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Headhunter

Couverture
31 Avis
Crown, 1993 - 440 pages
The Edgar Award-winning author of The Telling of Tales returns with a psychological thriller set in a Toronto mental hospital. Lilah Kemp, a sometime spiritualist, inadvertently lets Kurtz, the diabolical character from Conrad's Heart of Darkness out of page 92--and can't get him back in.

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Review: Headhunter

Avis d'utilisateur  - Megan Baxter - Goodreads

Headhunter is not a book to read if you want the word "settled" to enter your vocabulary any time in the near future. It is perhaps as unsettling a book as I am willing to read, and yet, I've read it ... Consulter l'avis complet

Review: Headhunter

Avis d'utilisateur  - Jeffrey - Goodreads

I loved this novel. I enjoyed the literary allusions... or rather intrusions... that cropped up through. I enjoyed the near portents of the future. I just found it an amazing read with compelling characters. Consulter l'avis complet

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Table des matières

Section 1
3
Section 2
6
Section 3
41
Droits d'auteur

26 autres sections non affichées

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Expressions et termes fréquents

Références à ce livre

Issues d'autres livres

Contemporary theories and Canadian fiction

Issues de Google Scholar

Margaret Atwood, Carol Shields, and" That Moodie Bitch".
Faye Hammill - 1999 - American Review of Canadian Studies
" The Things That Are Seen in the Flashes": Timothy Findley's ...
Lorraine York - 1994 - Modern Fiction Studies
Madness in English-Canadian Fiction
II Fachbereich, Sprach-und Literaturwissenschaft
Madness in English-Canadian Fiction
II Fachbereich, Sprach-und Literaturwissenschaft
Tous les résultats de recherche Google Scholar »

À propos de l'auteur (1993)

Timothy Findley was born in 1930. A native of Toronto, Canada, novelist and playwright Timothy Findley initially embarked upon an acting career. Findley worked for the Canadian Stratford Festival and later, after study at London's Central School of Speech and Drama, he toured Britain, Europe, and the United States as a contract player. While performing in The Matchmaker by Thornton Wilder, Findley was encouraged by the playwright to write fiction. Influenced by film techniques, Findley's first novel, The Last of the Crazy People (1967) is a penetrating look at a family of "emotional cripples" from a child's perspective. With his character Hooker, Findley captures the irrational logic of a child's mind without treating childhood sentimentally.The Butterfly Plague followed in 1969. The Wars (1978), Findley's most successful novel, has been translated into numerous languages and was made into a film. The Wars uses the device of a story-within-a-story to illustrate how a personality transcends elemental forces even while being destroyed by them. In 1981 Famous Last Words was published. This fictionalization of Hugh Selwyn Mauberley by Ezra Pound, a work that was already a "fictional fact," examines fascism. In Not Wanted on the Voyage (1984), Findley rewrites the story of Noah's Ark by giving voices to women, children, workers, animals, and folklore creatures, all of whom question Noah's authority. The novel turns into a parable that seems to challenge imperialism, eugenics, fascism, and any other force that endangers human survival. Again repeating an earlier text, Findley turns to Thomas Mann's Death in Venice to write The Telling of Lies (1986). This novel draws parallels between World War II atrocities and contemporary North America, which Findley sees as a metaphoric concentration camp. Findley died on June 20, 2002 in Provence, France

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