World's masterpiece | novel Alamut

Al-Araf

Author: Vladimir Bartol Publisher: Sanje Language: Slovenian

Knjiga sedemindvajsetih novel, ki jih nosi tok izjemne prodornosti in energije.

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Al-Araf
Al-Araf
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    Datum izida: 15. Oct. 2015

    Al Araf je v Koranu zid med rajem in peklom – zid spoznanja. V zbirki sedemindvajsetih napetih kratkih zgodb spoznavamo Bartola kot izjemno pronicljivega in duhovitega avtorja, ki je prehiteval duh časa na Slovenskem.

    Sedeminšestdeset let zapostavljeni Al Araf je knjiga novel, ki jih nosi tok izjemne prodornosti in energije. Pisatelj iz novele v novelo do osupljivih razsežnosti stopnjuje vprašanja, pred katerimi se je znašel človek 20. stoletja. Al Araf je apokalipsa shizofrenije sodobnega človeka in zemljevid njegove prihodnosti.

    Zbirki dramatičnih zgodb, ki jih je Bartol napisal na osnovi svojih izkušenj in dobrega poznavanja psihologije, biologije, zgodovine in še posebej filozofije, ne manjka domišljije, ljubezni in celo fantastike. Njegovo pisanje močno posega na področja različnih zvrsti: od trivialne, erotično-ljubezenske proze prek pustolovsko-kriminalnega žanra in vse do znanstvene fantastike. Skozi napeto igro učenosti in domišljije pa se v celotnem opusu kaže izjemna volja do notranje moči in svobode. V Al Arafu Bartola zanimajo ljudje, ki imajo osebno moč, ki lahko obvladajo džunglo družbe – tisti, ki suvereno in zmagovito »švigajo kakor ščuke med krapi«.

    Po mnenju nekaterih Bartolovo najboljše delo!

    More Information
    Issue date 10/15/2015
    Scope 352
    ISBN 9789612743659
    Editor Tjaša Koprivec Vuga
    Co-authors Oblikovanje naslovnice: Boštjan Pavletič
    Spremna beseda: Boris Paternu
    Jezikovna redakcija in lektoriranje: Rosana čop
    Jezikovna redakcija (strokovni sodelavec): Jože Faganel
    Collection SANJE roman
    Publisher Sanje
    Language Slovenian
    Meja se bo dvigovala med izvoljenimi in zavrženimi. Na Al Arafu bodo možje, ki bodo spoznali tako prve kot druge.
    Vladimir Bartol

    Vladimir Bartol

    Vladimir Bartol (1903–1967)

    writer, playwright, essayist, and critic. Born in Trieste, Vladimir Bartol was one of Slovenia’s leading intellects and an author of plays, short stories and theater reviews. During the 1920s, he studied at the universities of Paris and Ljubljana, concentrating on philosophy, world religions, psychology (he was among the first to introduce Freud’s teachings in the former Yugoslavia) and biology. During World War II, he participated in the resistance movement against the Nazi occupation of former Yugoslavia.

    Alamut, the second of his two novels, represents the culminating point of his ideas and experiences of totalitarianism during the years before and after World War II. Vladimir Bartol did not live to experience the tremendous success of his novel Alamut, even though he had suspected and predicted it. Over the years, Alamut has been published more than 70 times. The success dreamt of by the author is thus becoming a reality.

    Bartol died on 12 September 1967 in Ljubljana, 64 years old, with most of his work out of print and was at the time virtually unknown among his countrymen.

    Besides Alamut his major works are Lopez (1932, drama), Al Araf (1934, collection of short stories), Tržaške humoreske (1952), Mladost pri Svetem Ivanu (1955–56, autobiography).

    Most of his works are currently being rediscovered and republished by Sanje.

     

    It is striking that in his diary, Bartol predicted his first international success with astonishing precision:

    “I will be understood by the public in 50 years” …1938 – and the first success of Alamut in France in 1988.

    “I had a feeling I was writing for a public who was going to live 50 years later…”

    “I finished Alamut at 5.45 a.m. Pleased. These final days I kept trembling for someone not to steal it from me, for a fire not to start, or for something else not to happen.

    Towards the end I fancied that someone could even have killed me or I could have met with an accident, Alamut was chiefly completed. Yet it was not until I put down the last letter that I felt

    really at ease. Let someone kill me - in Alamut, I am going to be immortal.”

    – Vladimir Bartol, Diary, Sunday, 24 July 1938

     

     

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