Teléfonos
941 501 418
Acceso a clientes
Regístrate
Recuérdame
¿Olvidó su contraseña?
Buscar
Búsqueda avanzada
Inicio
Nuevos productos
Contáctenos
No tiene artículos en su carrito de compras.
0 productos
0
Producto (s)
Categorías
eBooks
Artes
Historia y biografías
Literatura y lenguaje
Ficción
Humanidades
Sociedad y ciencias sociales
Economía y finanzas
Derecho
Medicina
Matemáticas y ciencia
Tecnología e ingeniería
Salud y desarrollo personal
Ocio y deportes
Infantil
¿No encuentra un libro?
Pídalo aquí
Compra ahora tu
eReader
El soporte más práctico y flexible para tus libros.
LEER MÁS
Entrega a domicilio en
72hs
Low Cost
eBooks
Por menos de
2
eBooks
Por menos de
5
Top
eBooks
Historia y biografías
Our Fathers
Our Fathers
Ficha
Autor:
Andrew O'Hagan
Editorial:
Faber & Faber
ISBN:
9780571268344
Fecha de Publicación:
2011
Formato:
EPUB
epub
Adobe Drm
Permisos
Impresión no pemitida
Copiar/Pegar no permitido
Nº de dispositivos permitidos ilimitado
€9,47
Hugh Provan was a Modernist hero. A dreamer, a Socialist, a man of the people, he led Scotland's towerblock programme after the war. Now he lies on a bed on the eighteenth floor. The times have changed. His flats are coming down. The idealism he learned from his mother is gone. And even as his breath goes out he clings to the old ways. His wife sings her Scots ballads to soothe him, yet his final months are plagued by memory and loss, by a bitter sense of his family and his country, who could not live up to the houses he built for them. Meanwhile the corruption hearings bring their hammer down on the past.Hugh's grandson, Jamie, comes home to watch over his dying mentor. The old man's final months bring Jamie to see what is best and worst in the past that haunts them all, and he sees the fears of his own life unravel in the land that bred him. He tells the story of his own family - a tale of pride and delusion, of nationality and strong drink, of Catholic faith and the end of the old Left. It is a tale of dark hearts and modern houses, of three men in search of Utopia. Andrew O'Hagan has written a story which is a poignant and powerful reclamation of the past and a clear sighted gaze at our relationship with history, personal and public.
Sé el primero en opinar sobre este producto