Wednesday, December 15, 2010

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The corpuscles of Krause

Separated in forty-seven short chapters, Krause's corpuscles is a novel whose main key is based mainly on meetings of Lucie, the heroine of 24 years, with various characters a village in the North Shore of Montreal, where she decided to settle after the death of his mother. Making use of slang by ellipsis, Sandra Gordon excels in vivid description of places and characters and readily accomplished at a rate effective narrative, deftly changing the "clips" at the movies. By the personal tone of the writing, we are convinced that by the time the heroine is none other than the author. It does not say exactly: it is a self-fiction, but one feels what the character size Lucie, filled with humanity and lucidity at point blank range and without affectation.

Immediately after completing The corpuscles of Krause , I still wonder how much thought should encourage this reading. Praise the courage, commitment, truth, desire to be reborn, this first novel by Sandra Gordon touches all these issues. The story builds slowly around a tragedy and how it is brought recalls some American authors to this end, we think more than happy to Hemingway Bukowski said, perhaps wrongly, back cover. Despite pessimism hovering, this novel nevertheless some solar thing and refers to Paul Auster to the theme of resurrection - the heroine who stands up after a hard race. In its way, The corpuscles of Krause explores the world of literature for reflection it provokes about loneliness and death. Despite its somewhat abrupt end, an interesting novel that I finished with the vague impression that everything had been said in these 47 chapters. My colleagues

The Rookie of the Month also commented on this novel. For their views, here is .

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