Kamis, 29 Januari 2015

## Download For Kings and Planets: A Novel, by Ethan Canin

Download For Kings and Planets: A Novel, by Ethan Canin

Why must select the problem one if there is easy? Get the profit by purchasing the book For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin here. You will obtain different method making an offer as well as obtain the book For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin As known, nowadays. Soft data of the books For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin become incredibly popular among the readers. Are you among them? And also below, we are offering you the extra collection of ours, the For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin.

For Kings and Planets: A Novel, by Ethan Canin

For Kings and Planets: A Novel, by Ethan Canin



For Kings and Planets: A Novel, by Ethan Canin

Download For Kings and Planets: A Novel, by Ethan Canin

Is For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin book your preferred reading? Is fictions? Exactly how's concerning record? Or is the most effective seller unique your option to fulfil your spare time? Or even the politic or spiritual books are you searching for currently? Here we go we provide For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin book collections that you need. Lots of varieties of books from several areas are offered. From fictions to scientific research as well as spiritual can be looked as well as learnt here. You might not stress not to discover your referred book to check out. This For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin is among them.

If you obtain the printed book For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin in on-line book establishment, you might additionally find the very same trouble. So, you have to relocate shop to store For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin and also look for the readily available there. But, it will certainly not take place below. Guide For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin that we will supply here is the soft file principle. This is just what make you could conveniently discover and also get this For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin by reading this website. We offer you For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin the most effective product, constantly as well as constantly.

Never ever question with our offer, due to the fact that we will certainly consistently give what you need. As like this upgraded book For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin, you may not discover in the various other area. But right here, it's really easy. Merely click as well as download and install, you could have the For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin When simplicity will relieve your life, why should take the complicated one? You can acquire the soft documents of the book For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin right here and be participant people. Besides this book For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin, you could also discover hundreds lists of guides from lots of resources, collections, publishers, as well as writers in all over the world.

By clicking the link that we provide, you could take guide For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin perfectly. Link to internet, download, as well as conserve to your device. Exactly what else to ask? Reviewing can be so simple when you have the soft data of this For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin in your device. You could additionally duplicate the file For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin to your workplace computer or in the house as well as in your laptop. Just share this excellent information to others. Recommend them to see this page and also get their hunted for publications For Kings And Planets: A Novel, By Ethan Canin.

For Kings and Planets: A Novel, by Ethan Canin

Ethan Canin is one of America's finest writers.  He has been called "brilliant" by the Los Angeles Times, "a tremendous talent" by the Chicago Sun-Times, and "dazzling" by Walker Percy.  The bestselling author of The Palace Thief and Emperor of the Air now gives us this stunning new novel, For Kings and Planets.

"Years later, Orno Tarcher would think of his days in New York as a seduction.  A seduction and a near miss, a time when his memory of the world around him --the shining stone stairwells, the taxicabs, the sea of nighttime lights--was glinting and of heroic proportion.  Like a dream."  So begins this remarkable novel about the lives of two young men and the women they love.

Orno Tarcher arrives in New York City from a small town in Missouri, feeling unsophisticated and disadvantaged by his family's bedrock values.  He meets Marshall Emerson, the charismatic gem of a worldly family, a seductive and brilliant New Yorker who is revealed, as time passes, to be bent on destruction.  The novel explores with depth and sophistication the conflicts of character at the heart of every life, the desire for grandeur and the lure of normalcy, the tension between rivalry and friendship, fathers and sons, love and betrayal.  For Kings and Planets is the story of a man  who thinks of himself as moral, who tests his character against power, deception, and seduction.  It is also the story of a friendship fractured by love.

For Kings and Planets is a remarkable achievement, another fiction classic by the writer who has been called "a worthy successor to...Philip Roth, Elizabeth Bishop, and Robert Penn Warren."

