
Parámetros
- 114 páginas
- 4 horas de lectura
Más información sobre el libro
From the internationally best-selling author of Measuring the World and F, an eerie and supernatural tale of a writer's emotional collapse "It is fitting that I'm beginning a new notebook up here. New surroundings and new ideas, a new beginning. Fresh air." This passage is from the first entry of a journal kept by the narrator of Daniel Kehlmann's spellbinding new novel. It is the record of the seven days that he, his wife, and his four-year-old daughter spend in a house they have rented in the mountains of Germany--a house that thwarts the expectations of the narrator's recollection and seems to defy the very laws of physics. He is eager to finish a screenplay for a sequel to the movie that launched his career, but something he cannot explain is undermining his convictions and confidence, a process he is recording in this account of the uncanny events that unfold as he tries to understand what, exactly, is happening around him--and within him.
Compra de libros
You should have left, Daniel Kehlmann
- Idioma
- Publicado en
- 2017
- product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
- (Tapa dura)
Métodos de pago
Nos falta tu reseña aquí
- Título
- You should have left
- Idioma
- Inglés
- Autores
- Daniel Kehlmann
- Editorial
- Pantheon Books
- Publicado en
- 2017
- Formato
- Tapa dura
- Páginas
- 114
- ISBN10
- 110187192X
- ISBN13
- 9781101871928
- Serie
- Etiquetas
- Ficción, Novela negra & Thriller, Fantasía, Ciencia ficción, Thriller, Familia, Ficción contemporánea, Cuentos cortos, Suspense, Terror, Alemania, Novelas cortas, Matrimonio, Fantamas y apariciones, Relatos cortos de terror, Fraudes
- Calificación
- 3,55 de 5
- Descripción
- From the internationally best-selling author of Measuring the World and F, an eerie and supernatural tale of a writer's emotional collapse "It is fitting that I'm beginning a new notebook up here. New surroundings and new ideas, a new beginning. Fresh air." This passage is from the first entry of a journal kept by the narrator of Daniel Kehlmann's spellbinding new novel. It is the record of the seven days that he, his wife, and his four-year-old daughter spend in a house they have rented in the mountains of Germany--a house that thwarts the expectations of the narrator's recollection and seems to defy the very laws of physics. He is eager to finish a screenplay for a sequel to the movie that launched his career, but something he cannot explain is undermining his convictions and confidence, a process he is recording in this account of the uncanny events that unfold as he tries to understand what, exactly, is happening around him--and within him.
