Que se passe-t-il quand on enferme huit scientifiques pendant deux ans dans une gigantesque biosphère sous verre, plantée quelque part dans l'immensité de l'Arizona, pour tester la résistance de l'être humain et sa capacité à vivre en autarcie ? On apprend à se jauger, s'appréhender ou s'éviter. Les complicités se font et se défont, les amitiés naissent et les haines, parfois, explosent. Il faut tenir, car rien ne doit ni entrer ni sortir, et assurer parfois le spectacle pour les sponsors du projet. Mais que faire lorsque la faim, le désir et le sexe s'invitent dans la bulle ?
T. C. Boyle s'inspire d'une expérimentation réellement mise en place aux États-Unis dans les années quatre-vingt-dix pour recréer un huis clos infernal.
T.C. Boyle, en maître incontesté de la forme courte, explore une grande variété de thèmes dans ce nouveau recueil. D'une plume acérée, il nous parle du monde d'aujourd'hui et de demain, des nouvelles technologie et d'écologie, mais toujours en portant une attention particulière aux couples. Ceux qui se forment par hasard quand on est voisins, ou ceux qui sont soumis à rude épreuve par une invasion de fourmis géantes. Certains profitent d'un tsunami annoncé pour se rapprocher, quand d'autres se désagrègent à cause d'une voiture volée et d'un chien disparu. D'autres encore doivent faire face au changement climatique qui menace leur survie. Les nouvelles de Boyle se situent au temps présent ou dans un futur proche, et les préoccupations intimes de ses protagonistes croisent des questions politiques et sociétales de manière toujours surprenante. Boyle possède une voix bien à lui, et les huit nouvelles rassemblées ici en sont une nouvelle et éclatante preuve.
@00000327@One family's adventures in LSD: the brilliantly strange new novel from the mind of 'one of the most inventive, adventurous and accomplished fiction writers in the US today' (Lionel Shriver)@00000133@ @00000327@ Chosen as a Book of the Year 2019 by the @00000373@Herald@00000155@ @00000133@It is Harvard in the early 1960s. Just off campus, Dr Timothy Leary plays host for his PhD students, laying on a spread of cocktails, pizza and LSD. Among the guests is Fitzhugh Loney, a psychology student, and his librarian wife Joanie. Married young, and both diligently and unglamorously toiling to support their son, they are not the sort of people one would expect to be seduced by the nascent drug culture. But their nights on LSD prove so extraordinary - so revelatory, so earth-shattering, so downright seductive - that Fitzhugh and Joanie are soon captive to the whims of the charismatic and subversive Dr Tim.
Follow Fitzhugh and Joanie on their quest for transcendence, as sultry Mexican nights at Hotel Catalina give way to a ramshackle mansion in upstate New York, where thirty devotees - students, wives and children - play out the final act of a terrible, beautiful experiment.
Join us, won't you? It's going to be one hell of a trip.
BY THE WINNER OF THE JONATHAN SWIFT PRIZE 2017 A dynamic new collection from one of our most original storytellers: satirical, surreal and very much of the moment.
In these stories, T. C. Boyle focuses his unerring eye on humanity's relationship with nature, and the unintended consequences of our efforts to control it. The prize-winning 'Are We Not Men?' reflects on the impact of new gene-editing technologies while 'The Relive Box' parodies our obsession with electronic games.
In 'She's the Bomb', a young woman waits on her graduation day, heart in mouth, for an explosive event. A burrito-seller has a killer business idea in 'The Five-Pound Burrito', but learns that success comes at a price. An Italian couple moves south for a fresh start in 'The Argentine Ant', but finds that paradise holds a nasty sting. And in the chilling 'The Designee', a lonely widower can't believe his luck when he receives a mysterious letter from England.
In electric prose T. C. Boyle explores myriad facets of society: greed and excess, parenthood and responsibility, the digital world and the way we understand our mortality. Roaming unrestrainedly through the present and near future, he inhabits his characters' minds with a ventriloquist's flair, skewering human motivations and revealing us to ourselves with empathy and wry humour.
Presents a saga in which scandalous affairs rage behind closed doors, broken hearts are tossed aside, fires rip through the wings of the house and paparazzi lie in wait outside the front door for the tragedy.
A deep and disturbing meditation on the rootsof American gun violence, exploring the fine line between heroism and savagery, and just how far parents can be held accountable for the actions of their child. The son of a Vietnam veteran descends into a spiral of fanatical violence that is impossible to halt. From }New York Times{ bestselling author T.C. Boyle. Now in paperback
Indisponible
It is 1970, and a down-at-the-heels California commune devoted to peace, free love, and the simple life has decided to relocate to the last frontier--the unforgiving landscape of interior Alaska--in the ultimate expression of going back to the land. Armed with the spirit of adventure and naïve optimism, the inhabitants of Drop City arrive in the wilderness of Alaska only to find their utopia already populated by other young homesteaders. When the two communities collide, unexpected friendships and dangerous enmities are born as everyone struggles with the bare essentials of life: love, nourishment, and a roof over ones head. Rich, allusive, and unsentimental, T.C. Boyles ninth novel is a tour de force infused with the lyricism and take-no-prisoners storytelling for which he is justly famous.
