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Padgett Powell

    April 25, 1952

    Padgett Powell writes with incredible inventiveness and precision, exploring the depths of human experience. His works are characterized by a unique style that masterfully blends humor, tragedy, and profound insights into Southern life. Powell's prose is rich with linguistic experimentation, offering readers a fresh perspective on familiar themes. Through his novels, the author delves into the complexities of identity, memory, and the search for meaning in an often ambiguous world.

    Schrottplatz der gebrochenen Herzen
    Mrs. Hollingsworth's Men
    A woman named Drown
    The Celts
    The Interrogative Mood
    Edisto Revisited
    • Edisto Revisited

      • 160 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      Fourteen years after we first met Simons Manigault, our protagonist is newly graduated from Clemson University, bored, unfocused, and idling his summer away at his mother’s home in Edisto, South Carolina. Not yet ready to fully embrace adulthood, Simons finds himself surrendering to cynicism, as well as to the temptations of his “turned-out-well” first cousin, Patricia.To avoid sinking further into his rut, Simons embarks on a road trip through the South. After a disastrous stint as a Corpus Christi fisherman, he exits the Lone Star State, doubling back to the Louisiana bayou to spend some quality time with his former friend and mentor—and his mother’s ex-lover—Taurus. But as even Taurus’s once sought-after wisdom wears thin, Simons begins to suspect that the grass is not greener on the other side—it may be burnt, brown, and dead wherever he goes.

      Edisto Revisited
      3.7
    • The Interrogative Mood

      • 176 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      Are your emotions pure? Are your nerves adjustable? How do you stand in relation to the potato? Should it still be Constantinople? Does a nameless horse make you more nervous or less nervous than a named horse? In your view, do children smell good? Does your doorbell ever ring? Through the series of questions, this title intends to light up life.

      The Interrogative Mood
      3.4
    • The Celts

      • 232 pages
      • 9 hours of reading

      A classic account of the language, culture, and traditions of the Celts.

      The Celts
      3.5
    • Mrs. Hollingsworth's Men

      • 134 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      At her kitchen table somewhere in the South, Padgett Powell's narrator embarks on a spirited and often hilarious imagining of certain historical figures and current national preoccupations. Ostensibly writing her grocery list, Mrs. Hollingsworth most happily loses her sense of herself. Her list becomes a discovery of the things she has and those she lacks, including men -- even her own husband. Mrs. Hollingsworth begins her list by imagining a lost-love story in which she is playful with and disdainful of the conventions of Southern literature. Soon tiring of that, she decides to turn up her imagination. For reasons unclear to her, the Confederate general Nathan Bedford Forrest, an icon of the Lost Cause, rides into her tired lost-love story. He appears as a hologram created by a media giant, Roopit Mogul, who aims to find the real New Southerner -- in a man who can recognize General Forrest's image. Into this surreal atmosphere enter Mrs. Hollingsworth's all too real daughters, the forgotten husband, Mr. and Mrs. Mogul, the boys of the neighborhood, and petty criminals named Oswald and Bundy. Within this singular narrative collage, strong tenderness arises, with accounts of genuine lost love, both familial and wholly romantic. MRS HOLLINGSWORTH'S MEN is a remarkable achievement, full of style and feeling.

      Mrs. Hollingsworth's Men
    • Sie begehren auf gegen vorgestanzte Lebensmuster. Sie provozieren, irritieren, stören. Sie trinken und lügen. Sie setzen alles aufs Spiel. Padgett Powells Figuren eint der tägliche Kampf gegen den Absturz, gegen Wahnsinn und Delirium. Ein Mann, der auf einer Mauer patrouillierend den Schrottplatz gebrochener Herzen bewacht; ein zwölfjähriger Knirps, der der reifen, gelangweilten Mrs Hollingworth unziemliche Avancen macht; der Dachdecker Wayne, der Frau und Kinder verlässt und sich im weiten amerikanischen Süden zu verlieren droht. »Das Leben ist Flaute«, heißt es in einer Story, doch nichts stimmt weniger für Powells trotzige Helden. Das Leben ist Aufruhr, und niemand könnte besser davon erzählen, rotzig, neurotisch, abgrundtief komisch, als Padgett Powell.

      Schrottplatz der gebrochenen Herzen