Connexion Inscription

Fiche livre

EAN : 9782875863492 · Données disponibles
EAN 9782875863492
← Accueil Dashboard
Couverture
Couverture
Edern Editions Parution : 26-11-2024 400 pages
image_key: 978/28/75/9782875863492_07be7137c88ad111
Informations
Fear of Paradise
Vincent Engel
Dernière mise à jour : 21/03/2026
0%
Fiche complétée
Éditeur
Edern Editions
Collection
Série
Numéro de série
Format
Présentation
Parution
26-11-2024
Pages
400
Poids
647
Largeur
Hauteur
Épaisseur
Classification
Littérature générale > Romans
Sélectionnez une catégorie jusqu’au niveau le plus précis disponible.
Image key
978/28/75/9782875863492_07be7137c88ad111
Fear of Paradise is a story of longing and missed opportunities, of separation, the passage of time, and the unforeseen consequences of innocent decisions. Set against the rise of Fascism in 1920s Italy, Vincent Engel's haunting novel takes us on a journey through a wild and romantic landscape where two lonely young people forge a strange and wonderful friendship. Between the sea and the forest, in the heart of Puglia, lies the village of San Nidro, frozen in time. Here, Basilio and Lucia swear their love and loyalty until an irreparable act sets them on a collision course with the tragic realities of history. "A beautifully constructed, unsettling novel - set in a superbly realized Italian village before the cataclysm of World War II - Fear of Paradise speaks volumes about the secrets we all carry with us." — Douglas Kennedy, author of Five Days. "Vincent Engel is the kind of writer I dreamed of becoming. At once discreet and prolific, he has allowed his body of writing to speak for itself, and he is today among the most important and well-respected writers in French." —Alain Mabanckou, author of Lumières de Pointe-Noire. "Life and death, love and lust, religion and superstition make up the mix that award-winning Belgian author Vincent Engel stirs into his haunting novel, Fear of Paradise. Set in a remote fishing village in southern Italy in the 1920s, the plot follows the story of two young star-crossed lovers and examines the impact of Fascist rule on a simple people steeped in tradition. Poetic and thought-provoking, Richard Kutner's glowing translation deftly retains the flavor of the original." —Victor Rangel-Ribeiro, author of Tivolem.
API (debug) /api/v1/lookup?ean=9782875863492
Librairies

Outils de recherche:

(liste non exaustive)

    Vous constatez une erreur ?

    Connectez-vous pour proposer une correction et recevoir 20 crédits MetasBooks après validation.