Críticas:
Bob Smith aims high and succeeds. Band of Thebes " It is abundantly clear that Smith mixed the funny with the sad in Remembrances of Things I Forgot, and he has literally turned that genre of life into a tangible reflection of the time it takes for humans to forget their life experiences, big and small, sweet and sorrowful; and in the end how remembrance of all things could actually change the world. Tony Hobday, QSaltLake " A beautifully written and well-paced comic sci-fi extravaganza, a true page turner yet pregnant with deep social and human insight. . . . Take this book to heart: it will absorb you, change you, and in the clincher of the last sentence move you to tears. Richard Canning, The Gay and Lesbian Review Worldwide " Bob Smith s Remembrance of Things I Forgot is a delightful, moving portrait of a man who is given the rare opportunity to literally revisit his past, and the novel will likely be considered one of the year s best. Christopher Verleger, Lambda Literary " "Wildly comic political satire mixes with cutting comedy, social commentary, and a touch of sf in this seriously entertaining summer read." Booklist " An extraordinary novel: smart, funny, fiendishly inventive, often moving and ultimately profound. I've never read anything like it. Bob Smith combines the ingenuity of science fiction with the emotional weight of autobiographical fiction. He then adds politics in the form of the greatest villain of recent American history. This is a comic novel, but reading it can be a life-altering experience, like falling through a rabbit hole in space/time, and coming out the other side a better person. Christopher Bram, author of Gods and Monsters " His characters are brilliantly drawn, the dialogue is Preston Sturges deft, the political satire is damning without being shrill, and you will absolutely cry when you read the last line. How did Smith do that? I didn t think it was possible to be a bigger fan of Bob Smith s than I already was, but I am. David Rakoff, author of Fraud " If H. G. Wells had been funny and Oscar Wilde obsessed with time travel they might have mated and produced Bob Smith, who has written the funniest and wildest ride imaginable through the recent past and near future. Edmund White " Bob Smith aims high and succeeds. "Band of Thebes"" It is abundantly clear that Smith mixed the funny with the sad in "Remembrances of Things I Forgot," and he has literally turned that genre of life into a tangible reflection of the time it takes for humans to forget their life experiences, big and small, sweet and sorrowful; and in the end how remembrance of all things could actually change the world. Tony Hobday, "QSaltLake"" A beautifully written and well-paced comic sci-fi extravaganza, a true page turner yet pregnant with deep social and human insight. . . . Take this book to heart: it will absorb you, change you, and in the clincher of the last sentence move you to tears. Richard Canning, "The Gay and Lesbian Review Worldwide"" Bob Smith s "Remembrance of Things I Forgot" is a delightful, moving portrait of a man who is given the rare opportunity to literally revisit his past, and the novel will likely be considered one of the year s best. Christopher Verleger, "Lambda Literary"" "Wildly comic political satire mixes with cutting comedy, social commentary, and a touch of sf in this seriously entertaining summer read." "Booklist"" An extraordinary novel: smart, funny, fiendishly inventive, often moving and ultimately profound. I've never read anything like it. Bob Smith combines the ingenuity of science fiction with the emotional weight of autobiographical fiction. He then adds politics in the form of the greatest villain of recent American history. This is a comic novel, but reading it can be a life-altering experience, like falling through a rabbit hole in space/time, and coming out the other side a better person. Christopher Bram, author of "Gods and Monsters"" His characters are brilliantly drawn, the dialogue is Preston Sturges deft, the political satire is damning without being shrill, and you will absolutely cry when you read the last line. How did Smith do that? I didn t think it was possible to be a bigger fan of Bob Smith s than I already was, but I am. David Rakoff, author of "Fraud"" If H. G. Wells had been funny and Oscar Wilde obsessed with time travel they might have mated and produced Bob Smith, who has written the funniest and wildest ride imaginable through the recent past and near future. Edmund White" "Bob Smith aims high and succeeds."--"Band of Thebes" "Bob Smith's "Remembrance of Things I Forgot" is a delightful, moving portrait of a man who is given the rare opportunity to literally revisit his past, and the novel will likely be considered one of the year's best."-- Christopher Verleger, "Lambda Literary" "A beautifully written and well-paced comic sci-fi extravaganza, a true page turner yet pregnant with deep social and human insight. . . . Take this book to heart: it will absorb you, change you, and--in the clincher of the last sentence--move you to tears."--Richard Canning, "The Gay and Lesbian Review Worldwide" "It is abundantly clear that Smith mixed the funny with the sad in "Remembrances of Things I Forgot", and he has literally turned that 'genre of life' into a tangible reflection of the time it takes for humans to forget their life experiences, big and small, sweet and sorrowful; and in the end how remembrance of all things could actually change the world."--Tony Hobday, "QSaltLake" "An extraordinary novel: smart, funny, fiendishly inventive, often moving and ultimately profound. I've never read anything like it. Bob Smith combines the ingenuity of science fiction with the emotional weight of autobiographical fiction. He then adds politics--in the form of the greatest villain of recent American history. This is a comic novel, but reading it can be a life-altering experience, like falling through a rabbit hole in space/time, and coming out the other side a better person." --Christopher Bram, author of "Gods and Monsters" "His characters are brilliantly drawn, the dialogue is Preston Sturges deft, the political satire is damning without being shrill, and you will absolutely cry when you read the last line. How did Smith do that? I didn't think it was possible to be a bigger fan of Bob Smith's than I already was, but I am."--David Rakoff, author of "Fraud" "If H. G. Wells had been funny and Oscar Wilde obsessed with time travel they might have mated and produced Bob Smith, who has written the funniest and wildest ride imaginable through the recent past and near future."--Edmund White "An extraordinary novel: smart, funny, fiendishly inventive, often moving and ultimately profound. I've never read anything like it. Bob Smith combines the ingenuity of science fiction with the emotional weight of autobiographical fiction. He then adds politics-in the form of the greatest villain of recent American history. This is a comic novel, but reading it can be a life-altering experience, like falling through a rabbit hole in space/time, and coming out the other side a better person." -Christopher Bram, author of "Gods and Monsters" "His characters are brilliantly drawn, the dialogue is Preston Sturges deft, the political satire is damning without being shrill, and you will absolutely cry when you read the last line. How did Smith do that? I didn't think it was possible to be a bigger fan of Bob Smith's than I already was, but I am."-David Rakoff, author of "Fraud" "If H. G. Wells had been funny and Oscar Wilde obsessed with time travel they might have mated and produced Bob Smith, who has written the funniest and wildest ride imaginable through the recent past and near future."-Edmund White
Reseña del editor:
A casebook of interpretations of the ballad The Walled-Up Wife. Some contributors offer competing nationalistic claims concerning the ballad's origins, Ruth Mandel examines gender and power issues in the ballad, and Lyubomira Parpulova-Gribble presents a structuralist interpretation.
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