      Haus der Stummen, englische Ausgabe

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      In Persian myth, it is said that Akbar the Great built a palace which he filled with newborns, attended only by mutes, in order to learn whether language is innate or aquired. As the children grew into their silent and difficult world, this palace became known as the Gang Mahal, or Dumb House. In his first novel, John Burnside explores the possibilities inherent in a modern-day repetition of Akbars investigations. The unnamed narrator creates a twisted variant of the Dumb House. When the children develop a musical language of their own, excluding their jailer, he extracts an appalling revenge.

      The Dumb House
      3,9
    • Granta 105

      Lost And Found

      • 256pages
      • 9 heures de lecture

      Our world is changing at a dizzying our physical environment, our communities and our cultures, how we communicate and the speed with which we adapt to new ways of experiencing and living in the world. Caught in the midst of decline and regeneration, what are we losing and what are we gaining? And how do we decide what's worth saving and what should be thrown away? In this issue, we travel to places on the cusp of staggering change, talk to people who have seen and done it all and rescue a few choice items from the recycling bin. From Ireland's Catholic priests - once exported around the world and now under threat even in their own country - to the hitherto obscure music saved from extinction via the vast exchange mart of the Internet, "Granta 105" captures moments of both disappearance and rebirth in all their complexity and strangeness.

      Granta 105
      3,8
    • Glister, English edition

      • 272pages
      • 10 heures de lecture

      The children of Innertown exist in a state of suspended terror. Every year or so, a boy from their school disappears, vanishing into the wasteland of the old chemical plant. Nobody knows where these boys go, or whether they are alive or dead, and without evidence the authorities claim they are simply runaways. The town policeman, Morrison knows otherwise. He was involved in the cover-up of one boy's murder, and he believes all the boys have been killed. Though he is seriously compromised, he would still like to find out the killer's identity. The local children also want to know and, in their fear and frustration, they turn on Rivers, a sad fantasist and suspected paedophile living alone at the edge of the wasteland. Trapped and frightened, one of the boys, Leonard, tries to escape, taking refuge in the poisoned ruins of the old plant; there he finds another boy, who might be the missing Liam and might be a figment of his imagination. With his help, Leonard comes to understand the policeman's involvement, and exacts the necessary revenge - before following Liam into the Glister: possibly a disused chemical weapons facility, possibly a passage to the outer world. A terrifying exploration of loss and the violence that pools under the surface of the everyday, Glister is an exquisitely written, darkly imagined novel by one of our greatest contemporary writers.

      Glister, English edition
      3,4
    • Ashland & Vine

      • 352pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      What does it mean to live with integrity in the United States of America? That is the question haunting John Burnside's new novel... The way that Burnside layers these stories is masterful, and becomes a meditation on storytelling itself. Duncan White Daily Telegraph

      Ashland & Vine
      3,7