Kitaplar ekstra gümrük ve kargo masrafı olmaksızın ortalama 28 gün
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Sure to be hailed alongside H is for Hawk and The Hare with Amber Eyes, an exceptional work that is at once an astonishing journey across countries and continents, an immersive examination of a great artist’s work, and a moving and intimate memoir.
Değerlendirmeler
‘I was reminded a little of Sebald, a little of Teju Cole, a little of Geoff Dyer – but mostly I knew I had met a book that kept its own rules and knew its own voice … Oddly beautiful and beautifully odd, it will draw many readers into its strange world, and the short lives that it contains’ Robert Macfarlane ‘A quixotic global quest to see all of the master’s 45 paintings’ Sunday Times ‘…an intricately plotted book that is by turns stimulating and moving…the real strength of this book lies in Ferris’s infectious enthusiasm for Bruegel, and every arcane offshoot loops back to the artist’s work. He is brilliant on the detail, on the slight variations that denote the master from the copyists, on the realities of peasant life, on the marginal figures; and Bruegel of all painters is the most rewarding subject for this sort of scrutiny’ Spectator ‘…an uncategorisable book that mingles paintings and pensées, history and life lessons, travel and memoir. The pictures, every one of them enigmatic, stimulate innumerable musings and thoughts, some random, some focussed… This book mimics the way the mind works when confronted with compelling but complicated paintings’ Literary Review ‘The advent of Toby Ferris’s 42nd birthday sparked him off on a quest to visit each one of the 42 surviving paintings by Pieter Bruegel the Elder. The project had little to do with either Bruegel or painting, and everything to do with Ferris’s own listlessness, exacerbated by the recent death of his father. So packed with life are those 16th-century images that Ferris mined them for insights into the human condition: “birth to death in 42 panels”, as the subtitle has it, but with less weighty digressions, too, on everything from children’s games to mastodons’ New Statesman