Would you like to see this page in English? Click here.

 

ou
Ouvrez une session pour activer Commander en 1-Click.
 
 
D'autres produits offerts
31 neufs & d'occasion à partir de CDN$ 0.01

Vous en avez un à vendre? Vendez les vôtres ici
 
   
Heaven Of Mercury
 
 

Heaven Of Mercury (Paperback)

de Brad Watson (Author) "FIVE HUNDRED FEET above the highest building in downtown Mercury, thrust up amidst the light and swirling, lifting fog, the tower beacon for WCUV-AM glowed..." En savoir plus
3.7étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (25 évaluations de client)
Prix éditeur: CDN$ 22.50
Price: CDN$ 16.43 & se qualifie pour Livraison super-économique GRATUITE pour des commandes de plus de CDN$ 39. Détails
Vous économisez : CDN$ 6.07 (27%)
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
Habituellement expédié sous 7 à 10 jours.
Vendu et expédié par Amazon.ca.

9 neufs à partir de CDN$ 9.10 22 d'occasion à partir de CDN$ 0.01

Les détails du produit


Descriptions du produit

From Amazon.com

Brad Watson's The Heaven of Mercury brings fresh, sly humor to the traditionally dark genre of Southern gothic. It's the story of the small town of Mercury, Mississippi, told through the lives of various inhabitants, including a white man, Finus, and his lifelong love, Birdie; and a black girl, Creasie, and her Aunt Vish--slave descendants who see Mercury as the zone of their captivity. All over Mercury, characters dream about moments in the past when they wish they'd had the courage to change the course of their lives. Watson’s (Last Days of the Dog-Men) ornate, lush prose will remind readers of Faulkner, but he has a much lighter touch. Mercury is a sad world of violent drunks, unpunished crimes, and unrequited love, but Watson’s wry observations work to dispel the gloom (a strict Christian woman wears "a tight brown bun in her hair like an onion God drew forth from her mind"). The Heaven of Mercury is an ambitious work from an important voice in American fiction--a voice with a distinctly Southern accent. --Ellen Williams --Ce texte provient de la Hardcover édition.

From Publishers Weekly

Watson traces a dark but resonant journey through the world of the Southern gothic in his bleak, touching debut novel (after his hailed collection, Last Days of the Dog-Men), set in tiny Mercury, Miss., in the first quarter of the 20th century. He takes some risks in employing genre cliches, starting with the romantic triangle in which young, sensitive Finus Bates watches the girl of his dreams, Birdie Wells, marry a more determined suitor, the shallow but ardent earl Urquhart. That leaves Bates to marry Birdie's best friend, Avis Crossweatherly, and both marriages fail miserably as Watson tracks his two would-be lovers through the years. At 16, Birdie is a victim of her slick husband's infidelity, which starts when he finds her sexually inadequate and turns his attention to other women, until he finally falls in love with a woman living in a nearby town. Bates, meanwhile, realizes that Avis has engineered Birdie's marriage, leaving Bates vulnerable to her own rapacious pursuit. To escape his shrewish wife, he immerses himself in his work on his smalltown newspaper, where he pens eloquent obituaries ("Disappointments flock to us like crows," he writes in one). Watson's subordinate characters - including the compassionate town mortician, whose first experience of death involves necrophilia; former slave, medicine woman and midwife Aunt Vish, who knows all the dark secrets of the community; Creasie, a taciturn maid - are observed with cool irony and invested with humanity. Several deaths punctuate the narrative, and casual, virulent racism is rampant, sometimes balanced by a grudging interracial respect. Watson's prose is lush and sometimes a bit too orotund and faux-Faulknerian, but it fits the narrative theme of metamorphoses from one life to another, from earth to a land beyond.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte provient de la Hardcover édition.

Dans ce livre (les détails)
First Sentence
FIVE HUNDRED FEET above the highest building in downtown Mercury, thrust up amidst the light and swirling, lifting fog, the tower beacon for WCUV-AM glowed on and off with the regularity of a low pulse. Lire la première page
En découvrir plus
Concordance
Parcourir les pages échantillon
Plat recto | Droit d'auteur | Table des matières | Extrait | Plat verso
Cherchez à l'intérieur de ce livre:

Associer des mots-clés à ce produit

 (De quoi s'agit-il ?)
Considérez votre mot-clé comme une sorte d'étiquette définissant parfaitement ce produit.
Les mots-clés aident les clients à organiser et trouver leurs articles favoris.
Vos mots-clés : Ajouter votre premier mot-clé
 

 

L'avis des consommateurs

25 évaluations
5 étoiles:
 (15)
4 étoiles:
 (1)
3 étoiles:
 (2)
2 étoiles:
 (1)
1 étoiles:
 (6)
 
 
 
 
 
Évaluation du client type
3.7étoiles sur 5 (25 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
Partagez votre opinion avec les autres clients:
Commentaires client les plus utiles

 
5.0étoiles sur 5 Love this book!, Nov. 11 2007
Par J. A. Hovey "book lover" (Quispamsis, New Brunswick Canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
So exciting to discover a wonderful talent - the bit with the horse stayed with me, -:) And the boy with the 'dead' girl. It's probably not a book I would pick up if I'd read some of these negative reviews first. I'm so glad I didn't. Brilliant descriptive writing. The writing is just so damn good. I'm looking forward to reading more of his fine work.

Joan Hall Hovey
Author of NOWHERE TO HIDE
Aidez d'autres clients à trouver les commentaires les plus utiles  
Ce commentaire vous a-t-il été utile ? Oui Non


 
5.0étoiles sur 5 Subtle storytelling, gorgeous prose, Janv. 27 2004
Par Un client
Many of the negative reviews here seem focused on the disjointed narrative or - unbelievably - a supposed lack of plot. Perhaps those readers would be better served by the latest Patricia Cornwell novel, complete with inciting incident, rising action, climax, etc., all told in linear fashion, each event telegraphed to the reader by the event before it. I don't doubt that these same readers struggled through "plotless" books like The Sound and the Fury or Joseph Heller's Something Happened.