BY THE WINNER OF THE JONATHAN SWIFT PRIZE 2017 A dynamic new collection from one of our most original storytellers: satirical, surreal and very much of the moment.
In these stories, T. C. Boyle focuses hisunerring eye on humanity's relationship with nature, and the unintended consequences of our efforts to control it. The prize-winning 'Are We Not Men?' reflects on the impact of new gene-editing technologies while 'The Relive Box' parodies our obsession with electronic games.
In 'She's the Bomb', a young woman waits on her graduation day, heart in mouth, for an explosive event. A burrito-seller has a killer business idea in 'The Five-Pound Burrito', but learns that success comes at a price. An Italian couple moves south for a fresh start in 'The Argentine Ant', but finds that paradise holds a nasty sting. And in the chilling 'The Designee', a lonely widower can't believe his luck when he receives a mysterious letter from England.
In electric prose T. C. Boyle explores myriad facets of society: greed and excess, parenthood and responsibility, the digital world and the way we understand our mortality. Roaming unrestrainedly through the present and near future, he inhabits his characters' minds with a ventriloquist's flair, skewering human motivations and revealing us to ourselves with empathy and wry humour.
A second volume of collected short fiction--from the bestselling author and winner of the 2015 Rea Award for the Short Story Few authors write with such sheer love of story and language as T.C. Boyle, and that is nowhere more evident than in his inventive, wickedly funny, and always entertaining short stories. In 1998, T.C. Boyle Stories brought together the authors first four collections to critical acclaim. Now, T.C. Boyle Stories II gathers the work from his three most recent collections along with fourteen new tales previously unpublished in book form as well as a preface in which Boyle looks back on his career as a writer of stories and the art of making them. By turns mythic and realistic, farcical and tragic, ironic and moving, Boyles stories have mapped a wide range of human emotions. The fifty-eight stories in this new volume, written over the last eighteen years, reflect his maturing themes. Along with the satires and tall tales that established his reputation, readers will find stories speaking to contemporary social issues, from air rage to abortion doctors, and character-driven tales of quiet power and passion. Others capture timeless themes, from first love and its consequences to confrontations with mortality, or explore the conflict between civilization and wildness. The new stories find Boyle engagingly testing his characters emotional and physical endurance, whether its a group of giants being bred as weapons of war in a fictional Latin American country, a Russian woman who ignores dire warnings in returning to her radiation-contaminated home, a hermetic writer who gets more than a break in his routine when he travels to receive a minor award, or a man in a California mountain town who goes a little too far in his concern for a widow. Mordant wit, emotional power, exquisite prose: it is all here in abundance. T.C. Boyle Stories II is a grand career statement from a writer whose imagination knows no bounds.
Quiconque s'est déjà aventuré dans l'univers baroque, féroce et hilarant de ce magicien de la prose qu'est T.C. Boyle connaît bien sa propension à la cruauté...
On ne s'étonnera donc pas de le voir, aujourd'hui, placer sous cette enseigne son nouveau recueil de nouvelles. Cruelles, ces histoires, parce qu'il y est souvent question de vies fracassées par un destin méchamment farceur, mais aussi de bêtes sauvages, d'animaux étranges venant bouleverser le cours de l'existence des malheureux héros de Boyle. Ainsi, dans " Toutes griffes dehors ", un pauvre type à la dérive se retrouve, suite à un pari dans un bar, propriétaire d'une espèce de panthère, laquelle va méthodiquement réduire en miettes son appartement - et plus encore. Dans " Cynologie ", c'est une jeune femme qui se prend pour un chien. Le lecteur est aussi convié à une ahurissante chasse à l'éléphant, au record du monde de l'insomnie, à la visite d'une petite communauté édénique montée de toutes pièces dans un parc d'attractions infesté de moustiques et de crocodiles, ou encore... à la fin du monde, tout bonnement, puisqu'une monstrueuse météorite surgit aussi au détour de ces pages.
Mais la " cruauté " de l'écrivain n'est jamais gratuite ni mauvaise : il s'agit, avant tout, de savourer avec jubilation ces histoires inouïes, irrésistibles de drôlerie et d'originalité, dont Boyle a le secret. Et de découvrir, derrière l'extravagance, une méditation en vérité très incisive sur l'Amérique des ombres, des laissés-pour-compte et de la paranoïa ordinaire.
Voici Bernard Puff, propriétaire d'un hôtel-ranch pour safaris près de Bakesfield en Californie, où vous pourrez dégommer du gros gibier sans connaître les désagréments d'un voyage en Afrique. Puis Susan Certaine, spécialisée dans les kleptomanies à tendance névrotique. Elle vous soulagera de tout ce qui vous encombre, y compris votre santé mentale. Et encore Wallace Pinto, un ado-beatnik. Ou la belle Alena Jorgensen, beauté glacée, libératrice des dindons élevés en batteries à la ferme Hedda-Gabler. Brillantes, exubérantes, acerbes et toujours hilarantes, les quinze nouvelles d'{Histoires sans héros} pétillent et crépitent, nous montrant, comme toujours chez Boyle, les travers de la société américaine.