On Occasion of My Last Afternoon

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出版者:Perennial
作者:Gibbons, Kaye
出品人:
页数:273
译者:
出版时间:
价格:$13.00
装帧:Paperback
isbn号码:9780380732142
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图书标签:
  • 诗歌
  • 现代诗
  • 个人情感
  • 回忆
  • 孤独
  • 失落
  • 生活
  • 感伤
  • 文学
  • 内省
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具体描述

Amazon.com Polly Holliday of TV's Home Improvement won a Tony nomination on Broadway playing Big Mama in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, and she makes Clarice, the matriarch of Kaye Gibbons' Civil War story On the Occasion of My Last Afternoon, sound very big of voice indeed. Clarice is the slave who really runs things on Virginia's Seven Oaks plantation, no matter what her nasty, brutish owner, Samuel P. Tate, might think. Holliday has a good time voicing Tate's fulminations, too, neatly distinguishing them from the heroine-narrator Emma Tate's rather daintier dulcet tones. Not that Emma can't be wicked in her own way: she describes a snobbish socialite, "aggressively plain in the face ... who effused through the front door and into the arms of everyone simultaneously." Ms. Holliday puts as much sly violence into that "effused" as she does into Mr. Tate's rages. Everyone who read Charles Frazier's Cold Mountain should consider reading On the Occasion of My Last Afternoon, the poetically charged fictional reminiscences of Emma Garnet Tate Lowell, circa 1842-1900. For one thing, it was Frazier's already-published friend Gibbons who, with Frazier's wife's connivance, pried Cold Mountain from his grip and got it into publishers' hands. But beyond their Civil War setting--a first for Gibbons, who's noted for 20th-century tales--the two books share resonant Southern literary accents, characters with similarly obstinate responses to enormous grief, and a shivery sense of history's stark shadow falling across everyday events. Oprah Winfrey twice recommended Gibbons' fiction (Ellen Foster and A Virtuous Woman), and Walker Percy compared her to Faulkner. Oprah probably liked Gibbons's heroines for their plucky refusal to buckle under oppression--a trait shared by Gibbons herself, who triumphed over the manic-depressive illness that drove her mother to suicide. Our heroine, Emma, shivers under the tyranny of her plantation daddy, Mr. Tate, who slits the throat of a slave who talks back to him and just might do the same to his half-dozen children. There is no enormity of which he is incapable, this bellowing Simon Legree with an autodidact's education and a self-made man's bottomless urge to rise above his raising. He is, as he might have thunderingly put it, "a pluperfect son of Satan." Only Clarice can fight Samuel Tate to a verbal draw and prevent slave uprisings on the eve of the war. Clarice helps save Emma, as does Emma's impeccable swain Dr. Quincy