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The Eighth Day: A Novel (Harper Perennial…
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The Eighth Day: A Novel (Harper Perennial Modern Classics) (alkuperäinen julkaisuvuosi 1967; vuoden 2017 painos)

Tekijä: Thornton Wilder (Tekijä)

JäseniäKirja-arvostelujaSuosituimmuussijaKeskimääräinen arvioMaininnat
6781333,908 (3.78)28
At the turn of the century, an Illinois man is sentenced to death for the murder of a close friend, but escapes to South America to build a new world for himself and his family.
Jäsen:giovannaz63
Teoksen nimi:The Eighth Day: A Novel (Harper Perennial Modern Classics)
Kirjailijat:Thornton Wilder (Tekijä)
Info:Harper Perennial Modern Classics (2007), Edition: Reprint, 512 pages
Kokoelmat:Oma kirjasto
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Avainsanoja:to-read

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The Eighth Day (tekijä: Thornton Wilder) (1967)

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Näyttää 1-5 (yhteensä 13) (seuraava | näytä kaikki)
The Eighth Day is a 1967 novel by Thornton Wilder. Set in a mining town in southern Illinois, the plot revolves around John Barrington Ashley, who is accused of murdering his neighbor Breckenridge Lansing. The novel was written over the course of twenty months while Wilder was living alone in Douglas, Arizona. The Eighth Day was the 1968 winner of the National Book Award.
  RedeemedRareBooks | Mar 6, 2024 |
I read the hardcover published in 1967. This was not easy to read nor understand, but a very worthwhile book. There are so many metaphors presented so well I'm sure I missed many. There are also too many characters to keep track of. However, Wilder makes many comments on human behavior and the lack of humanity that I found this as relevant today as it was in the past. Most of the booki takes place in the 1880's until the 1920's, but Wilder also discusses both earlier and later times. He tells us mainly about 2 families who are brought together by a misattributed tragedy. ( )
  suesbooks | Apr 11, 2022 |
A wonderful existentialist novel about a man convicted of a murder he did not committ, the threads of his life leading up to the event and the threads of his entire family's lives leading from the event. I had read this when a teenager and wanted to see whether it was a good as I had remembered. it was better! ( )
  M_Clark | Jul 19, 2016 |
I liked this book and its odd narrative structure: the plot was intriguing and the prose was distinctive. So, why do I dock it a star? I thought the characters were unbelievable and the things that happened to them implausible. I wished for a bit more showing and a bit less telling.

There's something very Midwestern about the book. It captures the puritanical mindset that still exists out here in a non-condescending manner, and that is a very difficult thing. Hard work is rewarded, acts of charity are done silently. Bad things happen to good people, but the good never suffer. To me the novel is unsettling, but it embodies a distinctively American philosophy that I see around me but can never know nor understand. ( )
  le.vert.galant | Jan 26, 2015 |
In the foreword to this volume, John Updike says about the book "Reviews were mixed, from Edmund Wilson's calling it 'the best thing he ever wrote' to...Stanley Kaufmann's [judgment] that 'we have – from a man who has always meant well – a book that means nothing.'" And, in a certain way, that divergence of opinion (a divergence that is evident in the many reviews of the book) is a nutshell of the reading experience. At times it was one of the finest books I ever read; at others I felt myself tempted to skim past descriptions or dissertations and even wonder why a certain section was included.

But, somewhere in between "greatest book" and "book that means nothing" is the crux of it. This is a very good book that sometimes stumbles on itself, but only because it is attempting to grasp and attempt quite a bit.

Harlan Ellison begins "'Repent, Harlequin!' Said the Ticktockman" with the line "Now begin in the middle, and later learn the beginning; the end will take care of itself." And that is as good a description of the plot line for this novel as I have seen – we start with a murder and trial, but then jump between the histories occurring before the event and the developments long afterwards.

The very beginning of the Prologue starts with John Barrington Ashley being tried for the murder of Breckenridge Lansing. They were friends, and everyone knows Ashley was not the murderer. However, that is not the outcome of the trial and Ashley is convicted. On the train ride to prison Ashely is freed; no one has any idea who freed him – not even Ashley.

That story, along with the subsequent explorations of how Lansing actually died and who freed Ashley, would take up the average, everyday novel. However, this is the least of what Wilder is trying to do. Again, this is the middle of the story.

What follows is an exploration of certain Ashely and Langston family members, as well as residents of Coaltown, Illinois. We see how people survived after the trial, we see the past that brought these two families to the Illinois coal town, and, most importantly, we see how these events shaped the people they have become and the people they will become.

While we learn who the people really are, this does not serve to drive forward a plot of "what happened?" (Part of the reason the book is dismissed as meaning nothing). Instead, it serves Wilder's bigger purpose of showing the way lives evolve and how we are all evolving into something new and different. (Is it for the better? That is a decision he leaves up to the reader.)

Some of the discussions of theories and religious concepts can (as one early reviewer noted) sound like essays embedded in a novel. And yet they serve well the purpose of showing that particular individual's development. And, by digging deeply into multiple characters, different points of view are brought forward with equal authority.

By the end, the answers to the mysteries are provided. But those have become nothing more than a necessary interference to the bigger questions that are raised throughout the novel. Those bigger questions do not have nicely-tied answers, as evidenced by Wilder's last paragraph. But, even without answers, we learn.

The book is a pleasant voyage. While the characters are not necessarily brilliantly dynamic (something we seem to expect in books that we don't expect of real people in real life) they have a reality that helps us accept them on their own terms. And, even with the essay-like discussions, the book continues to drive forward. I found myself caught up in the people and in those discussions. What more do we really want from a novel? ( )
1 ääni figre | Jul 20, 2014 |
Näyttää 1-5 (yhteensä 13) (seuraava | näytä kaikki)
In the end, like all good novels, this one is about how every story is part of a grand tradition of stories in the world, from the Bible to histories to journalism, as if, on the eighth day, God created a story about the first seven.
 
Sinun täytyy kirjautua sisään voidaksesi muokata Yhteistä tietoa
Katso lisäohjeita Common Knowledge -sivuilta (englanniksi).
Teoksen kanoninen nimi
Alkuteoksen nimi
Teoksen muut nimet
Alkuperäinen julkaisuvuosi
Henkilöt/hahmot
Tärkeät paikat
Tärkeät tapahtumat
Kirjaan liittyvät elokuvat
Epigrafi (motto tai mietelause kirjan alussa)
Omistuskirjoitus
Tiedot englanninkielisestä Yhteisestä tiedosta. Muokkaa kotoistaaksesi se omalle kielellesi.
For Isabel Wilder
Ensimmäiset sanat
Tiedot englanninkielisestä Yhteisestä tiedosta. Muokkaa kotoistaaksesi se omalle kielellesi.
In the early summer of 1902 John Barrington Ashley of Coaltown, a small mining center in southern Illinois, was tried for the murder of Breckenridge Lansing, also of Coaltown.
Sitaatit
Viimeiset sanat
Tiedot englanninkielisestä Yhteisestä tiedosta. Muokkaa kotoistaaksesi se omalle kielellesi.
(Napsauta nähdäksesi. Varoitus: voi sisältää juonipaljastuksia)
Erotteluhuomautus
Julkaisutoimittajat
Kirjan kehujat
Alkuteoksen kieli
Kanoninen DDC/MDS
Kanoninen LCC

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Englanninkielinen Wikipedia (1)

At the turn of the century, an Illinois man is sentenced to death for the murder of a close friend, but escapes to South America to build a new world for himself and his family.

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