Reseña del editor:
Winter Breaks is a no-frills week-end flight to the saddest hotel in the world. It's a grim Saga tour round the pleasures of old age, decrepitude and oblivion. Here you are only as cold as you feel. At the heart of the book is a cycle of poems based on Franz Schubert's Winterreise. Schubert's broken-hearted young man becomes a modern pensioned-off curmudgeon, an anti-romantic for our times. With one foot in the grave and the other in his mouth, the narrator faces loss and the certain expectation of loss with exasperation, anger and caustic irreverence. Gordon Hodgeon carefully picks his independent way across the frozen landscapes of the twenty-first century, glaciers of the heart, melting ice-caps of the spirit. Winter Breaks is a tribute to the nonconformist conscience, located somewhere between misanthropy and humanism, love and despair, mocking the world in which we live, bearing witness against false and unreliable gods. And when winter - like everything else - breaks down, the melting snows reveal the strength of tested values and convictions, the Horatian virtues of friendship, music, family, poetry, love and a determination to enjoy today - because tomorrow will surely be worse.
Biografía del autor:
Gordon Hodgeon was born in Lancashire in 1941. He has worked in schools, in
teacher-education and in educational administration. From 1972 to 1996 he
was a schools' adviser in Teesside, later Cleveland. He has been active for
many years in NATE, and in Northern Arts, Cleveland Arts and New Writing
North. These days he helps run Mudfog Press. Previous publications include
November Photographs (1981) and A Cold Spell (1996). He lives in
Stockton-on-Tees.
„Über diesen Titel“ kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.