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A Gentleman in Moscow: A Novel av Amor…
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A Gentleman in Moscow: A Novel (utgåvan 2019)

av Amor Towles (Författare)

MedlemmarRecensionerPopularitetGenomsnittligt betygDiskussioner / Omnämnanden
9,062513884 (4.38)1 / 745
I juni 1922 eskorteras greve Alexander Rostov från en rättegångssal i Moskva till det fashionabla Hotell Metropol beläget mittemot Kreml där han under flera år bott i en lyxsvit. Han har stått åtalad för en dikt han skrivit och med nöd och näppe undgått dödsstraff; istället döms han till husarrest på obestämd tid och tvingas flytta till ett litet vindsrum på hotellet. Medan Sovjetunionen genomgår decennier av våldsamma omvälvningar försöker Rostov skapa en ny mening och ett annat slags rikedom i sitt liv. Han lär i berättelsens början känna Nina, en nioårig flicka, som blir hans ledsagare in i hotellets sällsamma värld.Amor Towles förenar den sovjetiska historiens allvar med stor berättarglädje och livsbejakande humor. Trots smärtsamma förluster vill greve Rostov fortsätta att ta vara på tillvarons glädjeämnen och Hotell Metropol förser både honom och läsaren med en varm blandning av mänsklighet, romantik, äventyr och märkliga sammanträffanden.… (mer)
Medlem:Ninyadelrey
Titel:A Gentleman in Moscow: A Novel
Författare:Amor Towles (Författare)
Info:Penguin Books (2019), Edition: Reprint, 496 pages
Samlingar:Read in 2020
Betyg:
Taggar:Ingen/inga

Verksinformation

En gentleman i Moskva av Amor Towles

  1. 21
    Igelkottens elegans av Muriel Barbery (rocks009)
  2. 00
    Swimming in the Dark av Tomasz Jedrowski (potenza)
    potenza: Both poetic narratives in the Eastern Bloc
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Grupp DiskussionMeddelandenSenaste inlägget 
 The Green Dragon: A Gentleman in Moscow10 olästa / 10Sakerfalcon, november 2017

» Se även 745 omnämnanden

Really enjoyed it. Wonderful construction, turns of phrase and overall message of decency. ( )
  maryroberta | Apr 15, 2024 |
I'm sorry, I just can't. I've tried, twice. I got exactly 50% through (231 pages) but I just keep hearing that little voice inside myself asking me, "Why?" And so, I've stopped.

So, what is this book about? I am not sure. Back in Russia in the 1920s, a Count winds up on the wrong side of politics and instead of being put to death, is exiled to the place where he lives; a posh hotel, the Metropol. While at the hotel, the Count has several encounters with some colorful individuals, including a young girl who also lives at the hotel, a chef, a waiter, and a seamstress, all whom work at the hotel. Oh, and the Count has the utmost sophisticated manners and way of speaking. Hence the name of the book, I take it. But, again, what is this book really about? Ugh.

I am sure I am in the minority, but this is one of the most boring books. Is it well written? Undeniably. Is it incredibly researched? Without question. But so what - I'm watching grass grow here.

This literary (there's the keyword) fiction reads high-brow, something I am not. I'll go back to my women's fiction, mystery-murder, or even rom-com before I try the likes of this again. ( )
  LyndaWolters1 | Apr 3, 2024 |
Delightful, perfection. ( )
  farrhon | Apr 1, 2024 |
An all-time favorite. Perfect read for the middle of winter. ( )
  bookem | Mar 27, 2024 |
There’s so much acclaim for this book, yet other than an occasional moment between Rostov and the two youngest females in the story, I just wasn’t anywhere near as charmed by it as so many others appear to have been.

I’m okay with a leisurely pace if there’s enough story to justify it, but this book is over four hundred pages and it feels generous to say that maybe two hundred of those pages saw some semblance of story that moved forward. I don’t know if this was an attempt to echo “great” Russian novels or something, if so, I guess that was accomplished, as much like when I slogged my way through War and Peace many years ago, this too felt like the author must have been paid by the word, taking every opportunity to stretch into several pages what could have been conveyed in one concise paragraph. Like War and Peace, for me, reading this this felt more like an endurance test than a pleasure.

Too often there would be an extremely short burst of plot only to dip into lengthy disruptive passages of tedious details and research. Whenever this eventually got around to resuming the story, you’d get something akin to a recap, you’d be told the characters were older, told this or that happened, this person is growing up, that person’s career is floundering or flourishing, etc., but you see very little of any of it unfold or the relationships genuinely develop and deepen. I know this book has to have won awards and hearts for a reason, but it all felt so surface level to me, the way it was told in this repeated pattern of a bit of story (usually involving meals) followed by a dump of extraneous information, followed by a recap of the lives we didn’t actually see anyone living because while they were doing presumably interesting things off the page, on the page, the reader was stuck wading through those extraneous weeds. Or at least that was how I felt too much of the time, like I was stuck in a mostly stagnant cycle and missing out on key parts of the story, in particular Rostov’s transition into becoming a pivotal figure in a certain someone’s life and how that functioned for years without that person being removed, no one having any objection to it, etc., I needed more on that situation and how it could possibly have played out with so few hiccups of note.

