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Brian Moore

    25 agosto 1921 – 11 gennaio 1999

    Brian Moore ha creato un'opera prolifica che approfondisce i temi dell'identità, della fede e dell'alienazione. I suoi romanzi, che navigano con fluidità tra realismo, ambientazioni storiche e tocchi di fantastico, catturano le complessità della psiche umana. Moore esplora frequentemente stati di sradicamento, sia radicati nella convinzione religiosa sia nella ricerca di una casa in un mondo in continua espansione e diversità. La sua scrittura è caratterizzata da una profonda intuizione e da una voce narrativa distintiva.

    Brian Moore
    No Other Life
    The Feast of Lupercal
    The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne
    Banned in Ireland
    Temptation of Eileen Hugh
    Tascabili - 23: La caccia
    • Tascabili - 23: La caccia

      • 238pagine
      • 9 ore di lettura

      Tra il 1940 e il 1944, in Francia, fu deportato un ebreo su quattro. Pierre Brossard, come altri ufficiali filonazisti, combatte la sua personale guerra contro gli ebrei, accecato dall'odio. Estate del 1989: un vecchio dall'apparenza innocua attraversa il sud della Francia chiedendo ospitalità in monasteri e abbazie. Da più di quaranta anni Brossard, ricercato con l'accusa di crimini contro l'umanità, vive una lunga fuga dal proprio passato. Condannato a morte dai tribunali nel 1944 e poi graziato, Pierre ha goduto di amicizie influenti che tuttora lo aiutano, ma adesso qualcosa è cambiato: una sedicente organizzazione filoisraeliana è sulle sue tracce, e Brossard si trova improvvisamente al centro di una drammatica caccia all'uomo.

      Tascabili - 23: La caccia
      2,7
    • Temptation of Eileen Hugh

      • 192pagine
      • 7 ore di lettura

      This book portrays the relationship between a quiet young shop assistant from Ulster and her wealthy employers.

      Temptation of Eileen Hugh
      4,0
    • The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne

      • 256pagine
      • 9 ore di lettura

      When Judith Hearne moves into her new lodgings, she meets James Madden, recently returned from New York, where he was "in the hotel business right on Times Square". Is she too late for love - or dare she let herself hope? Soon reality and fantasy become hopelessly mixed.

      The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne
      4,2
    • Diarmuid Devine is a teacher, and bachelor, destined for a lifetime of loneliness. One day he overhears a colleague mocking his sexual inexperience then he meets Una and a possible future appears. Set in an oppressive Belfast, stifled by religion and the conformity it imposes, Brian Moore explores the innocence, misunderstanding and consequences of Devines relationship with Una until rejection and the fear of scandal forces him to choose how he will live the rest of his life.

      The Feast of Lupercal
      3,0
    • Father Paul Michel, a Canadian missionary on the poor Caribbean island of Ganae, rescues a little local boy from abject poverty, and sets him on the road towards a dramatic and dangerous future as a revolutionary priest and, later, as the first democratically elected leader in a land of dictators.

      No Other Life
      3,8
    • A funny and forthright collection of writings about sport from one of our most admired, and outspoken, commentators

      The Thoughts of Chairman Moore
      3,4
    • A novel of female sexuality. Mary Lavery lives in New York, happily married to a distinguished British playwright, but there have been two previous husbands and a passionate Catholic girlhood. So who is Mary Lavery, nee Dunne? The author's successes include the W.H. Smith Literary Award.

      I Am Mary Dunne
      3,4
    • The Mangan Inheritance

      • 335pagine
      • 12 ore di lettura

      Moore's suave professionalism elevates this lightweight, contrived search-for-identity novel. Jamie Mangan, a 36-year-old Canadian cub reporter and poet, inherits a fortune after the tragic death of his film star wife, Beatrice Abbot, who had recently left him for another man. Having spent years as "Mr. Beatrice Abbot" and feeling like a cuckold, Jamie desperately needs to reclaim his identity. Upon returning to Montreal, he discovers family documents, including a photograph of James Clarence Mangan, a 19th-century Irish poet who resembles him. This revelation prompts Jamie to travel to Ireland in search of personal identity. In the town of Dinshane, he encounters various Mangans, divided into two distinct groups: black sheep and white. The narrative unfolds as Jamie seeks to understand the origins of this behavioral divide, leading to revelations of incest, past traumas, and madness. While the plot may seem far-fetched, Moore's smooth storytelling engages readers throughout. The narrative's charm and the sentimental conclusion provide enjoyment, but the overall impact remains light and lacks depth.

      The Mangan Inheritance
      3,7
    • "The story is told with . . . superb grace and wit."--The New Yorker "If reading it upsets you, do not be surprised. . . . Moore has eliminated our standard escapes from God--a secularized Kingdom or a romanticized past."--America "A neat and striking story."--Times Literary Supplement In the not-too-distant future, the Fourth Vatican Council has abolished private confession, clerical dress, and the Latin Mass, and opened discussions about a merger with Buddhism. Authorities in Rome are embarrassed by publicity surrounding a group of monks who stubbornly celebrate the old Mass in their island abbey off the coast of Ireland. The clever, assured Father James Kinsella is dispatched to set things right. At Muck Abbey he meets Abbot Tomás, a man plagued by doubt who nevertheless leads his monks in the old ways. In the hands of the masterly Brian Moore, their confrontation becomes a subtle, provocative parable of doubt and faith. Loyola Classics are new editions of acclaimed Catholic novels.

      Catholics
      3,8