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Numeri Primi: Il bar delle grandi speranze

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  • 486 páginas
  • 18 horas de lectura

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In the grand tradition of landmark memoirs, this classic American story explores self-invention and escape, highlighting the fierce love between a single mother and her only son. J.R. Moehringer, captivated by the voice of his absent father—a New York City disc jockey—sought understanding of masculinity and identity. His mother was his rock, but he yearned for something more, something he could only hear in The Voice. At eight, when The Voice vanished from the radio, J.R. turned to a local bar, discovering a chorus of new voices. There, he encountered a diverse group of men—cops, poets, bookies, and soldiers—who shared their stories and provided a fatherhood-by-committee. J.R. found mentorship in figures like Uncle Charlie and Colt, who took him to the beach and ballgames, helping him navigate his dual influences: his mother’s strength and the bar’s allure. As he embarked on various life journeys—from a dilapidated grandfather's house to Yale, and from a retail job to a challenging role at the New York Times—the bar remained a seductive sanctuary, offering refuge from failure and heartbreak. This memoir is suspenseful, wrenching, and achingly funny, portraying one boy's struggle to become a man while revealing how men often remain, at heart, lost boys.

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Numeri Primi: Il bar delle grandi speranze, J. R. Moehringer

Idioma
Publicado en
2012
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(Tapa blanda),
Estado del libro
Bueno
Precio
2,79 €

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Título
Numeri Primi: Il bar delle grandi speranze
Idioma
Italiano
Editorial
Piemme
Publicado en
2012
Formato
Tapa blanda
Páginas
486
ISBN10
8866216151
ISBN13
9788866216155
Serie
Título original
The tender bar
Calificación
3,95 de 5
Descripción
In the grand tradition of landmark memoirs, this classic American story explores self-invention and escape, highlighting the fierce love between a single mother and her only son. J.R. Moehringer, captivated by the voice of his absent father—a New York City disc jockey—sought understanding of masculinity and identity. His mother was his rock, but he yearned for something more, something he could only hear in The Voice. At eight, when The Voice vanished from the radio, J.R. turned to a local bar, discovering a chorus of new voices. There, he encountered a diverse group of men—cops, poets, bookies, and soldiers—who shared their stories and provided a fatherhood-by-committee. J.R. found mentorship in figures like Uncle Charlie and Colt, who took him to the beach and ballgames, helping him navigate his dual influences: his mother’s strength and the bar’s allure. As he embarked on various life journeys—from a dilapidated grandfather's house to Yale, and from a retail job to a challenging role at the New York Times—the bar remained a seductive sanctuary, offering refuge from failure and heartbreak. This memoir is suspenseful, wrenching, and achingly funny, portraying one boy's struggle to become a man while revealing how men often remain, at heart, lost boys.