Colum McCann Libri
Colum McCann è un autore acclamato a livello internazionale le cui opere approfondiscono l'esperienza umana. La sua prosa è spesso descritta come musicale, cinematografica e delicata, intrecciando fatti e finzione per esplorare relazioni complesse e temi urgenti. McCann spesso unisce elementi disparati —storia, arte, natura e politica— in narrazioni coese e potenti. La sua capacità di intrecciare la tragedia personale con un richiamo universale alla pace e alla comprensione risuona nei lettori di tutto il mondo.







Questo bacio vada al mondo intero
- 464pagine
- 17 ore di lettura
1974. È un’estate torrida, di tradimenti e morti, Watergate e Vietnam. Un’estate di tormento e violenza. Poi, un mattino, New York si ferma incantata per osservare la passeggiata nel vuoto di un funambolo. Lieve e misterioso nel suo gioco di equilibrio, l’uomo ricama un sogno di purezza e speranza percorrendo una corda tesa a 110 metri dal suolo, fra le Torri Gemelle. Sotto di lui, in strada, la città trattiene il respiro e dimentica per un attimo le sue tragedie. Inizia così la storia poetica e convulsa di una manciata di newyorchesi – un monaco di strada che porta la sua missione fra le prostitute nel Bronx; una di loro, giovane e bellissima, che divide il marciapiede con la madre; un’artista corrosa dal rimorso ma decisa a ripulire la propria vita; madri in lutto e una nonna che non vuole arrendersi – le cui vite si sfiorano e si scontrano come biglie, sotto i grattacieli e nei sobborghi di una città dolente e umana. Una città che tiene ben nascosta la propria anima, sospesa come un equilibrista sul filo sottile tra il bene e il male. Un grande romanzo americano, crocevia di voci e destini che sanno aprire la porta alla speranza in un mondo abitato dal dolore.
Lascia che il mondo giri
- 464pagine
- 17 ore di lettura
On a cold day in January, J. Mendelssohn wakes in his Upper East Side apartment. Old and frail, the former judge waits for the heating to come on, the clacking of the pipes stirring memories of his past. He meets his son for lunch, who departs mid-meal, leaving Mendelssohn to eat alone. Moments after he leaves the restaurant, he is brutally attacked. Detectives comb through footage of his movements, their work like that of a poet searching for a word that will suddenly make sense of everything. Told from multiple perspectives, Thirteen Ways of Looking is a ground-breaking novella of extraordinary resonance. Accompanied by three powerful stories set in Afghanistan, Galway and London, this is a tribute to humanity's search for meaning and grace, from a writer at the height of his form.
The debut novel from National Book Award winner and Booker nominee Colum McCann 'Colum McCann conjures a hugely inventive debut' Observer 'McCann writes equally well about Ireland, America and Mexico, and he links past and present in a finely woven narrative: Songdogs is a vivid, beautifully measured book' Sunday Times __________________ Colum McCann's first novel goes back to the years before the Spanish Civil War, following the adventures of a peripatetic Irish photographer from the war-strewn shores of Europe to the exotic plains of Mexico. The story is told in the words of the photographer's only son, a wanderer himself, who uses his father's unreliable memories and the fading remnants of his art to piece together his family history and explain the mystery surrounding his mother - a Mexican beauty brought back by his father to Ireland.
Dancer
- 352pagine
- 13 ore di lettura
Trudging back through a ravaged and icy wasteland, their horses dying around them, their own hunger rendering them almost savage, the Russian soldiers are exhausted as they reach the city of Ufa. There, dancing unafraid among them, is one small pale boy. His name is Rudolf.
Emily watches as two airmen emerge from the carnage of World War One to pilot the first non-stop transatlantic flight. Among the mail being carried on the aircraft is a letter which will not be opened for almost 100 years. Senator George Mitchell criss-crosses the ocean in search of an elusive peace.
'McCann returns to Ireland with this collection, turning his measured gaze and incisive prose to the country's recent history with devastating effect' Maggie O'Farrell 'McCann once again shows why he is one of the best writers in the world ... Deeply moving and powerfully written, these are likely to become classics' Big Issue ___________________ One powerful novella, with two thematically linked short stories on either side of it, forms the basis of Everything in This Country Must. Although these are stories about Ireland and the Troubles, they have an almost mythical rather than a political feel. In the title story, four young soldiers help a farmer and his daughter free their horse from a stream in flood, unable to understand that their help will never be anything but an insult. In the novella, Hunger Strike, a young boy and his mother flee to Galway as the boy's uncle succumbs to a hunger strike in a Derry gaol. In Wood, a ten-year-old boy is asked by his mother to make poles for the marching season. ___________________ 'Colum McCann's stories are brooding, meditative and lyrically controlled to that delicate point where the emotion within them intensifies with each succeeding reading and recognition. The political turmoil of Northern Ireland finds here an answering, subtly respondent voice - wonderfully skilled and deeply felt' Seamus Deane
This side of brightness
- 256pagine
- 9 ore di lettura
At the turn of the century, New York's sandhogs burrowed beneath the East River, digging the tunnels that would link Brooklyn to Manhattan; many decades later, those same tunnels offer refuge to the desperate and homeless. Spanning 70 years, McCann's acclaimed novel tells the story of three generations bound to the tunnels by ill-fated loves, unintended crimes, and social taboos.


