Tandguld och andra berättelser
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Axel Thormählens noveller är lika oberäkneliga som livet självt, tankfulla blandningar av humor och svårmod med inslag av ömhet och stänk av satir. De handlar om människor som söker tröst och ett fotfäste i tillvaron, även om några av dem inser att de aldrig kommer att bli nöjda med vad som ligger inom det möjligas ramar.
Axel Thormählen, f. 1945 i Nordtyskland, har bott i Sverige sedan 1969 men har alltid skrivit
på sitt tyska modersmål. I svensk översättning
har följande böcker av honom utkommit, alla på ellerströms förlag: novellsamlingarna De närvarande (1987) och Verksamhetsberättelser (1996) samt romanen Wilhelm (1993). De tidiga romanerna Hanky och Hanna utkom 1978 resp. 1983 på Merlin Verlag i Tyskland. 2014 gav det likaledes tyska jmb-Verlag ut hans bästa noveller under
titeln Der letzte Wikinger und andere Erzählungen. Den satiriska litteraturthrillern Wenn Wörter töten könnten, en hejdlös drift med litteraturscenen och dess aktörer som delvis utspelar sig i Lund och
på Gotland, har kommit ut på jmb-Verlag i flera utgåvor, senast 2020.
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| Format | PDF, Physical book |
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The Ladislaw Case
This sequel to Middlemarch is also in a limited sense a sequel to Dickens’ Bleak House. While there is no need to have read either novel in order to enjoy The Ladislaw Case, acquaintance with George Eliot’s characters and Dickens’ Inspector Bucket enhances the reader’s pleasure in following the twists and turns of the plot and the tribulations of the characters.
Read the blurb text
Click here for a synopsis
Here is a chapter from the book: [Ladislaw Chapter 23.pdf]
"Thormählen writes very well, moves the plot along, and keeps the tension at just the right pitch throughout. She does a particularly good job extrapolating Eliot's characters, convincingly making Ladislaw much less attractive than he is in Eliot's novel and revealing the implications of Rosamond's chilling egotism ... Thormählen ... has created an entertaining re-vision of a major Victorian novel [which] successfully extrapolates elements in [Middlemarch] that both illuminate and criticize [it]." George P. Landow, Editor-in-Chief, The Victorian Web.
'One of the pleasures of reading Imke Thormählen's murder mystery ... is that it works on two levels: even as it unravels the question of who committed the murder, the novel provides a thought-provoking sequel to George Eliot's Middlemarch. /---/ [It contains] ... strong narrative suspense, psychological realism, and a credible Victorian setting ... [I]maginatively and insightfully faithful to George Eliot's vision ... this novel ... reveals some of the hitherto untapped potential that lies latent in ... Eliot's novel and is, at the same time, a very good read indeed.'
Micael M. Clarke, George Eliot -- George Henry Lewes Studies, Nos. 64-65
'The characterization of the main protagonists in the story is generally consistent with that created by George Eliot ... Characters impress us or repel us by what they say. There is no difficulty here in recognizing their voices: the clear sombre voice of the disappointed Dr Lydgate; the excessively polite voice of Rosamond, so quick to criticize her husband and add to his sense of failure in his professional and social life; the irritable and yet self-critical voice of the young politician Ladislaw; the certain tones of Lady Chettam secure in her social position, correcting her sister "Dodo" and yet always caring for her ... If the reader has also devoured Middlemarch, he or she will be eager to meet old friends, to be reminded of some of the darker strands of that story, and ultimately, tense with expectations, excited to discover the murderer. We are kept guessing until very near the end and for most readers the revelation will be a real surprise.'
Ruth and Michael Harris, The George Eliot Review 44 (2013), 88-89
Der Grüne Himmel
JMB Verlag, 2015
Illustrationen von Peter Kirchhof
„Schlachtfeld Menschheit“: Unter diesem Thema wird in der kleinen südschwedischen Universitätsstadt Lund eine zehntägige Konferenz abgehalten, an der führende Geisteswissenschaftler aus aller Welt teilnehmen. Parallel dazu tagen im medizinischen Bereich Experten der Kardiologie. Bei einem Ausflug am ersten Tag vermischen sich einige der Teilnehmer in einem kleinen Wald außerhalb von Lund. Dieser Wald ist danach der wirkliche Mittelpunkt der Handlung. Jeden Tag treffen sich dort verschiedene Personen und machen Spaziergänge, wobei zuweilen merkwürdige Dinge passieren.
Dieser Roman besteht aus Episoden. Während der jeweiligen Spaziergänge werden zentrale Aspekte unseres Menschenlebens angesprochen. Dazu gehören Alter und Kindheit, Liebe, Krankheit und Tod sowie Kunst, Lüge und Zukunft. Axel Thormählen beschreibt die Geschehnisse in einem warmen und zeitweise humoristischen Ton. Ohne vor den tiefsten Unruhen der Menschenseele haltzumachen, bietet dieser zugleich besinnliche und fantasievolle Roman vor allem Trost.
Zahngold
Der letzte Wikinger
JMB Verlag Hannover
ISBN 9783944342542
Illustrationen von Peter Kirchhof
Endlich gibt es eine Auswahl der besten Erzählungen von Axel Thormählen auf Deutsch:
Über die in den U.S.A. herausgegebene Auswahl A Happy Man and other Stories (Les Figues Press) schrieb Claude Rawson, Literaturprofessor an der Yale University: „Ein entzückendes, ungewöhnliches, hochindividuelles Buch mit einer milden Weisheit, manchmal beunruhigend oder belustigend oder beides zugleich, aber immer unverwechselbar.“
The Water Tower and Other Stories
In these six stories, everyday incidents and situations become extraordinary, lingering on in the reader's memory. For instance, the search for the perfect Christmas tree will never be quite the same again after reading '23 December'.
The pursuit of human happiness in all its different manifestations is at the core of these taut, ironic, and compassionate tales.
Rethinking Modernism
Around 1979, scholars adopted the term "modernism" as a designation for the radical changes that took place in Anglo-American literature in the early twentieth century. The concept lent prestige to works and authors associated with it, encouraging the development of a vast body of criticism while blocking academic recognition of literature to which it does not readily apply. In Rethinking Modernism, published by Palgrave Macmillan in 2003 and edited by Marianne Thormählen, fifteen scholars of modernism subject the concept to sceptical scrutiny as they revisit their special areas of expertise. The general question they all face is not so much "what was modernism?" -- a familiar question -- as "was/is modernism?" Their results show that although "modernism" remains a useful concept under certain conditions, for them -- as for any reader of this book -- modernism will never be quite the same again.
The book ends with a 20-page bibliography of works on modernism in two parts, compiled by the editor; the Literary Research/Recherche littéraire reviewer called it "comprehensive and invaluable". Other reviewers have praised the book as forming a "both focused and vigorous" volume (The Yearbook of English Studies) and as offering noteworthy "considerations of category breakers and the construction of categories by the reception of literary works" (The Review of English Studies).
https://www.palgrave.com/page/detail/rethinking-modernism-marianne-thormählen/?sf1=barcode&st1=9781403911803




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