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The Last World

With an Ovidian Repertory

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A man embarks on a quest to find the Roman poet Ovid, exiled to a remote location. He discovers that Ovid's essence and tales have transformed into a series of clues scattered across people, strange events, and landscapes. In his anguish over being banished from Rome, Ovid had burned the manuscript of his masterpiece, Metamorphoses. Years later, when news of his death reaches Rome, his young admirer Cotta follows him to the Black Sea port of Tomi. There, he encounters a town steeped in Ovidian mythology, where the ancient world collides with the modern era. As Cotta deciphers the clues left by Ovid, he becomes immersed in a surreal landscape that mirrors the lost poem, where the ordinary morphs into the extraordinary. Characters and events, such as a village idiot turning to stone and a beautiful woman vanishing, contribute to a compelling narrative that explores themes of exile, censorship, and environmental decay. Acclaimed as a modern masterpiece, this novel captivates with its lush language and profound insights into the cyclical nature of life and time. It serves as a cultural and political fable, resonating with contemporary issues while remaining timeless.

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The Last World, Christoph Ransmayr

Idioma
Publicado en
1990
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Subtítulo
With an Ovidian Repertory
Idioma
Inglés
Publicado en
1990
Formato
Tapa dura
Páginas
202
ISBN10
0701135026
ISBN13
9780701135027
Serie
Calificación
3,85 de 5
Descripción
A man embarks on a quest to find the Roman poet Ovid, exiled to a remote location. He discovers that Ovid's essence and tales have transformed into a series of clues scattered across people, strange events, and landscapes. In his anguish over being banished from Rome, Ovid had burned the manuscript of his masterpiece, Metamorphoses. Years later, when news of his death reaches Rome, his young admirer Cotta follows him to the Black Sea port of Tomi. There, he encounters a town steeped in Ovidian mythology, where the ancient world collides with the modern era. As Cotta deciphers the clues left by Ovid, he becomes immersed in a surreal landscape that mirrors the lost poem, where the ordinary morphs into the extraordinary. Characters and events, such as a village idiot turning to stone and a beautiful woman vanishing, contribute to a compelling narrative that explores themes of exile, censorship, and environmental decay. Acclaimed as a modern masterpiece, this novel captivates with its lush language and profound insights into the cyclical nature of life and time. It serves as a cultural and political fable, resonating with contemporary issues while remaining timeless.