Produktbild: Our Endless Numbered Days

Our Endless Numbered Days

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8,99 €

inkl. gesetzl. MwSt.

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Format

ePUB

Kopierschutz

Ja

Family Sharing

Nein

Text-to-Speech

Ja

Erscheinungsdatum

26.02.2015

Verlag

Penguin Books Ltd

Seitenzahl

304 (Printausgabe)

Dateigröße

5110 KB

Sprache

Englisch

EAN

9780241969014

Beschreibung

Rezension

Rewardingly unsettling...as warped and sinister as any Brothers Grimm fairytale, this tautly written, tense novel is brilliant at evoking both the bewitching beauty of its setting - and its inherent dangers... haunting, suspenseful and deftly written... memorably chilling.

Produktdetails

Format

ePUB

eBooks im ePUB-Format erlauben eine dynamische Anpassung des Inhalts an die jeweilige Display-Größe des Lesegeräts. Das Format eignet sich daher besonders für das Lesen auf mobilen Geräten, wie z.B. Ihrem tolino, Tablets oder Smartphones.

Kopierschutz

Ja

Zum Lesen dieses eBooks auf Geräten der tolino Familie sowie auf sonstigen eReadern und am PC benötigen Sie eine Adobe ID. Weitere Hinweise zum Lesen von kopiergeschützten eBooks finden Sie unter Hilfe/Downloads.

Family Sharing

Nein

Mit Family Sharing können Sie eBooks innerhalb Ihrer Familie (max. sechs Mitglieder im gleichen Haushalt) teilen. Sie entscheiden selbst, welches Buch Sie mit welchem Familienmitglied teilen möchten. Auch das parallele Lesen durch verschiedene Familienmitglieder ist durch Family Sharing möglich. Um eBooks zu teilen oder geteilt zu bekommen, muss jedes Familienmitglied ein Konto bei Thalia oder einem anderen tolino-Buchhändler haben. Weitere Informationen finden Sie unter Hilfe/Family-Sharing.

Text-to-Speech

Ja

Bedeutet Ihnen Stimme mehr als Text? Mit der Funktion Text-to-Speech können Sie sich im tolino webReader und in der aktuellen Thalia – Lesen & Hören App das eBook vorlesen lassen. Weitere Informationen finden Sie unter Hilfe/Text-to-Speech.

Barrierefreiheit

  • navigierbares Inhaltsverzeichnis
  • alle Texte können angepasst werden
  • logische Lesereihenfolge eingehalten
  • hoher Kontrast zwischen Text und Hintergrund
  • keine Vorlesefunktionen des Lesesystems deaktiviert

Erscheinungsdatum

26.02.2015

Verlag

Penguin Books Ltd

Seitenzahl

304 (Printausgabe)

Dateigröße

5110 KB

Sprache

Englisch

EAN

9780241969014

Kundinnen und Kunden meinen

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Survival in N. Kampusch style

Bewertung am 01.08.2020

Bewertungsnummer: 328824

Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

This novel is dystopian, technically, since it ties in with many other post-apocalyptic titles. It's Fuller's brilliant debut novel, but it has become more relevant again, as it's quite possible that we are seeing a surge of people fantasizing about getting away from it all, retreat from this present-day civilized mess. This is a story of "surviving" in very harsh conditions. In a Natascha Kampusch sort of way. However, the author says the story was inspired by Ray, a teenage boy who appeared in Berlin in 2011 saying that he had been living in the German forest for the past five years (all made up, of course)./// You have to be quite open to the willing suspension of disbelief. Even in the seventies, how likely would it have been that a couple of "hermits" in a forest cabin in the middle of Europe would have gone undiscovered for nine long years? But it's close to a fairy tale, and also no coincidence that the little girl whisked away into the wilderness by her own father, a so-called "retreater", takes on the name of "Punzel." /// It's a brilliantly constructed novel with a distinct build-up, fantastically atmospheric and suspenseful. /// In the audio version, the protagonist's German mother was painfully stereotypical with her strong accent, grammar mistakes and Wagnerian attitude. At one point in the text, it takes a bit of a comical turn: "I open the bedroom window and call to an old man walking down the street. He takes a long time to look around him and find who is shouting. 'Ich habe ein Baby!' I yell, and only when another contraction has passed do I reaIize I have been calling to him in German." Ah well. A German native would have shouted "ich bekomme ein Baby" for "I'm having a baby", of course. It's a little detail. Don't let it deter you from reading this book. That, and the very unfortunate cover design of the mass market paperback. What is it with all the female silhouettes (depicted mostly from behind) these days? /// Surprisingly, this book has not been translated into German yet.

Survival in N. Kampusch style

Bewertung am 01.08.2020
Bewertungsnummer: 328824
Bewertet: Buch (Taschenbuch)

This novel is dystopian, technically, since it ties in with many other post-apocalyptic titles. It's Fuller's brilliant debut novel, but it has become more relevant again, as it's quite possible that we are seeing a surge of people fantasizing about getting away from it all, retreat from this present-day civilized mess. This is a story of "surviving" in very harsh conditions. In a Natascha Kampusch sort of way. However, the author says the story was inspired by Ray, a teenage boy who appeared in Berlin in 2011 saying that he had been living in the German forest for the past five years (all made up, of course)./// You have to be quite open to the willing suspension of disbelief. Even in the seventies, how likely would it have been that a couple of "hermits" in a forest cabin in the middle of Europe would have gone undiscovered for nine long years? But it's close to a fairy tale, and also no coincidence that the little girl whisked away into the wilderness by her own father, a so-called "retreater", takes on the name of "Punzel." /// It's a brilliantly constructed novel with a distinct build-up, fantastically atmospheric and suspenseful. /// In the audio version, the protagonist's German mother was painfully stereotypical with her strong accent, grammar mistakes and Wagnerian attitude. At one point in the text, it takes a bit of a comical turn: "I open the bedroom window and call to an old man walking down the street. He takes a long time to look around him and find who is shouting. 'Ich habe ein Baby!' I yell, and only when another contraction has passed do I reaIize I have been calling to him in German." Ah well. A German native would have shouted "ich bekomme ein Baby" for "I'm having a baby", of course. It's a little detail. Don't let it deter you from reading this book. That, and the very unfortunate cover design of the mass market paperback. What is it with all the female silhouettes (depicted mostly from behind) these days? /// Surprisingly, this book has not been translated into German yet.

Kundinnen und Kunden meinen

Our Endless Numbered Days

von Claire Fuller

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