Break.up
Joanna Walsh
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Belletristik/Erzählende Literatur
Beschreibung
The internet has collapsed the boundaries of time, space, and desire. However far apart lovers are, they can instantly be present. So can they ever really break up?
This is the question Walsh's narrator must reckon with as she travels across Europe after the end of a love affair conducted largely online. This pilgrimage through 'offline' space dictated by chance - on railways, on buses, on planes and, above all, on foot - wrestles with the dangers of converting longing into language, and reclaims and reshapes the territory of the male travel writer by creating personal and innovative maps of cities by which Walsh navigates the complexities of modern love.
This is a work about borders - between places, people, genres - and how we might cross them. Challenging the divisions between intellect and intimacy, Walsh blends the personal and the critical to tell a mystery story about her own reality. But Break.up also challenges the borders between fiction and non-fiction, ranging widely into eclectic essays on music, boredom, shame, photography, marriage, art.
From Rome to Budapest, Freud to Foucault, algorithms to nostalgia, this is a stimulating, original work which dismantles what we know of love, and how we make art from it, and finds a new form and language for the way we love now.
Rezensionen
Joanna Walsh is fast becoming one of our most important writers
Joanna Walsh is [a] wonderful and enigmatic writer
Walsh is an inventive, honest writer. In her world, objects may be closer and far more intricate than they appear; these stories offer a compelling pitch into the inner life.
<i>It'
A novel about love in digital spaces that takes the time to breathe, exhaling into the muggy air of real places. A bereft protagonist is consoled by the energy of philosophical fragments and messy objects. Walsh has surgical expertise in the dissection of online excitements and misdirections but puts us in the sensual world of Dior lipsticks and Perfecto jackets. The result is bracing. It'
Packs a wallop
Melding travel writing with philosophy and emotion, Walsh is a true original
<b>Praise for Break.Up: </b>A novel about love in digital spaces that takes the time to breathe, exhaling into the muggy air of real places. A bereft protagonist is consoled by the energy of philosophical fragments and messy objects. Walsh has surgical expertise in the dissection of online excitements and misdirections but puts us in the sensual world of Dior lipsticks and perfecto jackets. The result is bracing. It'
Deliciously sharp ... With wry humour and profound sensitivity, Walsh takes what is mundane and transforms it into something otherworldly with sentences that can make your heart stop. A feat of language
<i>Break.up</i> is steeped in the pure poetics of now. It is a smart, allusive meditation... on the sheer fragility of experience and feeling.
<b>Praise for <i>Vertigo</i>: </b>Her work trades on the literary genres of the miniature-short stories, essays, even postcards-reminiscent of Marcel Schwob, Clarice Lispector, Roland Barthes, and Lydia Davis
<p><b>Praise for Joanna Walsh: </b><br>Walsh is a sublimely elegant writer... artful and intelligent</p>
Beautifully simple and unembellished, Walsh'
This luminous philosophical novel casts dye into the spaces between things, the gaps between certainties, colors them visible, valuable. Sometimes these take the form and hue of a train journey, or time spent in a city, or the pause between two emails. Sometimes you could call them love.
Walsh's closest literary ally is probably Lydia Davis, with whom she shares a brevity and starkness of expression. . . Walsh'
Moments of blazing perspicacity, creativity, intelligence, and dark humour are insanely abundant in [Walsh'
Original and breathtaking
Richly observant writing... has the making of poetry
Walsh'
Break.up goes further still than Walsh'
Kundenbewertungen
loss, affair, dating, internet, Roland Barthes, break ups, heartbreak, love, Sex, autofiction, break-ups