Kolia
Auteurs : Leblanc, Perrine (Auteur) ; Hamilton, David Scott (Traducteur)
Lieu de publication : Toronto
Éditeur : Arachnide
Date de publication : 2013
ISBN : 9781770892194
Langue : Anglais
Description : 213 pages ; 19 cm
Titre orginal : Homme blanc
Sujets :
Clowns - Romans, nouvelles, etc.
Camps de concentration - URSS - Romans, nouvelles, etc.
Arts du cirque dans la littérature
Résumé :
Set against the backdrop of Stalinism and then the collapse of the USSR, Kolia is a luminous and unforgettable story about a boy born in a Siberian Gulag and his eventual freedom and life as a clown in the Moscow circus in the 1960s.
Kolia’s life begins in a labour camp in eastern Siberia in 1937. Iosif, a prisoner originally from Western Europe, teaches him the basic knowledge for survival in the harsh environment of the Gulag, but he also teaches him calculus, Russian, and French, before disappearing like most people who have lived in the open-air prison.
After Stalin’s death, Kolia is released and he’s thrown into Soviet society. He joins a circus in Moscow, where he finds the comfort of a family and is successful until the collapse of the USSR. But the memory of Iosif and the Gulag haunt him all his life.
Kolia is a moving and deeply human novel that beautifully illustrates the resilience of the human spirit. [editor summary]
Collection : Bibliothèque de l'École nationale de cirque
Localisation : Littérature anglaise
Cote : LEB
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