  • Sales Rank: #274468 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2013-03-06
  • Released on: 2013-03-06
  • Format: Kindle eBook

Most helpful customer reviews

27 of 30 people found the following review helpful.
I loved this book
By A Customer
I bought this book partly because I was intrigued by the comments on this page. People seem to have either loved this book or hated it. (Sign of an important piece of art, if you look back through recent history) And the reviews from major professional reviewers have been equally hot or cold. (I've listed a few here so you see what I mean.) The two best reviewers, in my opinion (Christopher Lehmann-Haupt of the NY Times and Alan Cheuse of NPR) both loved it unequivocally, but Rand Cooper (whoever he is) really hated it in his review in the Times Book Review, and Salon did too. So I bought it (used,I admit, but the paperback wasn't out yet and I spend too much on books). So here is my opinion: I consider myself a well-read person (a book a week for the past twenty years), and I would say that this book is one of the two or three most powerful, intelligent, courageous novels that I have read in as long as I can remember. Others I would put in this category are Philip Roth's "American Pastoral" and Mailer's "The Naked and the Dead". It is gorgeously written, psychologically complex, and emotionally unflinching. I just don't see, in the end, why the reviews seem to be so split. It occured to me that younger reviewers might not like the book because it is not hip. That's okay, but if you are, like me, looking for a mature, thoughtful, character-driven novel, then I would say this is a book for you. I could't recomend it more highly.
Here, for your interest, are some of the contrary reviews:
Cristopher Lehmann-Haupt (The New York Times)   Shimmering...luminous...For Kings and Planets leaves you wounded and healed.   Rand Richards Cooper (NYTimes Book Review)   . . .[A] greedy monster of a novel that swallows up its creator's virtues and leaves only weaknesses on display. . . .[it has a] discomfort with form: a welter of narrative summary; important characters who exist solely as props for the protagoist; a bland and pedantic narrative voice.   San Jose Mercury News "For Kings and Planets" is wide and deep, intelligent, subtle but clear, and profoundly satisfying. A wonderful book by a major American writer.
Newsday  To this year's list of outstanding American novels, we must now add Ethan Canin's For Kings and Planets. Never before has Canin been so surehanded a storyteller. Given the achievement of For Kings and Planets, Scott Fitzgerald himself would have been honored by his company. Canin's novel speaks with a hard-earned grace worthy of the master.
Elizabeth Judd, SALON Magazine "Canin pretends that the fate of Orno's soul is up for grabs, when no one -- not even the world's biggest hayseed -- could mistake which way the wind is blowing. Apparently, the moral of "For Kings and Planets" is not that nice guys finish first or last, but that they speak in clichés and graduate at the middle of their dental school class."
Alan Cheuse (NPR All Things Considered) "The most mature and accomplished novelist of his generation. For Kings and Planets stands head and shoulders above the crowd."
There you have it.

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful.
I can think of younger days....and so can Dr. Canin.
By Samuel McKewon
Beautifully written yet painfully spare, the events in "For Kings and Planets" whoosh by the reader like a subway train. For me the style worked, and it didn't work: It worked in the sense that evoked a certain kind of nostalgia; Canin writes peering back into the past, and his ability to boil down affairs and big moments into singular pages is impressive, to be sure. Less can be more.
But less can be less, too, and at times there just doesn't seem to be much excuse for the sheer lack of dialogue in the book. Canin's characters can barely breathe, he does so much of the talking for them. On the book's opening page two women are mentioned, and you'd guess they figure prominently, but only one of them actually has a speaking "part" in the book, and a small one at that. I can appreciate that Canin is guiding us to package this knowledge as a hazy fling that our main character, Orno Tarcher, once had, but still. At times, it just isn't enough.
The story is not complicated: There is Orno, an earnest Midwestern kid and Marshall, a brilliant, depressed New Yorker. They become friends when they meet Columbia University, mostly by chance, and then remain friends ever as Marshall drifts away into other circles. Canin draws Orno very nicely as a decent kid with a tad too much give in his personality. He takes it on the chin from Marshall a few too many times. And Marshall seems more than willing to throw the punch. And there is Simone, Marshall's sister, a sweet, considerate girl with less brilliance than Marshall but twice as much maturity. Orno recognizes those qualities in her and falls in love.
The book appeals to a certain taste. These days, the "in" thing is to delve and delve and delve into a scene or a character or a subject until it's been turned inside out. Canin rejects that. He has great instincts; the book is well thought-out, and well executed. It takes a lot more effort to write a book this way than it does to write a 1000-page tome that just goes on and on. Canin is after crafting realistic characters. That means that not every burden of the week is included.
Did some of the critics have a tough time with this one? Sure they did, because many of them are from the Marshall Emerson set, and it's not in their natural prediliction to side with someone without nihilism and sarcasm. Books like these are hard for the critical community for two reasons:
1. They want more ugliness to get their hands around, more pure, mean drama, more villanous behavior, more tension, more rivalry, presumably because it equals their life.
2. They see earnestness as a naivete, as intellectually underwhelming.
Thus, they disapprove of some of Marshall's changes late in the book, but they disapprove because they, like Orno, saw the Marshall they wanted to see, not the one Canin was quietly creating. Canin craftily shows us just he wants to show us, revealing Marshall's layers slowly, but clearly. There's much more, and in a sense less, there than we first believed.
Are we disappointed with how Marshall turns out? You bet we are. That's part of the point, and what a lot of critics failed to understand. It's clear to me some mistook their disappointment that Canin didn't uphold the jaded academic "standard" of greatness as poor or boring writing.
But "For Kings and Planets" is neither poor nor boring, it's simply a curve ball; for once here's a colorful genius that, we figure, will probably fail, but in a spectacular, weird, grand way that befits an intellectual giant. Orno, we sense, half expects it, too.
The trick, then, is that Marshall has invented half of his greatness, maybe because he wanted to be great, but didn't know how to be, and, in the end, is pretty blase like all the other wasted geniuses out there. Like the book that Marshall writes, the words are there, but not the music; Marshall has the knowledge to lead a great life, but not the style.
Thankfully, Dr. Canin knows the music to make this story sing.

