3
0
Support the library.
Your support helps keep books free for everyone ❤️
📍 Noticed
Near to the Wild Heart
by Clarice Lispector
Sponsored
Synopsis
Near to the Wild Heart is Clarice Lispector's first novel, written from March to November 1942 and published around her twenty-third birthday. The novel, written in a stream-of-consciousness style reminiscent of the English-language Modernists, centers around the childhood and early ...
Near to the Wild Heart is Clarice Lispector's first novel, written from March to November 1942 and published around her twenty-third birthday. The novel, written in a stream-of-consciousness style reminiscent of the English-language Modernists, centers around the childhood and early adulthood of a character named Joana, who bears strong resemblance to her author: "Madame Bovary, c'est moi", Lispector said, quoting Flaubert, when asked about the similarities. The book, particularly its revolutionary language, brought its young, unknown creator to great prominence in Brazilian letters and earned her the prestigious Graça Aranha Prize.
Joana, a young woman very much in the mode of existential contemporaries like Camus and Sartre, ponders the meaning of life, the freedom to be one's self, and the purpose of existence. Near to the Wild Heart does not have a conventional narrative plot. It instead recounts flashes from the life of Joana, between her present, as a young woman, and her early childhood. These focus, like most of Lispector's works, on interior, emotional states of mind.
Joana, a young woman very much in the mode of existential contemporaries like Camus and Sartre, ponders the meaning of life, the freedom to be one's self, and the purpose of existence. Near to the Wild Heart does not have a conventional narrative plot. It instead recounts flashes from the life of Joana, between her present, as a young woman, and her early childhood. These focus, like most of Lispector's works, on interior, emotional states of mind.
You May Also Like
Fuccboi
Sean Thor Conroe
Unbound (Shifters of the Zodiac Book 1)
T. B. Wiese
The Longevity Paradox: How to Die Young at a Ripe Old Age
Steven R. Gundry
Folklore and Fable: Aesop, Grimm, Andersen (Harvard Classics, #17)
Charles William Eliot
Warning Signs
Tracy Sierra
Defining Style: The Book of Interior Design
Joan Barzilay Freund
Biography Picks
View All
Four Eyes: A Graphic Novel
Rex Ogle
Fly, Wild Swans: My Mother, Myself and China
Jung Chang
The Flower Bearers: A Memoir
Rachel Eliza Griffiths
King of Kings: The Iranian Revolution—A Story of Hubris, Delusion and Catastrophic Miscalculation
Scott Anderson
The Tragedy of True Crime: Four Guilty Men and the Stories That Define Us
John J. Lennon
Departure
Julian Barnes