Download Free Books Heartsnatcher  Full Version
Heartsnatcher Paperback | Pages: 245 pages
Rating: 3.97 | 4496 Users | 226 Reviews

Be Specific About Books Conducive To Heartsnatcher

Original Title: L'Arrache-cœur
ISBN: 1564782999 (ISBN13: 9781564782991)
Edition Language: English
Characters: Angel (Heartsnatcher), Clémentine (Heartsnatcher), Jacquemort

Interpretation In Favor Of Books Heartsnatcher

Set in a bizarre and slightly sinister town where the elderly are auctioned off at an Old Folks Fair, the townspeople assail the priest in hopes of making it rain, and the official town scapegoat bears the shame of the citizens by fishing junk out of the river with his teeth. Heartsnatcher is Boris Vian's most playful and most serious work. The main character is Clementine, a mother who punishes her husband for causing her the excruciating pain of giving birth to three babies. As they age, she becomes increasingly obsessed with protecting them, going so far as to build an invisible wall around their property.

Itemize Regarding Books Heartsnatcher

Title:Heartsnatcher
Author:Boris Vian
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 245 pages
Published:October 3rd 2003 by Dalkey Archive Press (first published 1953)
Categories:Fiction. Cultural. France. European Literature. French Literature. Novels

Rating Regarding Books Heartsnatcher
Ratings: 3.97 From 4496 Users | 226 Reviews

Appraise Regarding Books Heartsnatcher
I love this book. It is surreal, interesting, and I always find something new that I neglected the previous times I've read it. I think I've finished it three times now. It was one of my favorite Dalkey books I read while I worked there. Also, I designed the cover (though, not one of my best ones in my opinion).

Vian is the ultimate accomplishment of literary Surrealism, its purest although late manifestation. This novel is no exception: a wild fantasy we can only try to unravel, one page at a time... unless we want to get stuck into Vian's dangerous, deceiving universe. Because the French writer, engineer and jazz musician is like a creepy pervert with his pockets full of candies, luring us with his colourful, cheerful visions and lightheartedness until we take his hand and follow him in the bushes.

In "Heartsnatcher," Boris Vian put the Western world on the couch for an examination and decided the best solution was to hide from it. Like many writers, Vian had no particular claim to the title of social psychoanalyst other than the frequent contemplation of his navel, which he found time to do in between stints as an actor, jazz trumpeter, engineer and mechanic. This French scribe, of little import beyond his native nation's borders, was part of a post-World War II Parisian ebullience

The deliciously bizarre world of hitchhiking animals, crucified horses, and psychoanalyzed cats. To say nothing of the kids.

"We find that things that don't interest us very much are beautiful above all others because they allow us to see what we want to see in place of them. Perhaps I shouldn't put it in the first person plural." (212)This book has the dubious honor of joining the elite "completed-during-childbirth-hospital-stay" shelf started two years ago when my eldest was born. It will be forever nestled safely in my mind between The Brothers Karamazov and the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus. I know, I've revealed

Why, oh why did I let you sit on my shelf so long, little Heartsnatcher?At first Vian seems like he's just goofing off. He's writing a novel as one tries on a costume and prances around in it. Behold my costume, don't I look fine in it? (Wink.) Aren't you fooled? (Nudge.) Let's see a novel has, what? Characters. No problem. Here's a new mother with a gun under her pillow. And here's a vicar who could've been in the Sex Pistols, if there were such a band as the Sex Pistols when I wrote this. And

Very, very strange. A village where violence reigns supreme and people shed their shame to Glory Hallelujah. A mother who's infinitely paranoid about the well-being of her three children. A psychiatrist who looks upon all this with bewilderment. Kids who eat slugs and gain the ability to fly. Invisible fences, invisible carpets. Almost-human animals. Accelerated precociousness in youngsters. Months that are portmanteaus and have hundreds of days.Surreal and disjointed. If only the three parts of