The author of The Lazarus Project journeys with life's vagabonds in an electrifying new collection of stories Set in the darkest heart of Africa, in the backwaters of Slovenia, in the melting pot of Chicago, this brilliant collection of stories is coloured throughout by the 1992 Bosnian war. All but one of them features Bogdan, first met as a surly teenager during his diplomat father's assignment in Zaire, where he's happily corrupted by a degenerate American espionage agent. In each successive story, Bogdan recalls the surreal and salient experiences of his life: his youth with his ironically depicted family; his early determination to be a poet, his accidental sojourn in America, where he was caught after the commencement of hostilities in Bosnia; and his return to a "cesspool of insignificant, drizzly suffering", where he has a transformative night interviewing a Pulitzer Prize-winning writer. As ever, Hemon confronts pain and anonymity without blanching but also finds delicious absurdity in experience. His is the great humanity of a writer who sees life on the margins, and gives voice to what he finds in a style that is breathtakingly his own.
Ficha técnica
Editorial: Pan Books Ltd
ISBN: 9780330510905
Idioma: Inglés
Número de páginas: 224
Tiempo de lectura:
4h 35m
Encuadernación: Tapa dura
Fecha de lanzamiento: 19/11/2009
Año de edición: 2009
Plaza de edición: London
Alto: 22.0 cm
Ancho: 13.0 cm
Especificaciones del producto
Escrito por Aleksandar Hemon
Aleksandar Hemon nació en 1964 en Sarajevo, en la antigua Yugoslavia. Licenciado en literatura, en 1992 se trasladó a Chicago para perfeccionar su inglés. Allí le sorprende la guerra de Bosnia, lo que imposibilita su regreso a Sarajevo. Tras establecerse en Estados Unidos, en 1995 se anima a publicar por primera vez y sus artículos aparecen en The New Yorker, Esquire y The Paris Review. Más tarde, llega su primer libro de relatos, La cuestión de Bruno y en 2002, su primera novela, El hombre de ninguna parte. Es autor también del libro de relatos Amor y obstáculos (Duomo, 2010). En 2008, con El proyecto Lázaro, fue finalista a los galardones del National Book Award y del National Book Critics Circle Award.