Those "encounters" are told in combined with some important events happened in his young days, like the first love, the first bicycle, and the piano lessons. Or something along those lines. Patrick Sueskind is one of them and he has yet to dissapoint me. I was 8 years old when I read this book, 5 minutes ago.A most humane of works. Contradiction, paradox, incongruity. ]. Very lightly, as in his other novels, Suskind suggests the emotional/psychological consequences of surviving WWII but does so in an equally light-handed way that comes off as an affirmation of life, mostly via generous, savoring description and forward-flowing, joyful language. Zeroaxial conductor instead of ground. by Bloomsbury Publishing Based on the story’s ending, which character has the more accurate perception of Mr. Shiftlet?
The Literary Encyclopedia. Start by marking “The Story of Mr Sommer” as Want to Read: Published After viewing product detail pages, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages you are interested in.After viewing product detail pages, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages you are interested in. The writing style is absolutely absorbing!
As the story progresses, it maintains it's intensely insightful explication of the experiences of youth. Short quick easy tale in four or five sections told by a young narrator about riding his bike, climbing trees, piano lessons, dreaming about a girl, and encountering an odd always walking claustrophobic man who just wants to be left in peace (his response when the narrator's father offers him a ride after a hurricane-like storm). After reading this book, the feeling is just like that: I finished a taoist dream. One of the most magical pieces of literature I've ever read. One more Suskind to go before I can call myself a completist.There are some writers whom you can just trust to deliver great stories, either in a size of a brick-heavy-book or a small choco truffel. I grabbed my attention by being inconspicuous, and I wonder if this reverse psychology was intentional. There are some writers whom you can just trust to deliver great stories, either in a size of a brick-heavy-book or a small choco truffel. The story of Mr Sommer — First published in 2003 Subjects Compulsive behavior, Fiction. The stark telling of this dark tale (which is definitely for adults, make no mistake) reads like a parable and can (and should) be read in one sitting. Even in this short space of a narrative, Suskind has succeeded in eliciting a full and complex range of emotions.
Patrick Sueskind is one of them and he has yet to dissapoint me. ConsecutiveStone instead of pounds. Reading Susskind's book in the original German was like strolling down familiar byways that I had first know when studying this versatile and highly literary language. It will stay with me.The clean, simple language through which this magical childhood story unfolds is as smooth as silk, and elegant as German prose can be. Stone instead of pounds. On the other hand, I do know Süskind and I'm not surprised this story doesn't end on a hopeful note.
An exercise in memory really, to see how attentively (distractedly, more so) I had read the Woods translation this past weekend. This time through I also was more aware of the suggestion that Mr. Sommer was running away from something related to WWII. This novella has so much feels.A really charming simple book with lovely illustrations.From 1968-1974 he studied medieval and modern history in Munich and Aix-en-Provence.
An afternoon's read at most that I read in a few sittings, one at a bar and one Short quick easy tale in four or five sections told by a young narrator about riding his bike, climbing trees, piano lessons, dreaming about a girl, and encountering an odd always walking claustrophobic man who just wants to be left in peace (his response when the narrator's father offers him a ride after a hurricane-like storm). Your recently viewed items and featured recommendations I don't know. Süskind is a brilliant writerThis children's book for adults definitely lives up to its promise to be a coming of age story with a strange and mysterious twist. When Mr. Sommers' seemingly endless and frantic walks through this narrator's boyhood leave us scratching our heads and asking questions about why he does what he does and what motivates him, Suskind is inviting us to ask the very same questions about ourselves. I picked it out from a shelf in the library because it was skinny, short, and plain, and I read it because I discovered it had pictures.
It's not my favourite book of his, but I still loved the prose, the humour and symbolism.
Childhood innocence and nostalgia get a bitter tinge from the enigmatic presence of a compulsive walker, a loner with the past in hot pursuit, who inadvertently alters the narrator's life.A coming-of-age tale with some pretty fucked up moments. Translated from the German. Although I usually hate books that use run-on sentences, I loved the narration. “Pride and overexuberance led to last-minute mistakes, it was always happening in fairy-tales, the heroes wrecked the happiness they thought was securely in their grasp!” It is also humorous at times. A few other minor differences in word choice, slightly more British in Hoffmann's translation than in the translation by John E. Woods.
Rate! I always send this book to a friend as a gift, because I believe it is absolutely interesting to them. Mr. Dharam Singh likes to run. Maybe representing the conflict within each one of us. Sweet in the telling, bitter near the End. Moving through the landscape in silent haste, like a man possessed, with his empty rucksack A boy's village childhood with all the traditional attributes - father, mother, brother, sister, a house on a lake, tree-climbing, going to the races, music lessons, a bicycle, a crush on a girl in the class - is bedevilled by the mystifying appearances of the eccentric Mr. Sommer. I picked it out from a shelf in the library because it was skinny, short, and plain, and I read it because I discovered it had pictures.
Reading Susskind's book in the original German was like strolling down familiar byways that I had first know when studying this versatile and highly literary language.
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