-6%20
45,00 €**
42,45 €
inkl. MwSt.
**Unverbindliche Preisempfehlung des Herstellers
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in über 4 Wochen
payback
21 °P sammeln
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
Produktdetails
  • Verlag: HARPERCOLLINS
  • Gesamtlaufzeit: 732 Min.
  • Erscheinungstermin: 5. Mai 2020
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-13: 9781094156576
  • Artikelnr.: 58568216
Autorenporträt
Lionel Shriver is a novelist whose books include Orange Prize winner We Need to Talk about Kevin, The Post-Birthday World, A Perfectly Good Family , Game Control, Double Fault, The Female of the Species, Checker and the Derailleurs, and Ordinary Decent Criminals. She is widely published as a journalist, writing features, columns, op-eds, and book reviews for the London Guardian, New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, Economist, Marie Claire, and many other publications. She is frequently interviewed on television, radio, and in print media.
Rezensionen
The Motion of the Body Through Space is notionally about fitness fanaticism, but it's really about physical decline and mortality . . . . What's remarkable is that Shriver, who is at her most lyrical and compelling when contemplating her characters' ambivalence, is so inordinately assured of her positions on real-world issues that many of us find confounding. - Ariel Levy, The New Yorker

"The prospective thrill of a new novel by the iconoclast Lionel Shriver is located here, in anticipating the skewing of pieties." - Joshua Ferris, New York Times Book Review

"The fitness industry is a fat target for satire. And Shriver brings all her ferocious wit to bear to mock its hucksters and disciples." - Ron Charles, Washington Post

"Painfully funny . . . much of it rings true." - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Lionel Shriver's The Motion of the Body Through Space is a caustic satire on the modern obsession with exercise in all its lunatic narcissism, with sideswipes at chiding woke culture. But it also contains the most tender passage I've ever read on what it means to grow old in a long marriage. - Janice Turner, The Times (UK)

"Provocative and witty . . . the need for us all to stop moving for a moment and reflect on where we are is Shriver's main subject." - Times Literary Supplement (London)

"If you are looking for a new take on how to live well when the body is failing, Shriver could be just the difficult, limping fellow traveller you need." - The Times (UK)

"A cheeky diatribe on a society determined to go to extremes."
- Booklist

"Scabrously funny. . . . presents a dyspeptic view of people in thrall to exercise. . . . Few authors can be as entertainingly problematic as Shriver."
- The Guardian

…mehr
The Motion of the Body Through Space is notionally about fitness fanaticism, but it's really about physical decline and mortality . . . . What's remarkable is that Shriver, who is at her most lyrical and compelling when contemplating her characters' ambivalence, is so inordinately assured of her positions on real-world issues that many of us find confounding. - Ariel Levy, The New Yorker

"The prospective thrill of a new novel by the iconoclast Lionel Shriver is located here, in anticipating the skewing of pieties." - Joshua Ferris, New York Times Book Review

"The fitness industry is a fat target for satire. And Shriver brings all her ferocious wit to bear to mock its hucksters and disciples." - Ron Charles, Washington Post

"Painfully funny . . . much of it rings true." - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Lionel Shriver's The Motion of the Body Through Space is a caustic satire on the modern obsession with exercise in all its lunatic narcissism, with sideswipes at chiding woke culture. But it also contains the most tender passage I've ever read on what it means to grow old in a long marriage. - Janice Turner, The Times (UK)

"Provocative and witty . . . the need for us all to stop moving for a moment and reflect on where we are is Shriver's main subject." - Times Literary Supplement (London)

"If you are looking for a new take on how to live well when the body is failing, Shriver could be just the difficult, limping fellow traveller you need." - The Times (UK)

"A cheeky diatribe on a society determined to go to extremes."
- Booklist

"Scabrously funny. . . . presents a dyspeptic view of people in thrall to exercise. . . . Few authors can be as entertainingly problematic as Shriver."
- The Guardian
…mehr