Entrar
    Book cover
    Compartilhar
    Editar
    • Sinopse
    • Edições0
    • Vídeos0
    • Grupos0
    • Resenhas1
    • Leitores47
    • Similares0
    Skoob logo

    Saiba mais

    Quem somosTermos de usoFale conoscoCentral de ajudaPrivacidade

    Fique por dentro

    Livros em destaque

    Explore

    LivrosAutoresEditorasLeitoresCortesias

    Siga nas redes sociais

    Baixe o app

    Google PlayApp Store

    Geek Love - A Novel

    Katherine Dunn

    Vintage
    2002
    368 páginas
    12h 16m
    ISBN-13: 9780375713347
    4.3
    3 avaliações
    Leram9Lendo2Querem35Relendo0Abandonos1Resenhas1
    Favoritos1Desejados35Avaliaram3

    Two time periods are covered: the first deals with the Binewski children's constant vicious struggle against each other through life. They especially have to deal with Arty as he develops his own cult: Arturism. Arturism involves members having their limbs amputated so that they can be like Arty, the cult leader, in their search for the principle he calls PIP ("Peace, Isolation, Purity"). Each member moves up in stages, losing increasingly significant chunks of their limbs, starting with their toes and fingers. As Arty battles his siblings to maintain control over his followers, competition between their respective freak shows slowly begins to take over their lives. The second story is set in the present and is centered on Oly's daughter, Miranda. In her early twenties, Miranda does not know Oly is her mother. She lives on a trust fund created by Oly before she gave up her daughter to be raised by nuns. This had been urged by her brother Arturo, who was also Miranda's father (via Chick's telekinesis.) Oly lives in the same rooming house as Miranda so she can "spy" on her. Miranda has a special defect of her own, a small tail, which she flaunts at a local fetish strip club. There she meets Mary Lick, who tries to convince her to have the tail cut off. Lick is a wealthy woman who pays poor but attractive women to get disfiguring operations so they may live up to their potential instead of becoming sex objects. Oly plans to stop Lick in order to protect her daughter.

    Resenhas (1)Ver mais
    Leila de Carvalho e Gonçalves  picture
    Leila de Carvalho e Gonçalves 05/09/2018Resenhou um livro
    5 (Perfeito)

    O Fabuloso Circo Binewski

    Finalista do National Nook Award, ?Geek Love? é um romance de Katherine Dunn, publicado pela Knopf Books (uma divisão da Random House) em 1989. Entretanto, parte da narrativa já havia saído por duas outras editoras: a Mississippi Mud Book of Days (1983) e a Looking Glass Bookstore Review (1988). Resumidamente, esta é a história dos Binewskis, uma família disfuncional como tantas outras, mas tão bizarra que não pode ser comparada a nenhuma que já existiu. Proprietários de um decadente circo itinerante, seu patriarca Aloysius (Al) e a esposa Crystal Lil decidiram colocar em prática um plano assustador quando ainda era recém-casados, para solucionar de vez os constantes problemas financeiras. Por meio de um coquetel de drogas, eles conceberam uma trupe de filhos mutantes destinados a atuarem num show de variedades, capaz de atrair uma multidão de curiosos. São eles: o primogênito Arturo (Arty), nascido com nadadeiras em vez de membros; Olympia ("Oly"), uma anã albina e corcunda; as gêmea siamesas Electra ("Elly") e Ifigênia ("Iphy") de olhos violetas; alem do caçula Fortunato (Chick), aparentemente normal mas com inusitados poderes telepáticos. O romance apresenta as reminiscências de Oly, enquanto viveu no circo e seu dia a dia aos 38 anos, em Portland, cidade onde reside numa pensão administrada pela mãe desmemoriada por conta da dependência química. Também mora no local a filha de Oly, Miranda, uma bela jovem que, criada num orfanato, desconhece suas origens. Desta forma, três gerações de mulheres da família Binewski vivem juntas, conectadas apenas pelo conhecimento da frágil anã sobre o parentesco. Por sinal, Miranda também possui um defeito congênito: uma cauda (será que Dunn se inspirou em ?Cem Anos de Solidão??) que gostaria de amputar ao contrário dos demais membros da família que aprenderam a desprezar as pessoas normais e acreditam ser uma obra-prima da natureza. Esta opinião acabou despertando a rivalidade entre os irmãos e também é responsável pelos conflitos armados por Arty, um sociopata de ego inflado que tenta a todo custo superar qualquer concorrência. Para tanto, ele chega a criar um culto, o Arturismo, que lhe rende poder, dinheiro e milhares de seguidores em busca de paz, isolamento e pureza. ?Geek Love? é um romance brilhante, mas para quem tem estômago forte. Tim Burton comprou seus direitos para o cinema, mas até hoje o projeto não saiu do papel. Sem dúvida, um filme aguardado por conta da história que foge do lugar comum e trata de assuntos delicados como incesto, suicídio, país abusivos, amputação por opção e vício. Enfim, Dunn conseguiu superar minha expectativa e acredito que também poderá superar a de outros leitores. Nota: A edição é de impecável qualidade. O projeto gráfico explora as cores primárias, exibe um clima festivo e quem reparar nas letras do título perceberá uma cauda no ?L? e as fitas que brotam do ?G? e ?K?, uma ideia que foi aproveitada da capa original.

