Night Train to Lisbon 
This is a book which can be read on different levels! At least for me. I can think about a paragraph and the import of those lines OR I can read it for the story from start to finish. Some lines are priceless. Some lines, I just think: What??!!!I am nearing the end! What is going to happen?It ends perfectly.This book is very philosophical! Definitely not for everyone, and it is kind of wordy, but boy is there a lot to think about.....Some reviewers remark that it is poorly translated from the
Apparently, Page des Libraires calls this 'One of the great European novels of the past few years'- compared to what? The SNCF Railway Timetable.This book makes me incredibly angry. And after some thought I can honestly award it the 'worst book I have ever read' award. I could forgive it for being slow. I could forgive the missed opportunities of drawing what potentially could have been interesting characters in two dimensions. I could even forgive the shockingly bad translation (it has not even

Why would you give me this book to read? Why? You didnt like it. At the time I was too pleased to have a present to care. You could have put anything in my hands and Id have been delighted. A pen, a purl, a plum But this? Pah! At the time, I thought it might still be a good story though. It looked to be a quiet, interior journey. Our man, Gregorius, has a thing for words. I can relate. But not in the way I relate at the beginning of Disneys Beauty and the Beast. Gregorius is no Belle.
Coming from a Philosophy professor, I was a bit skeptical to get into the book first, but then I was drawn into the book when the protagonist, Gregorius, also a professor, leaves his stagnant and monotonous life behind on an impulse, and boards a train for Lisbon, to understand the tragic end of a writer.What is the story ? The main character, Raimund Gregorius, is a teacher of classics, who has lead a very tedious life, and that one day, out of the blue, decides to leave his job, go to Lisbon
I am very curious about the book*. There are introductory quotes by Michel Montaigne and Fernando Pessoa, both alluding the question of "self" and "the others"...and the "others within ourselves".Basically, it's a story about a Swiss teacher,an erudite, of Greek and Latin, who saves a Portuguese woman when she's attempting suicide at a bridge over the Aare, in Bern, Switzerland.So it starts. Raimund Gregorius is fascinated by the way she speaks French, with the Portuguese accent...and it
When, on a whim, I threw everything away to wander thousands of miles from anything I've ever known, I first went to Lisbon because of this book. That was last September, and by November I had traipsed through neighboring Spain and south into Africa, though, I've since been back to the city of Lisbon, and furthermore to this book. If you are not, at least in some part, a thinker, if philosophy ebbs away at your patience, if the sight of pages mostly barren of dialogue make you panic, this book
Pascal Mercier
Hardcover | Pages: 496 pages Rating: 3.73 | 16510 Users | 1760 Reviews

Present Books Concering Night Train to Lisbon
Original Title: | Nachtzug nach Lissabon |
ISBN: | 0802118585 (ISBN13: 9780802118585) |
Edition Language: | English |
Characters: | Raimund Gregorius |
Literary Awards: | Premio Grinzane Cavour for Narrativa Straniera (2007) |
Interpretation To Books Night Train to Lisbon
A huge international best seller, this ambitious novel plumbs the depths of our shared humanity to offer up a breathtaking insight into life, love, and literature itself. A major hit in Germany that went on to become one of Europe’s biggest literary blockbusters in the last five years, Night Train to Lisbon is an astonishing novel, a compelling exploration of consciousness, the possibility of truly understanding another person, and the ability of language to define our very selves. Raimund Gregorius is a Latin teacher at a Swiss college who one day—after a chance encounter with a mysterious Portuguese woman—abandons his old life to start a new one. He takes the night train to Lisbon and carries with him a book by Amadeu de Prado, a (fictional) Portuguese doctor and essayist whose writings explore the ideas of loneliness, mortality, death, friendship, love, and loyalty. Gregorius becomes obsessed by what he reads and restlessly struggles to comprehend the life of the author. His investigations lead him all over the city of Lisbon, as he speaks to those who were entangled in Prado’s life. Gradually, the picture of an extraordinary man emerges—a doctor and poet who rebelled against Salazar’s dictatorship.Describe Based On Books Night Train to Lisbon
Title | : | Night Train to Lisbon |
Author | : | Pascal Mercier |
Book Format | : | Hardcover |
Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 496 pages |
Published | : | December 21st 2007 by Grove Press (first published 2004) |
Categories | : | Fiction. Philosophy. Cultural. Portugal. Literature |
Rating Based On Books Night Train to Lisbon
Ratings: 3.73 From 16510 Users | 1760 ReviewsCritique Based On Books Night Train to Lisbon
This book took me a long, long time to read, but I am glad I stuck with it. A very philosophical book -- it asks the reader to imagine what would happen if you questioned everything about your life and started a new existence.The main character in this book does exactly that, using a book written by a Portuguese doctor to as a tool for self-discovery. If you want to be prompted to think more deeply about life, who you truly are, and about human nature in general, read this book.This is a book which can be read on different levels! At least for me. I can think about a paragraph and the import of those lines OR I can read it for the story from start to finish. Some lines are priceless. Some lines, I just think: What??!!!I am nearing the end! What is going to happen?It ends perfectly.This book is very philosophical! Definitely not for everyone, and it is kind of wordy, but boy is there a lot to think about.....Some reviewers remark that it is poorly translated from the
Apparently, Page des Libraires calls this 'One of the great European novels of the past few years'- compared to what? The SNCF Railway Timetable.This book makes me incredibly angry. And after some thought I can honestly award it the 'worst book I have ever read' award. I could forgive it for being slow. I could forgive the missed opportunities of drawing what potentially could have been interesting characters in two dimensions. I could even forgive the shockingly bad translation (it has not even

Why would you give me this book to read? Why? You didnt like it. At the time I was too pleased to have a present to care. You could have put anything in my hands and Id have been delighted. A pen, a purl, a plum But this? Pah! At the time, I thought it might still be a good story though. It looked to be a quiet, interior journey. Our man, Gregorius, has a thing for words. I can relate. But not in the way I relate at the beginning of Disneys Beauty and the Beast. Gregorius is no Belle.
Coming from a Philosophy professor, I was a bit skeptical to get into the book first, but then I was drawn into the book when the protagonist, Gregorius, also a professor, leaves his stagnant and monotonous life behind on an impulse, and boards a train for Lisbon, to understand the tragic end of a writer.What is the story ? The main character, Raimund Gregorius, is a teacher of classics, who has lead a very tedious life, and that one day, out of the blue, decides to leave his job, go to Lisbon
I am very curious about the book*. There are introductory quotes by Michel Montaigne and Fernando Pessoa, both alluding the question of "self" and "the others"...and the "others within ourselves".Basically, it's a story about a Swiss teacher,an erudite, of Greek and Latin, who saves a Portuguese woman when she's attempting suicide at a bridge over the Aare, in Bern, Switzerland.So it starts. Raimund Gregorius is fascinated by the way she speaks French, with the Portuguese accent...and it
When, on a whim, I threw everything away to wander thousands of miles from anything I've ever known, I first went to Lisbon because of this book. That was last September, and by November I had traipsed through neighboring Spain and south into Africa, though, I've since been back to the city of Lisbon, and furthermore to this book. If you are not, at least in some part, a thinker, if philosophy ebbs away at your patience, if the sight of pages mostly barren of dialogue make you panic, this book
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.