Free Download Books Swimming Home Online
Swimming Home 
Swimming Home is a steal: with just 157 pages, this little book packs an incredible punch. The pervading scent of menace in this novel is overpowering and disquieting. Precise, concise, decisive sentences trap the reader. Nice (France) is overhung with a grey cloud of emotive intrigue. Only the child seems to see the pervading danger imminent in the holiday. The disintegration of relationships is everywhere; marriages, friendships, businesses. Back-dropped by the scenic atmosphere of Nice, the
Shortlisted for the 2012 Man Booker Prize, this slim book reads like a play, the action centered on a small group of people gathered at a tourist villa in seaside France. Levy is a playwright and poet as well as a novelist, and this informs her fiction. Description is given like stage direction: His daughter, Nina Jacobs, fourteen years old, standing at the edge of the pool in her new cherry-print bikini, glanced anxiously at her mother. The poetry comes through in the spare and precise

Im really at a loss to understand why this novella shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize 2012 did not win it. This is a perfect book. The prose is magnificent and a tour de force by an author with an exquisite handling particularly of the mental state in human beings.The setting is July 1994, in a villa up in the hills from Nice in the Alpes-Maritime, one of my favourite places in southern France. A famous poet, Jozef Jacobs, known as Joe, and his wife Isabel, a former war correspondent, are on
Deborah Levy is an interesting writer. There is a visual quality to her work that makes the reader blink. Is this a novel, or is it a film, we ask ourselves? Are we reading or watching? We become immobile in front of the screen of her set pieces, watching passively as the events happen before our eyes, as if in a documentary or a piece of reality TV. But there is no voice over, hardly any backstory, and no linking of scenes. What we see is all there is so we have to make of it what we can.There
The antiquarian bookstore I most often frequent has two sections: "Fiction and Literature," where you'd find Michael Ondaatje and Grace Paley and Lorrie Moore, and "General Fiction," where you'd find Nicholas Sparks and Jodi Picoult and Candace Bushnell. I found Swimming Home in the latter section. Don't blame the staff. Blame the covers of the most recent editions, with their benevolent blues and suburban lawn greens. Blame the title (which serves in the novel as the title of a poem-cum-suicide
Relationships between family, friends and a mysterious stranger are explored in uneasy detail in this compact and memorable read. Set in a holiday home in the hills above Nice in 1994, this enthralling story is a great example of well crafted language. Every sentence being concise and well crafted and creates a narrative that is devastating in its effects.Poet Joe Jacobs is sharing a holiday home with his wife Isabel' teenage daughter Nina and friends Mitchell and Laura who own a business
Deborah Levy
Paperback | Pages: 165 pages Rating: 3.32 | 9467 Users | 1201 Reviews

