Titre de série : | The Edmund Trilogy, 1 | Titre : | A Boy's Own Story | Type de document : | texte imprimé | Auteurs : | Edmund White (1940-....), Auteur | Editeur : | Plume | Année de publication : | 1982 | Importance : | 218 pages | ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-0-452-26123-5 | Langues : | Anglais | Catégories : | Littérature Littérature:- Autobiographique Littérature:- Roman
| Résumé : | An instant classic upon its original publication, A Boy's Own Story is the first of Edmund White's highly acclaimed trilogy of autobiographical novels that brilliantly evoke a young man's coming of age and document American gay life through the last forty years.
The nameless narrator in this deeply affecting work reminisces about growing up in the 1950s with emotionally aloof, divorced parents, an unrelenting sister, and the schoolmates who taunt him.
He finds consolation in literature and his fantastic imagination. Eager to cultivate intimate, enduring friendships, he becomes aware of his yearning to be loved by men, and struggles with the guilt and shame of accepting who he is. Written with lyrical delicacy and extraordinary power, A Boy's Own Story is a triumph. |
The Edmund Trilogy, 1. A Boy's Own Story [texte imprimé] / Edmund White (1940-....), Auteur . - [S.l.] : Plume, 1982 . - 218 pages. ISBN : 978-0-452-26123-5 Langues : Anglais Catégories : | Littérature Littérature:- Autobiographique Littérature:- Roman
| Résumé : | An instant classic upon its original publication, A Boy's Own Story is the first of Edmund White's highly acclaimed trilogy of autobiographical novels that brilliantly evoke a young man's coming of age and document American gay life through the last forty years.
The nameless narrator in this deeply affecting work reminisces about growing up in the 1950s with emotionally aloof, divorced parents, an unrelenting sister, and the schoolmates who taunt him.
He finds consolation in literature and his fantastic imagination. Eager to cultivate intimate, enduring friendships, he becomes aware of his yearning to be loved by men, and struggles with the guilt and shame of accepting who he is. Written with lyrical delicacy and extraordinary power, A Boy's Own Story is a triumph. |
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