    10 curtidas

    Estatísticas

    Avaliações

    4.3 / 3
    • 5 estrelas67%
    • 4 estrelas0%
    • 3 estrelas33%
    • 2 estrelas0%
    • 1 estrelas0%
    Katherine Dunn profile picture

    Katherine Dunn

    Katherine Dunn is a best-selling novelist, journalist, voice artist, radio personality, book reviewer, and poet from Portland, Oregon. Katherine Dunn was born in Kansas City, Kansas in 1945. She went to high school in Tigard, Oregon, and later attended Reed College in Portland. Following her time at Reed, Ms. Dunn spent several years in Europe traveling. While in Ireland, she had a child, and five years later she returned with her son to the United States. In the 1970s Dunn hosted a radio show on Portland's community radio station KBOO, in which she would read short stories. Her work experience ranges from tending bar, painting houses, and waiting tables, to teaching advanced classes in creative writing at Oregon's Lewis & Clark College and voice-over work. Dunn's novel Geek Love was a finalist for the National Book Award in 1989. She also wrote the novels Attic (1970) and Truck (1971). In 1989, Dunn announced that she was working on a fourth novel, entitled The Cut Man. She was reportedly still living in Portland and working on the book in 1999. In 2008, it was reported that publisher Alfred A. Knopf had scheduled The Cut Man for release in September, but the novel was not published at that time. An excerpt appeared in the Summer 2010 issue of The Paris Review[4] under the title Rhonda Discovers Art. Dunn also wrote the text for Death Scenes: A Homicide Detective's Scrapbook (1995), a book of homicide photography; the humorous The Slice: Information with an Attitude (1989) (also published as Why Do Men Have Nipples? And Other Low-Life Answers to Real-Life Questions (1990), which contains her collected newspaper columns from Willamette Week, a Portland weekly newspaper; 3 Day Fox: A Tattoo, a poem; and numerous articles for Playboy, Vogue, and the L.A. Times. Dunn, who has been described as "one of the better boxing writers in the United States," is an editor and contributor for the online boxing magazine cyberboxingzone.com. Dunn wrote a regular column on boxing for PDXS in the 1990s, in which she at one time provided detailed criticism of Evander Holyfield's sportsmanship in his controversial fight with Mike Tyson. She won the Dorothea Lange—Paul Taylor Award in 2004 for her work on School of Hard Knocks: The Struggle for Survival in America’s Toughest Boxing Gyms. Her essays on boxing were collected in the 2009 anthology One Ring Circus: Dispatches from the World of Boxing. Fiction... Novels *Attic (1970) *Truck (1971) *Geek Love (1989) *The Cut Man (to come) Poetry *3 Day Fox: A Tattoo Nonfiction... *Death Scenes: A Homicide Detective's Scrapbook (1995), (text) *The Slice: Information with an Attitude (1989) (also published as Why Do Men Have Nipples? And Other Low-Life Answers to Real-Life Questions (1990), which contains her collected newspaper columns from Willamette Week, a Portland weekly newspaper

    8 Livros
    5 Seguidores

    Katherine Dunn