Gutscheinbedingungen

**Gültig nur für Bestellungen an die Wunsch-Poststation bis 10.06.2026 auf Spielzeug, Schreibwaren, Filme, Geschenke & Trends, Musik, tolino eReader & Zubehör, Hörbücher und Hörbuch-Downloads (außer Abo), nicht preisgebundene Bücher und Kalender online auf thalia.at und in der Thalia App. Einzelne Artikel können ausgeschlossen sein. Aufgrund der Buchpreisbindung sind deutschsprachige Bücher und eBooks ausgenommen. Zusätzlich ausgenommen sind preisgebundene Artikel, Abos & Flatrates, eBooks, Games, Geschenkkarten/-boxen, Shelfies, Software, Zeitschriften sowie einzelne Artikel von tonies®. Pro Einkauf einmal einlösbar. Kein Click & Collect möglich. Keine Barauszahlung. Nicht kombinierbar mit anderen Aktionen und Gutscheinen. Gutschein wird auf max. 500€ Bestellwert angerechnet. Nicht gültig für Versandkosten und Services.

Produktbild: Intimacies
- 44%

Intimacies A Novel

3
44% sparen

13,99 € UVP 25,30 €

inkl. gesetzl. MwSt., zzgl. Versandkosten


  • Kostenlose Lieferung ab 30 € Einkaufswert
  • Versandkostenfrei für Bonuscard-Kund*innen

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

20.07.2021

Verlag

Penguin LLC US

Seitenzahl

240

Maße (L/B/H)

22,2/15/2,5 cm

Gewicht

206 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-399-57616-4

Beschreibung

Rezension

Praise for Intimacies

Cooly written and casts a spell One of Kitamura s gifts is to inject every scene with a pinprick of dread . One of the best novels I ve read in 2021 A taut, moody novel that moves purposefully between worlds. Dwight Garner, New York Times

Intense, unsettling Intimacies is very much a story that seems to be something familiar but soon morphs into something disorientingly strange .Kitamura pulls us through a rising panic of hyper-awareness until the story s fever finally breaks with a note of hope and relief. But that can t quell the novel s reverberations, which expose something incomprehensible about the moral dimensions of modern life." Ron Charles, Washington Post

"Intimacies is both sleekly gorgeous those sentences and psychologically unnerving. She s an absolutely brilliant writer." Julie Otsuka, New York Times Book Review

"A master of cool disquiet... Kitamura writes with forceful, direct prose that makes for a bracing read and leaves the reader mesmerized." Lauren Mechling, Vogue

"[A] thriller of a novel.... In exploring how one s proximity to power and violence can hold endless repercussions, Kitamura interrogates how our intimacies can change the course of our lives. Time

"Kitamura s prose elegantly breaks grammatical convention this style mirrors the book s concern with the bleeding lines between intimacies especially between the sincere and the coercive while Kitamura s immense talent smooths the seams . Kitamura s work also contains a keen understanding of human behavior, one that reaches far beyond the pages of this brief and arresting book; she travels to places that ordinary writers cannot go." Catherine Lacey, The New York Times Book Review

"[A] gorgeous, destabilizing meditation on the power differentials built into language and the gradual distortions of our emotional allegiances. Raven Leilani, Vulture

"An amazing book, beautiful and captivating " Elif Shafak

"In spare and elegant prose, Kitamura limns her unnamed protagonist's search for home and gifts us a powerful, beautiful book." Chika Unigwe

I love how Katie Kitamura can channel a mind. Ruth Ozeki, Observer UK, Best Books of the Year)

A piercing meditation on the way language moderates our perception of violence . . . About once every two pages, Kitamura writes a phrase that feels like a key turning inside your body." Jenny Singer, Glamour

Powerful, masterful . One might call Kitamura one of the most talented thriller writers who doesn t write thrillers, for her novels are tinged with menace and threat and dark alleys that seem primed for acts of violence. And yet, really, the artistry . . . . lies in the delicate ways in which characters continue on, persevere slightly better or slightly worse, and survive. C hris Bollen, Interview Magazine

[T]he book vibrates with tension. . . Kitamura s prose is responsible for this effect she writes like a concert violinist, with clarity and control and a sustained, uneasy high pitch. Steph Cha, Los Angeles Times

Kitamura blends the personal and political in spare, elegant, inimitable prose. A standout novel, like nothing I ve read before." Kathryn Ma, San Francisco Chronicle

