Descriere YEO:
Pe YEO găsești The Importance of Being Poirot, de la St. Augustine\'s Press, în categoria Foreign Books.
Indiferent de nevoile tale, The Importance of Being Poirot, Paperback/Jeremy Black din categoria Foreign Books îți poate aduce un echilibru perfect între calitate și preț, cu avantaje practice și moderne.
Preț: 127.99 Lei
Caracteristicile produsului The Importance of Being Poirot,
- Brand: St. Augustine\'s Press
- Categoria: Foreign Books
- Magazin: elefant.ro
- Ultima actualizare: 10-12-2024 01:49:42
Comandă The Importance of Being Poirot, Online, Simplu și Rapid
Prin intermediul platformei YEO, poți comanda The Importance of Being Poirot, de la elefant.ro rapid și în siguranță. Bucură-te de o experiență de cumpărături online optimizată și descoperă cele mai bune oferte actualizate constant.
Descriere magazin:
Written by the renowned British historian who has been described as both utterly thorough and humanely delicate,
Jeremy Black offers a guided tour through the mind of Agatha Christie and life during the Great World Wars. His incomparable treatment of literary craft developing alongside global military engagement nearly overshadows the natural draw of the crime drama that is the subject of his book. Indeed, the "prurience and sensationalism" of crime is not as exciting as
Black\'s aptitude for drawing the reality from the fiction (and periphery sources), giving Christie a much louder voice than she might ever have dreamed. If Christie is also moralist and mirror to her times,
Black here plays his part as the detective and reveals layers of previously unmined truths in her stories. Hercule
Poirot as a character is masterfully imagined, but Black shows us how he is inseparable from Christie\'s turbulent and changing world. He also illuminates significant social commentary in Christie\'s fiction, and in so doing Black often uses his authority to vindicate Christie\'s work from hastily, at times stupidly, applied labels and interpretations. He is especially magnificent in his chapters, "Xenophobia" and "The Sixties." Black nevertheless gives due recognition to Christie\'s critics when they have something relevant and reasonable to say, and hence the reader finds yet another service in Black\'s comprehensive review of the reviewers over the expanse of Christie\'s writing career. For all this, Black proves himself to be a worthy history-teller because he can aptly \'detect\' the meaning of stories that seeks to answer the past and guide the present. His erudition runs much deeper than his ability to navigate the stores of resources available on the subject, and the reader gets a glimpse of this early on when in the introduction he proffers his own defense for writing about the importance of a Hercule
Poirot. Black writes, "the notion of crime had a moral component from the outset, and notably so in terms of the struggle between Good and Evil, and in the detection of the latter. Indeed, it is this detection that is the basis of the most powerful strand of detection story, because Evil disguises its purposes. It has to do so in a world and humanity made fundamentally benign and moral by God." The Golden Age of detective novels represents much more than a triumph of a literary genre. It is in its own right a story of how the challenge to address the problem of evil was accepted. Its convergence with the plot-rich narrative of the twentieth century in the modern age renders Black\'s account a thrilling masterpiece, seducing historians to read fiction and crime junkies to read more history. About author(s):
Jeremy Black is emeritus professor of history (University of Exeter) and prolific writer in the areas of eighteenth century British, European and American political, diplomatic and military history. Some of his recent work includes George III: Madness and Majesty (2020) and England in the Age of Shakespeare (2019). He is also a senior fellow at the Center for the Study of America and the West at the Foreign Policy Research Institute (Philadelphia).