Watson is a subtle storyteller who reveals the truth about his characters through a few well-chosen stories from their lives, each rendered in pitch-perfect prose. He does not feel compelled to give us a summation of each character's entire life history, nor does he show us the entire internal world of every person in the book, and for that he is beaten up by readers who apparently are unfamiliar with Hemingway's iceberg principle.
As to the charge that the relationship between a black housemaid and her employer was drawn without subtlety, nothing could be further from the truth. If anything, this was one of the most nuanced and deeply-felt examples of human connection (or lack thereof) in the novel.
Most of the readers who lambasted the story in the novel at least gave Watson credit for his brilliant writing style, so I won't add anything there.
If you treasure southern literature, stories of abiding love, or ruminations on life, death and the hereafter, order this book now.

Aidez d'autres clients à trouver les commentaires les plus utiles  
Ce commentaire vous a-t-il été utile ? Oui Non


 
1.0étoiles sur 5 If this is heaven, give me hell, Janv. 9 2004
Par Ken (Austin, Texas) - Voir tous mes commentaires
What do you say about a book whose crowning literary moment is the description of an 89-year-old man taking a dump in the bathroom? Then there's this lovely image of a horse: "A long, slow fart flabbered from the proud black lips of Dan's hole, and the smoke from it too trailed off in the air." Curiously, intellectuals praise The Heaven of Mercury for how it "illumines every accurate detail" and delivers "just-right words."

The Heaven of Mercury is part love story, part murder mystery, and part taste of the South. These parts combine into a dull and dreary text. The love story offers no payoff to the reader. The murder mystery fails outright. It is so loosely developed, there are no clues for the reader to pick up. In the end the omniscient narrator just tells some back story to explain the mystery. As for the taste of the South, it is bland at best.

The Heaven of Mercury does make a solid showing as a feminist text. In this book the men are weak, the women are strong.

Finally, The Heaven of Mercury is yet another example of how the academic mind disdains plot. Here the story is not told in a linear fashion. A character who dies in one chapter may be alive in the next. This book of 333 pages piddles along to a dubious crescendo (the bathroom scene) near page 200, then for the next 133 pages the author fills in gaps left by the first 200 pages.

Aidez d'autres clients à trouver les commentaires les plus utiles  
Ce commentaire vous a-t-il été utile ? Oui Non

Partagez votre opinion avec les autres clients: Créer votre propre commentaire
 
 
Commentaires client les plus récents

5.0étoiles sur 5 INTERESTING AND WELL DONE
Wonderful discriptive writing. It takes a bit to get use to the author's syntax and punctuation peculiarities, but once you get over that, it is rather fun and refreshing. Lisez davantage
Publié le Nov. 21 2003 par D. Blankenship

3.0étoiles sur 5 Wonderful descriptive power but...
This author, a creative writing instructor, hits the jackpot with his luscious descriptive ability. That is almost, but not quite, enough to carry the reader happily through the... Lisez davantage
Publié le Mai 29 2003

2.0étoiles sur 5 Great prose, but where's the story?
This guy can write -- if only he could learn the rules of novel writing: conflict, climax, resolution. There's none of that here. Lisez davantage
Publié le Mai 10 2003

4.0étoiles sur 5 A paean to the past...
The residents of Mercury, Mississippi are well known to each other, the once brilliant, but now fading remnants of a town that flourished at the beginning of the 20thCentury, now... Lisez davantage
Publié le Mai 9 2003 par Luan Gaines

1.0étoiles sur 5 Hell on earth is trying to get through this book.
I can not remember being MORE disappointed with a novel. Mr. Watson's run-on approach to describing events did not pull me in but bored me. Lisez davantage
Publié le Mars 5 2003 par Julia E Hunt

1.0étoiles sur 5 should have been a collection of short stories
i, the reviewer, say -out of the last 20 books i read, this one was the worst. i would describe it as a "flight of ideas" rather than a novel. Lisez davantage
Publié le Fév 10 2003

3.0étoiles sur 5 Not Exactly Heavenly
Nicely crafted, but ultimately unsatisfying. The themes are substantial - sex, death, racism, longing, opportunity lost - and Brad Watson strikes a rich vein when exploring the... Lisez davantage
Publié le Janv. 18 2003 par paco0819

5.0étoiles sur 5 SO MANY HEAVENS...
The concept of heaven - whether one believes it exists or not - is one that has as many facets as there are souls to discuss it. Lisez davantage
Publié le Janv. 2 2003 par Larry L. Looney

5.0étoiles sur 5 This Book Gets to the Heart.
Not many novelists can get to the heart of the reader as does Brad Watson in The Heaven of Mercury. Of modern writers David Adams Richards, Richard Flanagan and Roth in his recent... Lisez davantage
Publié le Nov. 24 2002 par J. GRAHAM

5.0étoiles sur 5 A heaven of reading
I have rarely encountered a book which is such an absolute pleasure to read, line for line, page for page. Lisez davantage
Publié le Nov. 7 2002

Rechercher uniquement sur les commentaires portant sur ce produit



Listmania!


Cherchez des articles semblables par catégorie


Chercher des articles semblables par sujet


Commentaires

Souhaitez-vous compléter ou améliorer les informations sur ce produit ? Ou faire modifier les images?

Votre historique récent

 (En savoir plus)

Après avoir visualisé des pages détaillées produit ou des résultats de recherche, regardez ici pour trouver une façon simple de poursuivre votre navigation sur des pages qui vous intéressent.