Even though that situation was something I mostly enjoyed whenever the book meandered back to it, it was also part of another aspect of this novel I struggled with in addition to the pacing. I had a hard time with how fairytale easy everything goes here, that Rostov, a prisoner of sorts, could maintain that particular relationship unimpeded, that he still had so much freedom inside the hotel, so much access still to the finer things, and easy access to friendship and love and adoration, and even the ending, one of the rare bits of excitement in the entire novel, that too just struck me as a little too easy to ring true. I don’t know the real life history related to this, if hotel arrest in Moscow was as lackadaisical as it mostly appeared in this fictional take on it, so I could be totally off base, but I just found it challenging to buy that the Russia you always hear about would basically mollycoddle someone, that conditions wouldn’t be at least a little harsh.

When I read literary fiction as beloved as this one and don’t share in the prevailing sentiment, it does make me second guess my intelligence, like maybe I’m not smart enough to understand what was so great about this, and maybe that’s the case, maybe the depths of this just went over my head. All I know is that the way I experienced this book, it felt like it contained more filler than substance and even though I could feel the painstaking research seeping through nearly ever sentence, the story itself wasn’t all that believable. ( )
  SJGirl | Mar 25, 2024 |
Visa 1-5 av 508 (nästa | visa alla)
Booklist
July 1, 2016
In his remarkable first novel, the best-selling Rules of Civility (2011), Towles etched 1930s New York in crystalline relief. Though set a world away in Moscow over the course of three decades, his latest polished literary foray into a bygone era is just as impressive. Sentenced as an incorrigible aristocrat in 1922 by the Bolsheviks to a life of house arrest in a grand Moscow hotel, Count Alexander Ilyich Rostov is spared the firing squad on the basis of a revolutionary poem he penned as an idealistic youth. Condemned, instead, to live his life confined to the indoor parameters of Metropol Hotel, he eschews bitterness in favor of committing himself to practicalities. As he carves out a new existence for himself in his shabby attic room and within the magnificent walls of the hotel-at-large, his conduct, his resolve, and his commitment to his home and to the hotel guests and staff together form a triumph of the human spirit. As Moscow undergoes vast political changes and countless social upheavals, Rostov remains, implacably and unceasingly, a gentleman. Towles presents an imaginative and unforgettable historical portrait.--Flanagan, Margaret Copyright 2016 Booklist
tillagd av kthomp25 | ändraBooklist
 

» Lägg till fler författare

Författarens namnRollTyp av författareVerk?Status
Towles, Amorprimär författarealla utgåvorbekräftat
Arjaan en Thijs van NimwegenÖversättaremedförfattarevissa utgåvorbekräftat
Höbel, SusanneÖversättaremedförfattarevissa utgåvorbekräftat
Smith, Nicholas GuyBerättaremedförfattarevissa utgåvorbekräftat
Smith, RodneyFotografmedförfattarevissa utgåvorbekräftat
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How well I remember

When it came as a visitor on foot
And dwelt a while amongst us
A melody in the semblance of a mountain cat.

Well, where is our purpose now?

Like so many questions
I answer this one
With the eye-averted peeling of a pear.

With a bow I bid goodnight
And pass through terrace doors
Into the simple splendors
Of another temperate spring;

But this much I know;

It is not lost among the autumn leaves on Peter's Square.
It is not among the ashes in the Athenaeum ash cans.
It is not inside the blue pagodas of your fine Chinoiserie.

It is not in Vronsky's saddlebags;
Not in Sonnet XXX, stanza one;
Not on twenty-seven red...

                                    Where Is It Now? (Lines 1-19)
                         Count Alexander Ilyich Rostov   1913
Dedikation
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For Stokley and Esmé
Inledande ord
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At half past six on the twenty-first of June 1922, when Count Alexander Ilyich Rostov was escorted through the gates of the Kremlin onto Red Square, it was glorious and cool.
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Mindful of their surroundings, the three damsels would initially speak in the hushed voices of gentility; but swept away by the currents of their own emotions, their voices would inevitably rise, such that by 11:15, even the most discreet enjoyer of a pastry would have no choice but to eavesdrop on the thousand-layered complications of their hearts.
The crowded confusion of furniture gave the Count's little domain the look of a consignment shop in the Arbat.
Yes, some claimed Emile Zhukovsky was a curmudgeon and others called him abrupt. Some said he was a short man with a shorter temper.
It was a place where Russians cut from every cloth could come to linger over coffee, happen upon friends, stumble into arguments, or drift into dalliances—and where the lone diner seated under the great glass ceiling could indulge himself in admiration, indignation, suspicion, and laughter without getting up from his chair.
Tall and thin, with a narrow head and superior demeanor, he looked rather like a bishop that had been plucked from a chessboard.
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I juni 1922 eskorteras greve Alexander Rostov från en rättegångssal i Moskva till det fashionabla Hotell Metropol beläget mittemot Kreml där han under flera år bott i en lyxsvit. Han har stått åtalad för en dikt han skrivit och med nöd och näppe undgått dödsstraff; istället döms han till husarrest på obestämd tid och tvingas flytta till ett litet vindsrum på hotellet. Medan Sovjetunionen genomgår decennier av våldsamma omvälvningar försöker Rostov skapa en ny mening och ett annat slags rikedom i sitt liv. Han lär i berättelsens början känna Nina, en nioårig flicka, som blir hans ledsagare in i hotellets sällsamma värld.Amor Towles förenar den sovjetiska historiens allvar med stor berättarglädje och livsbejakande humor. Trots smärtsamma förluster vill greve Rostov fortsätta att ta vara på tillvarons glädjeämnen och Hotell Metropol förser både honom och läsaren med en varm blandning av mänsklighet, romantik, äventyr och märkliga sammanträffanden.

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