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Search tags: dodgy-narrator
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review 2015-04-13 22:01
The Tin Drum by Günter Grass
The Tin Drum - Günter Grass

 



Re-visit 2015: Günter Grass, Nobel-winning German novelist, dies aged 87

Description: Danzig in the 1920s/1930s. Oskar Matzerath, son of a local dealer, is a most unusual boy. Equipped with full intellect right from his birth he decides at his third birthday not to grow up as he sees the crazy world around him at the eve of World War II. So he refuses the society and his tin drum symbolizes his protest against the middle-class mentality of his family and neighborhood, which stand for all passive people in Nazi Germany at that time. However, (almost) nobody listens to him, so the catastrophe goes on...



Did you spot Charles Aznavour in there!?
Powerful film of a powerful novel.

Sherbet fizz







Re-Read details: As Hitler rises to power, three-year-old Oskar decides he doesn't want to grow up. Stars Phil Daniels and Kenneth Cranham. Broadcast on:


blurb - Classic novel of the rise and fall of Hitler as seen through the eyes of the dwarfish narrator, Oskar Matzerath.

Not caring for the world he is growing up in, a small boy determines to remain a child. The epic sweep of Grass' novel satirises German nationalism and the rise and fall of the Nazi movement.


___

Brilliant portrayal of a youngster in denial of real-life. This theme has been loosely followed up in Cabaret and Pan's Labyrinth.
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review 2014-07-05 10:59
Notes From Underground by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, George Guidall (Narrator)
Notes From Underground - Fyodor Dostoyevsky,George Guidall

bookshelves: classic, fraudio, psychology, philosophy, re-read, paper-read, dodgy-narrator, doo-lally, mental-health

Read in March, 2009

 

Audio in conjunction with the Dover Thrift book.

Description: Written in 1864, this novel is the first and strangest of Dostoevsky's masterpieces--and the source of those that followed. Violating literary conventions in ways never before attempted, this classic tells of a mid-19th-century Russian official's breakaway from society and descent "underground".

Lauded as the first existensial novel, this addictive paranoiac babbling is a short story divided into two parts, the first of which lays the seed for Crime and Punishment. It's as hard to draw one's eyes away from this, as a lethal ten car pile up on the M4.

Opening line: I am a sick man... I am a wicked man. An unattractive man. I think my liver hurts.

Yes, yes, yes that first sentence is one of the most memorable ever and I am sure there is a listopia dealing with famous beginnings somewhere but I hate everything too much to care at this minute.

The comedy thief that hit Thomas Hardy must have visited Dostoevsky first.



 
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