Lowell, who sweeps in like a cool Boston breeze to dispel the dismal tidewater miasma. The war, alas, brings a tsunami of blood, forcing Dr. Lowell to make Emma a de facto battlefield surgeon, an occasion he recognizes by fashioning a bit of commemorative jewelry for her from a dead man's silver filling and inscribing the date with a finger-amputation tool. One aspect of Gibbons' Frazier-esque orgy of historical research for the book is an authentic feel for the grotesqueries of the period. One craves for Emma's hubby and daddy to swap five percent of each others' respectively perfect and perfectly awful souls--the book is not big on startling character revelations. What makes it work, despite its binary morality, is the grace and rumbling life of the narrator's language. The book, which has its sometimes anachronistically enlightened head in the New South and its feet firmly planted in the past, deserves a place next to Russell Banks' John Brown novel Cloudsplitter. At points, it reads like a smarter, nonracist Gone with the Wind, only less windy.--Tim Appelo --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. From Publishers Weekly A plea for racial tolerance is the subtext of Gibbons's estimable new novel, her first foray into historical fiction. Like her previous books (Ellen Foster, 1997, etc.), it is set in the South, but this one takes place during the Civil War era. Now 70 and near death, Emma Garnet Tate begins her account by recalling her youth as a bookish, observant 12-year-old in 1842, living on a Virginia plantation in a highly dysfunctional family dominated by her foulmouthed father, a veritable monster of parental tyranny and racial prejudice. Samuel Tate abuses his wife and six children but he also studies the classics and buys paintings by old masters. Emma's long-suffering mother, of genteel background and gentle ways, is angelic and forgiving; her five siblings' lives are ruined by her father's cruelty; and all are discreetly cared for by Clarice, the clever, formidable black woman who is the only person Samuel Tate respects. (Clarice knows Samuel's humble origins and the dark secret that haunts him, which readers learn only at the end of the book.) Gibbons authentically reproduces the vocabulary and customs of the time: Emma's father says "nigger" while more refined people say Negroes. "Nobody said the word slave. It was servant," Emma observes. At 17, Emma marries one of the Boston Lowells, a surgeon, and spends the war years laboring beside him in a Raleigh hospital. Through graphic scenes of the maimed and dying, Gibbons conveys the horror and futility of battle, expressing her heroine's abolitionist sympathies as Emma tends mangled bodies and damaged souls. By the middle of the book, however, Emma's narration and the portrayal of Clarice as a wise and forbearing earthmother lack emotional resonance. Emma, in fact, is far more interesting as a rebellious child than as a stoic grown woman. One finishes the novel admiring Emma and Clarice but missing the compelling narrative voice that might have made their story truly moving. Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. See all Editorial Reviews

