Il tamburo di latta
by:
Lia Secci (author)
Günter Grass (author)
Format: hardcover
ISBN:
9788496075894 (8496075893)
Publish date: February 5th 2003
Publisher: Gruppo Editoriale L'Espresso
Edition language: Italian
Category:
Novels,
History,
Literature,
European Literature,
Cultural,
Historical Fiction,
War,
World War II,
Magical Realism,
German Literature,
Nobel Prize,
Germany
Series: The Danzig Trilogy (#1)
bookshelves: re-read, spring-2010, dodgy-narrator, wwii, published-1959, noir, nobel-laureate, magical-realism, satire, nazi-related, paper-read, fradio, radio-4x, spring-2015, re-visit-2015, film-only, incest-agameforallthefamily, play-dramatisation Read from January 01, 2008 to April 13, 2015, r...
The next time I go to the Onion Cellar I will surely lament my finishing of this book. Why? Because less than a day after I have finished it, I already miss it and I am too prideful to cry without the aid of an onion. Finishing this book felt like saying goodbye to an old friend, oh sure we say we ...
I swear I could hear that drum playing in my head at odd moments. Especially every time I tried to write this review. I think it was my own warning to pay proper homage to a brilliant book. It always amazes me how some authors can take some dark passages of a characters life and treat it with a humo...
What a tightrope act of a book this is. Sustaining the totally unreliable, possibly insane voice of Oskar through a book this long without stumbling or stretching our suspension of semi-belief is a hell of a task, and Grass totally nails it. I found this entertaining, funny, sad, weird and wholly li...
This is going to be the very, very short version as one would have to write pages to do justice to this book and I'm just not up to it. In a nutshell..Oskar is born with the understanding of an adult. He hears a conversation between his mother and her husband in which the husband says Oskar will gro...