[Intimacies] spins a taut web of dread from the start. . . In cool, spare prose, Kitamura asks the book s animating query: How should you go about your little life in a world where horrible things are happening? Stephanie Hayes, The Atlantic

In crystalline prose, Kitamura probes the labyrinths of language and the riddles of our humanity . . . Intimacies is a judicious, cerebral novel, but Kitamura seasons it with dashes of glamor. . . . This slim, graceful novel punches above its weight as Kitamura explores tragedy on an epic scale, reckoning with the ways we deceive each other and ourselves. Hamilton Cain, Oprah Daily

Katie Kitamura dazzles us again. . . Her ability to impart vivacious detail with sparse and direct prose is a testament to her talent, and the moments that she is able to create between characters and places are memorable and beautiful." Buzzfeed

A strange and mesmerizing tale about language, understanding, and the role of strangers in our most intimate moments. Bookriot

[A] novel that carries enormous moral weight, attending to themes of alienation, violence, and love, with every page written in the most taut, gripping prose. It will haunt your dreams long after you ve turned down the last page. Tahmima Anam, E! Online

Spare, exacting prose . . . with powerful questions about morality, responsibility, and how we tell stories. Shondaland

There s a restrained intensity to Katie Kitamura s prose. . . It s that willingness to keep readers at an intriguing distance before revealing the messy emotions driving it all. A.V. Club

This is the kind of book that quickens the pulse not because of logic-defying plot twists, but rather because of how surgically precise it is in revealing how our emotional realities take on epic dimensions in our own minds, and often threaten our stability in the precise ways that things of global import rarely do. Refinery29

Intimacies is a haunting, precise, and morally astute novel that reads like a psychological thriller. It expertly and concisely delves into the paradoxes of language how language can obscure our own complicity, and how language can enable us to escape our own delusions. Katie Kitamura is a wonder; her work is striking, stylish, and fully realized. Dana Spiotta, author of Innocents and Others and Eat the Document

Gripping and elegant. No one s work simmers with emotional complexity like Katie Kitamura s. Mira Jacob, author of Good Talk

"A novel about the ruthlessness of power, the check of virtue, and the purportedly neutral bureaucracy meant to mediate between them. Katie Kitamura is among the most brilliant and profound writers at work today; she reminds me how high the moral stakes of fiction can be. Garth Greenwell, author of Small Rain

Katie Kitamura writes about being an outsider like no other author. Quiet moments are charged with tension and power. In short, the book is remarkable - beautifully written and intelligent. Avni Doshi, author of Burnt Sugar

Intimacies is a perfect novel taut and seductive. Kitamura has made the existential thriller all her own, and she effortlessly negotiates the personal and the geopolitical with a complex moral nuance. Simply stunning. Brandon Taylor, author of Minor Black Figures

"Saturated with enigmatic longing, Intimacies peels back the layers of sympathy, antipathy, and morality that both connect and divide us from others, unearthing something precious beneath. Katie Kitamura is a revelatory interpreter of the human heart, in all its brilliance and obscurity." Alexandra Kleeman, author of Something New Under the Sun

Katie Kitamura s voice spare, electric, evocative could take me anywhere. Especially into this landscape of global wanderers, uprooted women, fragmented souls. Intimacies is a singular pleasure a dangerous, seductive, dagger of a novel. Danzy Senna, author of Colored Television

Katie Kitamura s beautifully wrought novel is tense and suspenseful, a mystery about human choices. From its protagonist s work as an interpreter at the Hague, from crimes against humanity, to friendship and a love affair, the interpreter can t escape questions of judgment and justice. She balances tenuously on an ethical scale, while interpretation itself is brilliantly employed as the faulty method that subsumes all communication. Like a work by Graham Greene, INTIMACIES kept me in its tight grip. Lynne Tillman, author of Men and Apparitions

Like her protagonist, Kitamura... is a master of precisely evocative language. . . at once forthright and mysterious, [Intimacies is] a piercing and propulsive meditation on closeness of many sorts. Booklist (STARRED review)

[Intimacies] packs a controlled but considerable wallop, all the more pleasurable for its nuance. This psychological tone poem is a barbed and splendid meditation on peril. Kirkus (STARRED review)

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

20.07.2021

Verlag

Penguin LLC US

Seitenzahl

240

Maße (L/B/H)

22,2/15/2,5 cm

Gewicht

206 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-399-57616-4

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

Kundinnen und Kunden meinen

3 Bewertungen

Informationen zu Bewertungen

Zur Abgabe einer Bewertung ist eine Anmeldung im Konto notwendig. Die Authentizität der Bewertungen wird von uns nicht überprüft. Wir behalten uns vor, Bewertungstexte, die unseren Richtlinien widersprechen, entsprechend zu kürzen oder zu löschen.

