From the Man Booker shortlisted author of Harvest. Alfred Busi, famed in his town for his music and songs, is mourning the recent death of his wife and quietly living out his days in the large villa he has always called home. Then one night Busi is attacked by a creature he disturbs as it raids the contents of his larder. Busi is convinced that what assaulted him was no animal, but a child, `innocent and wild', and his words fan the flames of old rumour - of an ancient race of people living in the bosk surrounding the town - and new controversy: the town's paupers, the feral wastrels at its edges, must be dealt with. Once and for all. Lyrical and warm, intimate and epic, The Melody by Jim Crace tracks the few days that will see Busi and the town he loves altered irrevocably. This is a story about grief and ageing, about reputation and the loss of it, about love and music and the peculiar way myth seeps into real life. And it is a political novel too - a rallying cry to protect those we persecute. 'The Melody takes its place among his finest [novels] . . . an ecological fable for modern times' Guardian
Ficha técnica
Editorial: Pan Macmillan
ISBN: 9781509841387
Idioma: Inglés
Encuadernación: Tapa blanda
Fecha de lanzamiento: 22/02/2019
Año de edición: 2019
Especificaciones del producto
Escrito por Jim Crace
(St. Albans, 1946) es un escritor, periodista y guionista inglés. Sus obras se encuadran siempre en periodos de transición en los que los grupos humanos han de adaptarse a una nueva realidad. De entre su narrativa cabe resaltar Continente (1986, Seix Barral, 1989), galardonada con los premios David Higham, The Guardian y Whitbread a la mejor primera novela; El don de las piedras (1988, Hoja de Lata, 2019), ganadora del Premio GAP International, ambientada en el paso del Paleolítico al Neolítico; Arcadia (1992, Anagrama, 1994), y Los cuarenta días (1997, Ediciones B, 2002), que recrea el peregrinaje por el desierto de Jesucristo y que ganó el Premio Whitbread y fue nominada para el Booker Prize. Cosecha, la última y, para muchos, más destacada novela de Crace, ha ganado los premios James Tait Black Memorial (2013) e International IMPAC Dublin (2015), además de ser nominada para el Goldsmith, el Walter Scott y, nuevamente, el Booker Prize en 2013.