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Nights at the Alexandra

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Hailed as one of the greatest living writers of short stories, William Trevor is an elegiac chronicler of loss. Set in a provincial Irish town during the Second World War, this masterpiece of short fiction follows the reminiscences of fifty-eight-year-old Harry, a cinema owner. The narrative explores Harry's adolescence and his unlikely friendship with an émigré couple, Frau Messinger and her much older German husband, who bring color to his otherwise dull life. Disappointed by his mundane family and stifling boarding school, Harry is captivated by Frau Messinger’s enchanting stories and her whimsical nature. When Mr. Messinger plans to build the town's first cinema and offers Harry a job at the ticket window, Harry begins to envision a life filled with possibilities. However, this newfound sense of self comes at a cost, as Trevor skillfully navigates the delicate boundary between innocence and experience. The story paints a subtle portrait of a formative adolescent moment that can shape an entire lifetime, capturing the complexities of growth and the bittersweet nature of memory.

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Nights at the Alexandra, William Trevor

Language
Released
1988
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(Paperback),
Book condition
Good
Price
€5.99

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Title
Nights at the Alexandra
Language
English
Released
1988
Format
Paperback
Pages
80
ISBN10
0099600102
ISBN13
9780099600107
Series
Description
Hailed as one of the greatest living writers of short stories, William Trevor is an elegiac chronicler of loss. Set in a provincial Irish town during the Second World War, this masterpiece of short fiction follows the reminiscences of fifty-eight-year-old Harry, a cinema owner. The narrative explores Harry's adolescence and his unlikely friendship with an émigré couple, Frau Messinger and her much older German husband, who bring color to his otherwise dull life. Disappointed by his mundane family and stifling boarding school, Harry is captivated by Frau Messinger’s enchanting stories and her whimsical nature. When Mr. Messinger plans to build the town's first cinema and offers Harry a job at the ticket window, Harry begins to envision a life filled with possibilities. However, this newfound sense of self comes at a cost, as Trevor skillfully navigates the delicate boundary between innocence and experience. The story paints a subtle portrait of a formative adolescent moment that can shape an entire lifetime, capturing the complexities of growth and the bittersweet nature of memory.