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Heft [Livre audio] [Anglais] [CD]

Liz Moore , Kirby Heyborne , Keith Szarabajka
5.0 étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (2 commentaires client)
Prix : EUR 67,50 LIVRAISON GRATUITE En savoir plus.
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Formats

Prix Amazon Neuf à partir de Occasion à partir de
Format Kindle EUR 6,01  
Relié EUR 19,19  
Broché EUR 9,48  
CD, Livre audio EUR 23,30  
CD, Livre audio, 1 mars 2012 EUR 67,50  

Détails sur le produit

  • CD
  • Editeur : Blackstone Audiobooks; Édition : Unabridged (1 mars 2012)
  • Langue : Anglais
  • ISBN-10: 1455160156
  • ISBN-13: 978-1455160150
  • Dimensions du produit: 15,5 x 16,5 x 3 cm
  • Moyenne des commentaires client : 5.0 étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (2 commentaires client)
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Couverture | Copyright | Table des matières | Extrait | Quatrième de couverture
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Commentaires client les plus utiles
5.0 étoiles sur 5 AN AMAZING STORY BEAUTIFULLY READ 23 avril 2012
Par Gail Cooke TOP 1000 COMMENTATEURS
Format:CD
Kirby Heyborne and Keith Szarabajka are the perfect narrators to bring to life Liz Moore's powerful second novel. Their voices present so much more than dialogue, reflecting personalities, hopes and dreams. It's an uncommon treat to hear such able voice performers deliver this meritorious tale. Singer, songwriter, actor, narrator, Heyborne is a man of many talents. Many will remember Szarabajka for his stellar television performances on Law & Order, Star Trek, and others. The pairing of these two fine actors yields better than 5 star listening. .

The narrative in Heft is divided between two, first Arthur Opp, a 550 pound former professor who has not left his parents' home in some ten years. He has discovered how to have the necessities delivered to his door. The home is commodious, a three floor Brooklyn Brownstone. As he says, "There are nice things on the upper floors I suppose but I haven't seen them in a decade. I have no reason to go up there. I couldn't if I tried."

He is alone. No one visits; the phone does not ring. His only contacts have been a few letters exchanged with former student, Charlene Turner. She was a bit of an oddity at his school, self-concious, not dressed like the others but full of dreams. For a while Arthur and Charlene become companions, perhaps drawn together by their mutual lack of self-esteem and alienation. He takes her to museums, to plays, teaches her, and then they grow apart.

The second narrator is Kel Keller, Charlene's teenage son who loves baseball and wants to be a major league player. But, he's torn, often exhausted by and resentful of the care his alcoholic mother requires and their house on the wrong side of the tracks. Not only is it in a rundown section of Yonkers but it is often dark and cold because his mother cannot afford to pay the bills. Yet Kel is accepted at a prestigious school where he soon fits in due to his athletic prowess. He's puzzled yet drawn to the well to-do families he comes to know. When he visits their homes he feels "like an intruder, like somebody staking something out."

As the connection between these three develops we again recognize the author's ability to not only draw vivid true to life characters but also to make them matter. And matter they do for few of us will forget Arthur, Charlene or Kel and the life stories they have shared.

- Gail Cooke
Avez-vous trouvé ce commentaire utile ?
5.0 étoiles sur 5 AN AMAZING STORY BEAUTIFULLY READ 23 avril 2012
Par Gail Cooke TOP 1000 COMMENTATEURS
Format:CD
Kirby Heyborne and Keith Szarabajka are the perfect narrators to bring to life Liz Moore's powerful second novel. Their voices present so much more than dialogue, reflecting personalities, hopes and dreams. It's an uncommon treat to hear such able voice performers deliver this meritorious tale. Singer, songwriter, actor, narrator, Heyborne is a man of many talents. Many will remember Szarabajka for his stellar television performances on Law & Order, Star Trek, and others. The pairing of these two fine actors yields better than 5 star listening. .

The narrative in Heft is divided between two, first Arthur Opp, a 550 pound former professor who has not left his parents' home in some ten years. He has discovered how to have the necessities delivered to his door. The home is commodious, a three floor Brooklyn Brownstone. As he says, "There are nice things on the upper floors I suppose but I haven't seen them in a decade. I have no reason to go up there. I couldn't if I tried."

He is alone. No one visits; the phone does not ring. His only contacts have been a few letters exchanged with former student, Charlene Turner. She was a bit of an oddity at his school, self-concious, not dressed like the others but full of dreams. For a while Arthur and Charlene become companions, perhaps drawn together by their mutual lack of self-esteem and alienation. He takes her to museums, to plays, teaches her, and then they grow apart.

The second narrator is Kel Keller, Charlene's teenage son who loves baseball and wants to be a major league player. But, he's torn, often exhausted by and resentful of the care his alcoholic mother requires and their house on the wrong side of the tracks. Not only is it in a rundown section of Yonkers but it is often dark and cold because his mother cannot afford to pay the bills. Yet Kel is accepted at a prestigious school where he soon fits in due to his athletic prowess. He's puzzled yet drawn to the well to-do families he comes to know. When he visits their homes he feels "like an intruder, like somebody staking something out."

As the connection between these three develops we again recognize the author's ability to not only draw vivid true to life characters but also to make them matter. And matter they do for few of us will forget Arthur, Charlene or Kel and the life stories they have shared.

- Gail Cooke
Avez-vous trouvé ce commentaire utile ?
Commentaires client les plus utiles sur Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.5 étoiles sur 5  183 commentaires
71 internautes sur 75 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile 
5.0 étoiles sur 5 A story with heart and heft 16 janvier 2012
Par Susan Tunis - Publié sur Amazon.com
Format:Relié
I have to tell you, this novel grabbed me from the opening pages, which take the form of a confessional letter from former professor, Arthur Opp, to his long-ago student and long-time correspondent, Charlene Turner. They haven't seen each other in years, and Arthur has a lot to confess.