Die Bewertungen sind nach Format, Anzahl Sterne und Datum sortiert.

5 Sterne

4 Sterne

(0)

3 Sterne

2 Sterne

(0)

1 Sterne

(0)

Katie Kitamura - Intimacies

Miss.mesmerized am 18.07.2021

Bewertungsnummer: 1529416

Bewertet: Buch (Gebundene Ausgabe)

The narrator leaves busy New York after her father’s death for The Hague where she is to work as an interpreter at the International Court of Justice. She befriends Jana whom she had already met in London and who has moved to the Netherlands only a short time before her and who has already made the city her home. She cannot talk about her job outside the Court, not even with Adriaan, her kind of boyfriend who is still married to another woman. Unexpectedly, two major events come together, Adriaan needs to leave for a couple of days which soon turn into weeks and the interpreter is required in a high profile case: a former president of an unnamed African state is accused of crimes against humanity and she is to become the first interpreter. She does not only meet him in court but also when he confines with his lawyers where she sits close to him and can feel the impact and power the charismatic man can have on people. As the weeks go by, she struggles more and more, not only with her absent partner but also with how close she gets to a man who can only be considered a monster. Katie Kitamura’s novel “Intimacies” invites the reader into the thoughts of an interpreter who knows that the slightest mistake in her translation can have severe consequences. It also highlights the position of a job which is often overlooked but crucial in many ways and where people are forced to retreat behind words which is easier said than done. At times she feels depersonalised, like an instrument, but for the accused, she is the first person of communication. Many questions are raised throughout the plot, first, the question about belonging. The narrator does not have a place she can really call home. A cosmopolite speaking several languages and having lived in diverse countries, she does not know which place she could actually associate with a feeling of home. Her apartment in The Hague perfectly reflects this: she has rented a furnished place which she never managed to give a personal note. More importantly, however, is the place of the interpreter. Nobody prepares them for what they are going to hear at the court. The lawyers remain cool when being confronted with atrocious crimes, the interpreters react in much more humane way which can be heard in their voice immediately but which is considered unprofessional. Being often close to the accused over months, they form a very peculiar bond which makes them separate the deeds from the defendants. A wonderfully written homage to language and its force, even though there are a lot of things which remain unsaid in the novel.

Katie Kitamura - Intimacies

Miss.mesmerized am 18.07.2021
Bewertungsnummer: 1529416
Bewertet: Buch (Gebundene Ausgabe)

The narrator leaves busy New York after her father’s death for The Hague where she is to work as an interpreter at the International Court of Justice. She befriends Jana whom she had already met in London and who has moved to the Netherlands only a short time before her and who has already made the city her home. She cannot talk about her job outside the Court, not even with Adriaan, her kind of boyfriend who is still married to another woman. Unexpectedly, two major events come together, Adriaan needs to leave for a couple of days which soon turn into weeks and the interpreter is required in a high profile case: a former president of an unnamed African state is accused of crimes against humanity and she is to become the first interpreter. She does not only meet him in court but also when he confines with his lawyers where she sits close to him and can feel the impact and power the charismatic man can have on people. As the weeks go by, she struggles more and more, not only with her absent partner but also with how close she gets to a man who can only be considered a monster. Katie Kitamura’s novel “Intimacies” invites the reader into the thoughts of an interpreter who knows that the slightest mistake in her translation can have severe consequences. It also highlights the position of a job which is often overlooked but crucial in many ways and where people are forced to retreat behind words which is easier said than done. At times she feels depersonalised, like an instrument, but for the accused, she is the first person of communication. Many questions are raised throughout the plot, first, the question about belonging. The narrator does not have a place she can really call home. A cosmopolite speaking several languages and having lived in diverse countries, she does not know which place she could actually associate with a feeling of home. Her apartment in The Hague perfectly reflects this: she has rented a furnished place which she never managed to give a personal note. More importantly, however, is the place of the interpreter. Nobody prepares them for what they are going to hear at the court. The lawyers remain cool when being confronted with atrocious crimes, the interpreters react in much more humane way which can be heard in their voice immediately but which is considered unprofessional. Being often close to the accused over months, they form a very peculiar bond which makes them separate the deeds from the defendants. A wonderfully written homage to language and its force, even though there are a lot of things which remain unsaid in the novel.