16 of 19 people found the following review helpful.
Nothing New Here
By J. Mullin
I like Canin's short stories, and I really wanted to like this book. I read it in a couple of days, including the last half on a plane, and I must say that by the time I got home from the airport I had pretty much forgotten the whole thing. While Canin is an above-average writer, he treads no new ground here, and with all due respect to my fellow reviewers, to suggest that this novel is a 5 star masterpiece is like eating a nice hot dog for lunch, and proclaiming it the best meal you've ever eaten.
The book, like one reviewer put it, is like a tried and true story of the country mouse and the city mouse. Arno Tarcher comes to Manhattan to attend Columbia, ashamed of his modest beginnings in Missouri, and embarrassed by his parents as he introduces them to his new, sophisticated big city friend Marshall Emerson. The beginning of the novel, including Arno's gradual introduction to college and to NYC, were for me the strongest aspects of the novel. When Marshall starts rubbing off on Arno, as the latter begins staying up all night drinking brandy with pseudo-intellectual Eastern European beatniks at the same cafe every night, I thought the whole thing got a little ridiculous.
Arno to me was the only real well-drawn character in the book. The other characters seemed cardboard and put in the story oftentimes just to act as foils to Arno's small town, Missouri values. Why Marshall goes after Arno's Russian girlfriend, and why he cuts out to spoil a family wedding celebration at Cape Cod, are a mystery that we're just supposed to chalk up to his unpredictability and flamboyance. Then Marshall becomes a Hollywood writer and producer (more evidence of his phoniness, get it?) even though there wasn't a shred of evidence in the plot that he'd ever watched a movie or tv show, much less had any interest in working in Hollywood. Ultimately you really don't care, as you read along to the end just to see the culmination of a very predictable romance. This is definitely not Canin's best effort, the NY Times called it almost "banal." Form your own opinions, but consider yourself warned.

See all 68 customer reviews...

For Kings and Planets: A Novel, by Ethan Canin PDF
For Kings and Planets: A Novel, by Ethan Canin EPub
For Kings and Planets: A Novel, by Ethan Canin Doc
For Kings and Planets: A Novel, by Ethan Canin iBooks
For Kings and Planets: A Novel, by Ethan Canin rtf
For Kings and Planets: A Novel, by Ethan Canin Mobipocket
For Kings and Planets: A Novel, by Ethan Canin Kindle

## Download For Kings and Planets: A Novel, by Ethan Canin Doc

## Download For Kings and Planets: A Novel, by Ethan Canin Doc

## Download For Kings and Planets: A Novel, by Ethan Canin Doc
## Download For Kings and Planets: A Novel, by Ethan Canin Doc

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar