Entrar
    Book cover
    Compartilhar
    Editar
    • Sinopse
    • Edições1
    • Vídeos0
    • Grupos0
    • Resenhas0
    • Leitores0
    • 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

    The Changeling -

    Kenzaburo Oe

    Grove Press
    2011
    468 páginas
    15h 36m
    ISBN-13: 9780802145239
    0
    0 avaliação
    Leram0Lendo0Querem0Relendo0Abandonos0Resenhas0
    Favoritos0Desejados0Avaliaram0

    The Changeling (取り替え子 (チェンジリング) Torikae ko (Chenjiringu)) is a 2000 novel by Kenzaburō Ōe. It is the first book of a trilogy. It was translated into English by Deborah Boliver Boehm , and published in the United States by Grove Press. Its English publication appeared in 2010.[2] Boehm uses American English heavily in her translation. The United Kingdom version is published by Atlantic Books. In the novel, a filmmaker named Goro Hanawa commits suicide. Goro had appeared happy before his suicide. His best friend, a novelist named Kogito Choko, discovers the suicide via an audiotape recorded by Goro; he had sent forty tapes to Kogito. Chikashi Choko, Goro's sister and Kogito's wife, also learns that Goro died. To learn why Goro had killed himself, Kogito listens to the tapes. Scott Esposito of the Los Angeles Times said that "What he finds is a rambling series of discourses on everything from the friendship they've shared since they were teens in the 1950s to Goro's ideas about art and life, their shared admiration for Rimbaud and a few secrets from the past." Kogito Choko (長江 古義人 Chōkō Kogito) – The main character. He has a son who is a composer and is disabled.[1] The name "Kogito" is a tribute to Descartes (cogito ergo sum). Kogito is modeled off of Kenzaburō Ōe.[1] Ōe has a disabled son, Hikari Ōe. Goro Hanawa (塙 吾良 Hanawa Gorō) – A legendary filmmaker who commits suicide. He is Kogito's brother in law and best friend Goro is based on Juzo Itami, who was Ōe's brother in law.[1] Chikashi Choko (長江 千樫 Chōkō Chikashi) – Goro's sister and Kogito's wife Daio : one-armed leader of a band of young, right-wing disciples whom he inherited from Kogito's late father in 1945 Peter: a, homosexual U.S. Army officer serving in Japan in 1952 Mitsu Azuma-Böme:, a mysterious older Japanese woman who seeks Kogito out in Berlin Akari Choko (長江 アカリ Chōkō Akari):, Kogito's son and slightly mentally handicapped composer Ura Shima: Goro's teenage lover in Berlin one year before his suicide

    Edições (1)

    Ver mais
    • book cover

    Estatísticas

    Avaliações

    0 / 0
    • 5 estrelas0%
    • 4 estrelas0%
    • 3 estrelas0%
    • 2 estrelas0%
    • 1 estrelas0%
    Kenzaburō Ōe profile picture

    Kenzaburō Ōe

    Kenzaburo Oe (em japonês 大江 健三郎) é um escritor japonês. Estreou-se como contista em 1957, com a publicação de Shisha No Ogori e, logo no ano seguinte, viu o seu primeiro romance, Memushiri Kouchi (1958, Não Matem O Bebé ), ser recompensado com o Prêmio Literário Akutagawa. Prosseguindo a sua investigação sobre os efeitos do convívio forçado entre povos, desenvolveu um interesse particular sobre Okinawa, outrora a zona mais tradicionalista do Japão mas que, com a derrota do país, serviu de alojamento para uma base aérea norte-americana. Esse período da obra do escritor culminou com o aparecimento de Man'en Gannen Futoboru (1967). Foi agraciado com o Nobel de Literatura de 1994.

    35 Livros
    33 Seguidores
    Ehime, Japão

    Kenzaburō Ōe