Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Winesburg, Ohio (1919) is Sherwood Anderson's masterpiece, a cycle of short stories concerning life in a small Ohio town at the end of the nineteenth century. At the centre is George Willard, a young reporter who becomes the confidant of the town's 'grotesques' - solitary figures unable to communicate with others.

  2. About Winesburg, Ohio. In his Memoirs published in 1942, a year after his death, Anderson remarked that Winesburg "has become a kind of American classic and has been said by many critics to have started a kind of revolution in American short-story writing." Anderson must have written those words with pleasure for he was a man who liked to be ...

  3. Comprar libro 20 €. El joven George Willard, reportero del periódico local, observa la vida de los habitantes de su pequeño pueblo, Winesburg, en Ohio. La mirada del narrador construye, a partir de lo cotidiano y gris, un fascinante retrato humano, pulcro y detallado, de enorme realismo poético y finísima penetración, que convierte al ...

  4. Winesburg, Ohio, cuyo título completo es Winesburg, Ohio: Colección de relatos sobre la vida en un pequeño pueblo de Ohio, es una novela del escritor estadounidense Sherwood Anderson publicada en su primera edición en 1919. Se trata, según diversos críticos, de un clásico de la literatura estadounidense. 1 2 La trama se articula ...

  5. Published in 1919, Winesburg, Ohio is Sherwood Anderson’s masterpiece, a work in which he achieved the goal to which he believed all true writers should aspire: to see and feel “all of life within.”. In a perfectly imagined world, an archetypal small American town, he reveals the hidden passions that turn ordinary lives into unforgettable ...

  6. 19 de dez. de 2021 · シャーウッド・アンダーソンの代表作. 『ワインズバーグ、オハイオ』は、1919年にアメリカ人作家シャーウッド・アンダーソン(Sherwood Anderson)によって書かれた連作短編集である。原題は『Winesburg, Ohio』。. 日本国内では戦前より邦訳が出ており、まずは ...

  7. About Winesburg, Ohio. Selected by the Modern Library as one of the 100 best novels of all time Before Raymond Carver, John Cheever, and Richard Ford, there was Sherwood Anderson, who, with Winesburg, Ohio, charted a new direction in American fiction–evoking with lyrical simplicity quiet moments of epiphany in the lives of ordinary men and women.