The narrator leaves busy New…

Bewertung aus Mainz am 18.07.2021

Bewertungsnummer: 2996611

Bewertet: Buch (Gebundene Ausgabe)

The narrator leaves busy New York after her father’s death for The Hague where she is to work as an interpreter at the International Court of Justice. She befriends Jana whom she had already met in London and who has moved to the Netherlands only a short time before her and who has already made the city her home. She cannot talk about her job outside the Court, not even with Adriaan, her kind of boyfriend who is still married to another woman. Unexpectedly, two major events come together, Adriaan needs to leave for a couple of days which soon turn into weeks and the interpreter is required in a high profile case: a former president of an unnamed African state is accused of crimes against humanity and she is to become the first interpreter. She does not only meet him in court but also when he confines with his lawyers where she sits close to him and can feel the impact and power the charismatic man can have on people. As the weeks go by, she struggles more and more, not only with her absent partner but also with how close she gets to a man who can only be considered a monster. Katie Kitamura’s novel “Intimacies” invites the reader into the thoughts of an interpreter who knows that the slightest mistake in her translation can have severe consequences. It also highlights the position of a job which is often overlooked but crucial in many ways and where people are forced to retreat behind words which is easier said than done. At times she feels depersonalised, like an instrument, but for the accused, she is the first person of communication. Many questions are raised throughout the plot, first, the question about belonging. The narrator does not have a place she can really call home. A cosmopolite speaking several languages and having lived in diverse countries, she does not know which place she could actually associate with a feeling of home. Her apartment in The Hague perfectly reflects this: she has rented a furnished place which she never managed to give a personal note. More importantly, however, is the place of the interpreter. Nobody prepares them for what they are going to hear at the court. The lawyers remain cool when being confronted with atrocious crimes, the interpreters react in much more humane way which can be heard in their voice immediately but which is considered unprofessional. Being often close to the accused over months, they form a very peculiar bond which makes them separate the deeds from the defendants. A wonderfully written homage to language and its force, even though there are a lot of things which remain unsaid in the novel.

The narrator leaves busy New…

Bewertung aus Mainz am 18.07.2021
Bewertungsnummer: 2996611
Bewertet: Buch (Gebundene Ausgabe)

The narrator leaves busy New York after her father’s death for The Hague where she is to work as an interpreter at the International Court of Justice. She befriends Jana whom she had already met in London and who has moved to the Netherlands only a short time before her and who has already made the city her home. She cannot talk about her job outside the Court, not even with Adriaan, her kind of boyfriend who is still married to another woman. Unexpectedly, two major events come together, Adriaan needs to leave for a couple of days which soon turn into weeks and the interpreter is required in a high profile case: a former president of an unnamed African state is accused of crimes against humanity and she is to become the first interpreter. She does not only meet him in court but also when he confines with his lawyers where she sits close to him and can feel the impact and power the charismatic man can have on people. As the weeks go by, she struggles more and more, not only with her absent partner but also with how close she gets to a man who can only be considered a monster. Katie Kitamura’s novel “Intimacies” invites the reader into the thoughts of an interpreter who knows that the slightest mistake in her translation can have severe consequences. It also highlights the position of a job which is often overlooked but crucial in many ways and where people are forced to retreat behind words which is easier said than done. At times she feels depersonalised, like an instrument, but for the accused, she is the first person of communication. Many questions are raised throughout the plot, first, the question about belonging. The narrator does not have a place she can really call home. A cosmopolite speaking several languages and having lived in diverse countries, she does not know which place she could actually associate with a feeling of home. Her apartment in The Hague perfectly reflects this: she has rented a furnished place which she never managed to give a personal note. More importantly, however, is the place of the interpreter. Nobody prepares them for what they are going to hear at the court. The lawyers remain cool when being confronted with atrocious crimes, the interpreters react in much more humane way which can be heard in their voice immediately but which is considered unprofessional. Being often close to the accused over months, they form a very peculiar bond which makes them separate the deeds from the defendants. A wonderfully written homage to language and its force, even though there are a lot of things which remain unsaid in the novel.

Kundinnen und Kunden meinen

Intimacies

von Katie Kitamura

0 Bewertungen filtern

Weitere Artikel finden Sie in

Die Leseprobe wird geladen.
  • Produktbild: Intimacies