《倾尽余晖》 引言 《倾尽余晖》并非一部简单的回忆录,它更像是一幅徐徐展开的画卷,描绘着一个人在生命某个特定节点,对过往的回溯、当下的审视以及对未来的凝望。作者以一种近乎诗意的笔触,将那些散落在时间长河中的片段串联起来,不着痕迹地揭示出个体在时代洪流中的渺小与坚韧,在情感纠葛中的迷茫与成长。这本书没有跌宕起伏的传奇故事,没有惊心动魄的冒险经历,它所呈现的,是更为普遍而深刻的人生体验——关于爱与失去,关于梦想与现实,关于孤寂与陪伴,关于选择与放下。 第一部分:时间的剪影 故事的开端,并非从一个宏大的场景切入,而是从一个微小的、几乎被遗忘的瞬间开始。或许是某个午后,阳光透过斑驳的树影洒落在泛黄的纸页上;或许是某个雨夜,窗外的雨声勾勒出内心深处的宁静与忧伤。作者并未直接点明“最后一个下午”的具体含义,而是通过一系列碎片化的叙事,营造出一种弥漫着淡淡怀旧与告别的氛围。 这些剪影,可能是童年时期某个无忧无虑的午后,在田野里追逐蝴蝶的欢声笑语;可能是青春期初次感受到心动的悸动,羞涩而笨拙地递出一张小纸条;可能是步入社会后,在陌生的城市里感受到的孤独与迷惘,无数次在深夜里仰望星空,问自己何去何从。作者善于捕捉那些生活中最容易被忽略的细节,比如空气中淡淡的花香,指尖拂过旧照片的触感,甚至是微风吹过发梢的轻柔。这些细微之处,却能唤醒读者内心深处沉睡的记忆,引发共鸣。 在这些时间的剪影中,人物的形象也逐渐鲜活起来。虽然作者并未刻意去塑造一个完美的主角,但通过他们与周围环境的互动,与他人的交流,以及内心的独白,读者能够感受到他们的喜怒哀乐,他们的优点与缺点。他们可能是我们身边的任何人,有过相似的经历,有过相同的困惑。他们的故事,就是我们故事的缩影。 第二部分:情感的潮汐 《倾尽余晖》的核心,在于对情感的细腻描摹。作者没有回避情感的复杂与矛盾,而是坦然地展现了爱、失去、依恋、疏离等种种人类情感的潮起潮落。 关于爱,它可能是一段纯真的初恋,美好得如同夏日的第一朵玫瑰,即使凋零,香气依旧萦绕;它也可能是亲情,那种深沉而无需言语的牵绊,无论身在何方,总有一盏灯为你而亮;它更可能是一种对理想、对事业、对某个理念的执着追求,即使千辛万苦,也甘之如饴。作者在描写爱时,并非一味地歌颂,而是展现了爱中的脆弱与易逝,以及人们为了守护爱所付出的努力与代价。 而失去,则是生命中不可避免的篇章。失去亲人,失去挚友,失去曾经珍视的某个东西,甚至失去曾经的自己。作者以一种平静却深邃的笔调,触及了失去带来的伤痛。然而,这种伤痛并非绝望的深渊,而是成长蜕变的契机。在失去之后,人们学会了更加珍惜,学会了更加坚强,也学会了如何与伤痛共处,如何在废墟中寻找新的生机。 书中也探讨了人与人之间微妙的关系。那些曾经亲密无间的朋友,为何渐行渐远?那些曾经刻骨铭心的恋人,为何走向陌路?作者没有给出简单的答案,而是通过对对话、眼神、肢体语言的细致刻画,展现了沟通的障碍,现实的无奈,以及时间流逝对情感的侵蚀。然而,即便如此,作者也并非完全否定情感的价值。在那些曾经的羁绊中,总有闪光点值得回味,总有曾经的温暖能够抚慰心灵。 第三部分:现实的印记 《倾尽余晖》并非沉溺于纯粹的情感世界,它同样扎根于现实的生活肌理。作者深刻地描绘了个人在社会环境中的挣扎与适应。 时代的变迁,往往在不经意间改变着个体的命运。书中可能穿插着对某个历史时期社会风貌的侧写,对经济发展对个人生活带来的影响的探讨。例如,曾经的淳朴与信任,在时代的变迁中是否逐渐被功利与冷漠所取代?曾经的理想与抱负,在现实的压力下是否不得不做出妥协?作者以一种旁观者的清醒,记录下这些社会性的变迁,以及它们如何在个体的生命轨迹上留下深深的印记。 对于梦想的追逐,也是书中一个重要的主题。每个人心中都可能有一个不灭的火种,一个想要实现的愿望。然而,现实往往是残酷的,它可能需要你付出超乎想象的努力,承受巨大的压力,甚至面临失败的风险。作者通过书中人物的经历,展现了梦想与现实之间的博弈。有些人可能最终实现了自己的梦想,虽然过程充满了艰辛;有些人可能不得不放弃部分梦想,转而追求更脚踏实地的目标;还有些人,可能在追逐的过程中,发现了比最初梦想更珍贵的东西。 职场上的尔虞我诈,人际关系的复杂,家庭的责任与压力,这些都是现实生活中不可回避的挑战。《倾尽余晖》以一种坦诚的态度,展现了这些挑战对个体成长的影响。人们在这些磨砺中学会了圆滑,学会了担当,也学会了在纷繁复杂的世界里,寻找属于自己的立足之地。 第四部分:内心的回响 随着故事的深入,我们逐渐走进了人物的内心世界。作者以一种沉静而内敛的方式,挖掘出人物最深处的思想与感受。 孤独感,是一种普遍存在的情感体验。尤其是在现代社会,即使身处人群,人们也可能感到莫名的孤寂。作者没有将孤独描绘成一种需要被克服的病症,而是将其视为一种与自我对话的机会。在孤独中,人们得以审视内心,认识真实的自己,发现自己内在的力量。 对生命的意义的追问,是贯穿全书的另一条隐线。在经历过人生的起起伏伏之后,人们开始思考生命的价值,生命的走向。死亡并非总是令人恐惧,有时它也提醒着人们生命的宝贵,激励着人们去珍惜当下,去活出更精彩的人生。书中人物可能通过对生死的思考,对过去的经历进行重新解读,从而获得一种更深刻的领悟。 最终,这本书所传递的,并非对过去的沉湎,也非对未来的恐惧,而是一种对“此刻”的深刻体验与接纳。即使是“最后一个下午”,也蕴含着无限的可能性。重要的不是时间的长度,而是如何度过这段时间。通过对过往的审视,作者似乎在告诉读者,无论经历过什么,无论身处何方,我们都有能力去拥抱当下,去创造属于自己的价值。 结语 《倾尽余晖》是一本需要静下心来阅读的书。它没有华丽的辞藻,没有惊人的情节,但它有足以触动人心的力量。它像一杯陈年的老酒,越品越有味;它又像一曲悠扬的旋律,在心底久久回荡。它不是一个故事的结束,而是对生命旅程的一次深刻致敬,一次对所有曾经的、现在的,以及可能的美好瞬间的温情回望。阅读这本书,就如同在某个宁静的午后,与一位智者对坐,听他娓娓道来,关于人生,关于自己,关于生命中那些最柔软,也最坚韧的部分。

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