Alan Sillitoe Livres
Alan Sillitoe fut un écrivain anglais dont l'œuvre capturait souvent une représentation brute et sans concession de la vie de la classe ouvrière. Ses récits exploraient les frustrations et les aspirations profondément ancrées d'individus ordinaires naviguant dans les contraintes sociales. La prose de Sillitoe se caractérisait par sa franchise et sa perspicacité psychologique aiguë, offrant une voix à ceux qui étaient souvent négligés. Il reste une figure importante pour sa représentation authentique de la résilience de l'esprit humain et de sa quête de sens.







La solitude du coureur de fond
- 310pages
- 11 heures de lecture
Dès mon arrivée au Borstal, ils ont fait de moi un coureur de fond en cross. Ça doit être parce qu'ils trouvaient que j'avais la découpure qu'il faut, parce que j'étais grand et musclé pour mon âge (et je le suis toujours). Au fond, pour vous dire le vrai, je ne m'en faisais guère pour ça, parce que, de courir, ça tout le temps été le fort dans notre famille, surtout quand il s'agit de se défiler de la police. Moi, j'ai toujours été bon à la course, avec, à la fois du sprint et de la foulée, mais le seul ennui, c'est que malgré toute ma vitesse, et pour savoir jouer des flûtes, vous pouvez être, sûr que je m'y connais, même si c'est moi qui vous le dis, c'est pas ça qui m'a empêché de me faire piger par les cognes le jour que j'ai fait la boulangerie.
Raw Material
- 190pages
- 7 heures de lecture
This fusion of novel and memoir chronicles the destructive effects of WWI on two working-class families in Nottingham. Alan Sillitoe, an advocate for ordinary people, combines family memoir with extensive research on military records and artistic speculation in this inventive historical narrative. Central to the story are his grandfather, the blacksmith Ernest Burton, and his uncle Edgar, a World War I deserter. The narrative begins with a legless match-seller from Sillitoe’s childhood, whose deformity sparked various explanations from family members, setting the tone for a tale colored by human imagination and opinion. Sillitoe delves into his heritage, portraying his maternal grandfather as a tyrant who was both feared and respected, separated from society by illiteracy yet a talented craftsman. On his father’s side, he explores the life of his uncle Edgar, who enlisted in the army in 1914 but soon deserted after realizing the harsh realities of military life. Edgar's attempts to evade military service lead him on a tumultuous journey, culminating in his capture and return to duty just in time for the Battle of the Somme. Spanning a century of family history and legends, this work interweaves personal memories with collected facts and hearsay. Sillitoe's signature “kitchen-sink realism” evolves into a more philosophical exploration, reflecting the inspirations behind his esteemed literary career.
Thirty-eight stories on life among the English working classes. They include The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner, on a rebellious youth in a reformatory, and Mr. Raynor the School Teacher, on a teacher who is a Peeping Tom
A Childhood
- 122pages
- 5 heures de lecture
Gevoelens en ervaringen van een Joodse kleuter, die tijdens de Tweede Wereldoorlog met zijn ouders enkele jaren in een concentratiekamp doorbrengt.
Last Loves
- 190pages
- 7 heures de lecture
Alan Sillitoe is famous as a master of the short story. This book shows why. From the bible-basher and his key rôle in PIT STRIKE, to the boy whose parents left each other – and him – the same morning in ENOCH'S TWO LETTERS; from the man who tried to act out a 'real' life in MIMIC, to the woman whose husband came back to her in BEFORE SNOW COMES – these stories go to the heart of the torments and joys of living.
Birthday is the long-awaited sequel to Alan Sillitoe's classic novel of the 1950s, Saturday Night and Sunday Morning. Four decades on from the novel which was at the forefront of the new wave of British Literature, we re-discover the Seaton brothers: older, cetainly; wiser - possibly not. Arthur and Brian Seaton, one with an ailing wife, one with an emotional knapsack of failure and success, are on their way to Jenny's 70th birthday party. Jenny and Brian had years ago experimented with sex - semi-clothed, stealthy, with the bonus of fear. Arthur, of course, had cut a winning swathe through the married and unmarried women of Nottinghamshire. Life has changed. Alan Sillitoe is undoubtedly one of the greatest English writers of our time, and, indeed, one of the most influential.
A Man of His Time
- 400pages
- 14 heures de lecture
A wonderful historical novel from one of our best loved and most prolific writersAs a young man Ernest Burton was a bold and reckless journeyman blacksmith, seducing all young girls he comes across. We watch him grow to become a master Blacksmith, and a tyrannical father of eight who refuses even to try to remain faithful to the woman he married and who reigns over his young family with an iron fist, instilling in his sons and daughters a mixture of fear and hatred of him. Burton is an extraordinary fictional creation a bully who shows no mercy in his relentless terrorism of his sons, he can also be effortlessly charming, with a magnetic attraction that effects all he meets.Written in the sparse, plain language that Sillitoe has made his own, A Man of His Time is a mesmerising portrait of an extraordinary individual, aware that he is, in many ways, the last of a dying breed. It's a rich, absorbing, wonderfully readable novel that covers decades and crosses generations, depicting with singular brilliance an England poised on the brink of change.