"The first thing you must know about me is that I am colossally fat. When I knew you I was what one might call plump but I am no longer plump. I eat what I want & furthermore I eat whenever I want. For years I have made very little effort to reduce the amount that I eat for I have seen no cause to. Despite this I am neither immobile nor bedridden but I do feel winded when I walk more than six or seven steps, & I do feel very shy and sort of incased in something as if I were a cello or an expensive gun."

The fact that he weights somewhere between 500-600 pounds is just the beginning of Arthur's confession. He states, "In my letters to you these past two decades I have been untruthful by omission." He admits that not only has he not taught in years, but that he hasn't left his house in over a decade. He ends the lengthy missive, "In spite of everything, at heart I am still the same Arthur.

I'm going to stop right here and suggest there may be two kinds of reader responses to Arthur Opp, sympathy or revulsion. My immediate response was sympathy for this lonely man who fantasizes about salvation in the form of Dr. Phil. If your immediate response was revulsion, this is not the book for you.

As it happens, Charlene hasn't been entirely truthful about the details of her own life. And because so many stories follow predictable and formulaic patterns, early on in this novel I thought I knew the story I was reading. I thought it would be one of those heart-warming tales of two lonely people finding love and community. And it was and it wasn't that. I was delighted that author Liz Moore surprised me at many turns, and her story didn't follow the predictable path. Not entirely. There were notable divergences that gave the novel additional substance.

Heft really is a novel full of heart with flawed characters it was easy to fall in love with. The tale moved quickly. The characters were very well-developed and believable. I remained engrossed throughout and was satisfied at the end. Heft is nothing more than a good story, but that's plenty enough for me.
21 internautes sur 23 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile 
5.0 étoiles sur 5 What consitutes a family? 19 janvier 2012
Par Bibliophile By the Sea - Publié sur Amazon.com
Format:Relié
Heft is a wonderful story that will make you want to rethink what the word "family" really means.

Arthur Opps once was a college professor, but that was 18 years ago. Now, Arthur is a 58 year-old shut in who weighs in excess of 500 lbs. His best friend, who lived next door, passed away in 1997, and the last time Arthur has left his house in Brooklyn was in September 2001. The internet has made his reclusive life easy, since food and anything else he needs is delivered right to his front door. He has no family, no friends, no job, and no one to talk to, so over the years, his only comfort has come from the food he consumes, and occasional letters from a former student named Charlene Turner, who was 20 years younger than him.

Charlene and Arthur were two lost souls. Both were sad and lonely people, who spent hours talking over the course of the semester. When the class was finished, Charlene never took another course, but began to write Arthur letters. First he was rather shocked, but when he lost his job soon after, to him she seemed like the only friend he had.

(Arthur)...."And partly it was that I recognized myself in her---in her awkwardness, her loneliness, her being very out of place, an outsider in a roomful of compatriots. These feelings I recognized as my own. She spoke differently than her classmates. She had that accent, which I came to love, and that hopefulness that won me completely. One of the things I loved most about her, what I valued, was her lack of awareness."

Then abruptly the letters stopped, until one day many years later she contacts Arthur to reveal a little more about her life, and to ask him a favor. Her son Kel Keller, who is in high school is in need of some guidance, and since Arthur was the smartest man she had ever known, she asks that he help point her son in the right direction. On the surface, Kel seems to have a lot going for him, but he is dealing with some difficult issues which he tries to conceal from others.

Suddenly, Arthur's spirits seem brighter at the possibility of seeing Charlene again after almost 20 years. He hires a cleaning service to get his house in shape, and when 19 year-old Yolanda shows up, he finds himself looking forward to the days she cleans and their conversations which follow. Little by little life seems a bit brighter for Arthur.

The way in which the story unfolds is not perfect, but I cared so much about the characters that I was able to overlook any flaws in the story structure. The story alternates between Arthur's story, and Kel Keller's story. Both stories are heartbreaking at times. Heft, was one of my favorite kinds of novels, complete with dysfunctional, but well developed characters that I was cheering on all the way. It's a story that made me rethink what a "family" really is, and a story that left me feeling at least somewhat hopeful. It's a page-turner.
26 internautes sur 30 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile 
5.0 étoiles sur 5 Brilliant Novel of Lonely People 22 janvier 2012
Par Bonnie Brody - Publié sur Amazon.com
Format:Relié
Arthur Opp weighs between 500 and 600 pounds. It has been ten years since he has left his home. He feels trapped, alone and extraordinarily lonely. The only things that bring him pleasure are eating and his correspondence with an ex-student, Charlene Turner. At one time, Arthur was a college professor but now, at 58 years old, it's been decades since he's worked. He lost his job at his university and lives on his father's dole. His father is a famous architect. Arthur and he are estranged.

Charlene had idolized Arthur in the one college course she completed. They became friends but Charlene had to drop out of school. For awhile she worked but for most of the years she's been on disability because of lupus and alcoholism. She has a son, Kel, who she's raised on her own. However, for most of his life, it's Kel who has taken care of Charlene.

The novel weaves in and out of these two fascinating narratives and we learn how hopeless Arthur feels his life is. Charlene sends Arthur a picture of Kel and asks Arthur to call him. Kel loves baseball and it's his dream to make it to the major leagues. He has not seen his father since he was four and he dreams of reconnecting with him.

It's almost impossible to describe the wonders of this novel. Every page is a poetic gift filled with inner awareness of people and a perspicacity about human nature. It is a beautiful piece of writing, one that I will cherish.
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