Describe Epithetical Books Swimming Home
Title | : | Swimming Home |
Author | : | Deborah Levy |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 165 pages |
Published | : | October 6th 2011 by And Other Stories |
Categories | : | Fiction. Literary Fiction. Contemporary. Novels |
Commentary Supposing Books Swimming Home
I’m really at a loss to understand why this novella shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize 2012 did not win it. This is a perfect book. The prose is magnificent and a tour de force by an author with an exquisite handling particularly of the mental state in human beings. The setting is July 1994, in a villa up in the hills from Nice in the Alpes-Maritime, one of my favourite places in southern France. A famous poet, Jozef Jacobs, known as Joe, and his wife Isabel, a former war correspondent, are on holiday with their teenage daughter Nina. Other household guests are Laura and Mitchell, who own a shop in Euston, London. Isabel has known Laura for many years but they are certainly not close friends, if anything they are used to one another, and are comfortable together. A mix-up in the letting of the villa sees the arrival of Kitty Finch, who is friendly with the Austrian caretaker Jurgen. He was rather taken with Kitty and called her Kitty Ket whilst thinking of any conceivable manoeuvre to get closer to her in more ways than one. Isabel, decides that the villa is more than large enough for them and Kitty is invited to stay by her. The reason for this is apparent later on. Pubescent Nina has become interested in Claude, a friend of Jurgen, who owns the only café in the village and looks like Mick Jagger. Not a very exciting story you may think but think again. Slowly, the problems in Joe’s and Isabel’s marriage and its fragility become apparent, the worries that Nina has, the eighty year old retired Doctor Madeleine Sheridan who views from the balcony next door the development of the family’s encounter with Kitty and who knows the latter’s extraordinary background, and Mitchell and Laura. Talk about bated breath with every single page I read, this book sizzled with secrets, sensuality, depression, depravity, deception, fear, insecurity and I cannot list all the other factors that came into the equation. Every single comment, be it regarding an insect or whatever, is enhanced. The descriptions are vivid. What to any individual would appear as trivia become of vital importance. Every utterance is an impact on life. The theme centres around water and especially the swimming pool and the fact that Kitty had written a poem that she wished Joe to read. Kitty is a botanist and she is following a specific agenda in life. It was rather disturbing to find out what it was. The poem of Sir Walter Scott springs to mind: “Oh! What a tangled web we weave, when first we practice to deceive"… The intensity of the writing and the attention to detail, never mind the style, are absolutely breathtaking. The novella surges relentlessly towards its rather unexpected conclusion. The ending was not at all what I had envisaged. Spectacular – that’s the only word I can possibly use.Present Books As Swimming Home
Original Title: | Swimming Home |
ISBN: | 1908276029 (ISBN13: 9781908276025) |
Edition Language: | English |
Setting: | France Côte d'Azur(France) |
Literary Awards: | Booker Prize Nominee (2012), Jewish Quarterly-Wingate Prize Nominee (2013) |
Rating Epithetical Books Swimming Home
Ratings: 3.32 From 9467 Users | 1201 ReviewsAppraise Epithetical Books Swimming Home
This book is rather wonderful - cryptic, elusive, allusive and dreamlike, and very difficult to encapsulate or describe in a meaningful review. My only previous exposure to Levy was reading her most recent book Hot Milk, and this book occupies similar territory, at least superficially. Both are full of symbolism and striking imagery, and share similar southern European settings, but ultimately depend more on what is not said than what is. Levy toys with her characters and appears to understandSwimming Home is a steal: with just 157 pages, this little book packs an incredible punch. The pervading scent of menace in this novel is overpowering and disquieting. Precise, concise, decisive sentences trap the reader. Nice (France) is overhung with a grey cloud of emotive intrigue. Only the child seems to see the pervading danger imminent in the holiday. The disintegration of relationships is everywhere; marriages, friendships, businesses. Back-dropped by the scenic atmosphere of Nice, the
Shortlisted for the 2012 Man Booker Prize, this slim book reads like a play, the action centered on a small group of people gathered at a tourist villa in seaside France. Levy is a playwright and poet as well as a novelist, and this informs her fiction. Description is given like stage direction: His daughter, Nina Jacobs, fourteen years old, standing at the edge of the pool in her new cherry-print bikini, glanced anxiously at her mother. The poetry comes through in the spare and precise

Im really at a loss to understand why this novella shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize 2012 did not win it. This is a perfect book. The prose is magnificent and a tour de force by an author with an exquisite handling particularly of the mental state in human beings.The setting is July 1994, in a villa up in the hills from Nice in the Alpes-Maritime, one of my favourite places in southern France. A famous poet, Jozef Jacobs, known as Joe, and his wife Isabel, a former war correspondent, are on
Deborah Levy is an interesting writer. There is a visual quality to her work that makes the reader blink. Is this a novel, or is it a film, we ask ourselves? Are we reading or watching? We become immobile in front of the screen of her set pieces, watching passively as the events happen before our eyes, as if in a documentary or a piece of reality TV. But there is no voice over, hardly any backstory, and no linking of scenes. What we see is all there is so we have to make of it what we can.There
The antiquarian bookstore I most often frequent has two sections: "Fiction and Literature," where you'd find Michael Ondaatje and Grace Paley and Lorrie Moore, and "General Fiction," where you'd find Nicholas Sparks and Jodi Picoult and Candace Bushnell. I found Swimming Home in the latter section. Don't blame the staff. Blame the covers of the most recent editions, with their benevolent blues and suburban lawn greens. Blame the title (which serves in the novel as the title of a poem-cum-suicide
Relationships between family, friends and a mysterious stranger are explored in uneasy detail in this compact and memorable read. Set in a holiday home in the hills above Nice in 1994, this enthralling story is a great example of well crafted language. Every sentence being concise and well crafted and creates a narrative that is devastating in its effects.Poet Joe Jacobs is sharing a holiday home with his wife Isabel' teenage daughter Nina and friends Mitchell and Laura who own a business
0 Comments:
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.