Unbefugtes Betreten (Ungekürzte Fassung)
Geschrieben von Julian Barnes
Erzählt von Wolfram Koch
3.5/5
()
Über dieses Hörbuch
Ob der frisch geschiedene Immobilienmakler Vernon nicht akzeptieren kann, dass seine Freundin ein Geheimnis hat, das sie nicht preisgeben möchte, ob Phil und Joanna über Sex, Krebs, die Wirtschaft oder Orangenmarmelade diskutieren, ob die Schriftstellerinnen Jane und Alice vor allem Eifersucht füreinander empfinden oder ein Garten Auslöser für eine Ehekrise wird - Julian Barnes legt die menschlichen Stärken und Schwächen, den Rhythmus, den das Leben hat, mit feinem Humor und einem klaren Blick für die alltäglichen Niederlagen und Siege bloß."
Julian Barnes
Julian Barnes (Leicester, 1946) se educó en Londres y Oxford. Está considerado como una de las mayores revelaciones de la narrativa inglesa de las últimas décadas. Entre muchos otros galardones, ha recibio el premio E.M. Forster de la American Academy of Arts and Letters, el William Shakespeare de la Fundación FvS de Hamburgo y es Chevalier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres.
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Rezensionen für Unbefugtes Betreten (Ungekürzte Fassung)
116 Bewertungen15 Rezensionen
- Bewertung: 4 von 5 Sternen4/5Astute and beautifully written, as always. A few stories are heavy on dialogue and I don't think Barnes is at his best with dialogue. Also a few of the stories felt quite out of place to me (Harmony and Carcassonne, mainly).
- Bewertung: 4 von 5 Sternen4/5Barnes is one of my favorite authors and there are a few gems here. The waitress. The dinner party conversations. Perhaps I would have not listened one after the other, but I got a bit bored with the narrator’s tone. The world-weary Britishness of it was a bit much and not appropriate for all stories. Stilling worth a read in these dark times of Covid lockdown.
- Bewertung: 4 von 5 Sternen4/5I enjoyed Barnes's case studies of imperfect or failing relationships and human frailty. The series of over-dinner dialogues with very wordy middle class chatterboxes "At Phil and Joanna's" was not as fun.
- Bewertung: 3 von 5 Sternen3/5Solid collection, Barnes is best when novel length; some of the humour and language a little forced in places but there are classic Barnes observations throughout. “Marriage Lines” and Pulse” the two best entries. Barnes is truly admirable in his devoted query of love and relationships, he is unflinching yet compassionate. A bit commonplace for Barnes, no risks and no rewards overall. Going for poignancy but occasionally ends up a bit treacle.
- Bewertung: 3 von 5 Sternen3/5Leaning towards fours stars, I resigned myself to the lower designation as though the observations were impressive, there wasn't an all becoming instant, there were no talons which lingered after the turning of the page. Sad, that.
- Bewertung: 3 von 5 Sternen3/5This is a set of short stories in 2 parts. The first part are all modern, quite quick moving, quite light in tone. The second half are longer and more intense. Having listened to this, I didn't get the clear division of the book into 2 sections, however the stories themselves do that naturally. I enjoyed the visits to Phil & Joanna's, with the middle class, middle aged couples sitting around the table discussing the great (and not so great)issues of the day. I think I know them! Most of the stories concern relationships that are not going entirely smoothly, meaning it is not necessarily the sunniest of selections. The best story, to my mind, was the final one and the titular story, where the protagonist is dealing with the break up of his marriage and contrasting it with his parents, as that also comes to an end. Moving and thought provoking.
- Bewertung: 3 von 5 Sternen3/5Acerbic and British to the core.
- Bewertung: 3 von 5 Sternen3/5A wet afternoon's first half is redeemed by a sunlit second half; if I had to read one more of those interminable sketches of the dinner party I would have thrown the book across the room.
- Bewertung: 4 von 5 Sternen4/5Barnes, you bastard. I'm sure you did it on purpose. You spent more than half your book with stories that were... well... nicely written but... lacking something? Uninteresting? Something like that. I was seriously considering stopping reading and starting some other book (something I almost never do, so I just kept going).
...and then you did that thing. You finished the first part of the book with a beautiful story, made even better by contrast with the previous. Not only that, but you included the five stories of part II. And that is where you finally laughed at me, at us, for doubting you. You sir, are a bastard, but a really talented one. I loved those stories, much more than I didn't the first ones.
Four stars. On to the next one now. - Bewertung: 5 von 5 Sternen5/5I wouldn't give five starts for the entire book, but the "At Phil & Joanna's 1.. 2.. 3.. and 4" (chapters of numbered gatherings of six friends at Phil & Joanna's house) I enjoyed tremendously.
- Bewertung: 5 von 5 Sternen5/5Pulse is a sublime collection of short stories by Julian Barnes. In 14 stories Barnes explores the theme of what makes a good marriage, in particular focussing on the role of communication in relationships. It is sometimes said that great artistry is borne out of misery, and that a happy marriage is often improductive, at least to some authors. Barnes collection Pulse seems some proof towards that statement. While Barnes openly mourned his wife, who died in 2008, in Levels of Life, Pulse published in 2011 is a superb collection of tales looking at various aspects of perfect and failed marriages.Various stories in the collection explore the role of communication in relationships: what is said, and what isn't; what cannot be talked about, or a free flow of banter. The four stories centred on Phil and Joanna are about such a flow of easy-going, witty but not overly serious conversation. In "East Wind" the lover's prying into privacy and (unspoken) acknowledgement of what the woman tried to conceal breaks up the relation, while in “Trespass” the man treats his new girlfriend as a pure substitute for his ex, falling into the same behavioural patterns, and failing to see why she does not want to marry him. His need to make that explicit is just why.Several of the stories deal with rutted-in behavioural patterns, including, for instance, 'dirty talk' in the title story, "Pulse" which is the last story in the collection.Most stories are characterized by a sublime subtlety, surpassing Barnes previous work. As the theme of the stories is language, likewise the reader must be fine-tuned to listen and spot Barnes' subtle wit, as some irony is explicit and some implicit. Still, there are a number of hilarious moments, which may make you laugh out loud, as in the story Carcassonne".The 14 stories in Pulse are divided into two sections, the division is not very clear, except that the first nine stories in Part One seem a bit closer to everyday life, while the five longer stories in Part 2 seem more serious. Conversation in fiction does not seem Barnes strongest point, nonetheless the conversations in the various stories, while perhaps not the most natural, serve their purpose. In prose, Julian Barnes seems best when the stories take on the hue of non-fiction, as do the stories in Part 2. These stories, with apparently fictionalized autobiographical elements, are most effective, and various are unforgettable.Having read several works by Julian Barnes, it must be said that Pulse belongs to the toppers, on a par with Flaubert's Parrot.Highly recommended.
- Bewertung: 4 von 5 Sternen4/5Well-done stories. Some are conversations, some are more traditional, some funny, others not, some with action -- but all are character-driven.
I enjoyed "Pulse" more than any other modern collection of stories since Alice Munro's "Runaway" from six or seven years ago. - Bewertung: 3 von 5 Sternen3/5As always, he writes beautifully but after the first few stories you descend into mild depression brought on by all the middle-aged uber-ennuie. If you enjoy French films or fiction about educated, well-off Parisian bourgeoisie who find life flat and unsatisfying, you will like this.
- Bewertung: 3 von 5 Sternen3/5Cool contemporary short stories from England...
- Bewertung: 5 von 5 Sternen5/5I'm not usually a short story reader, but when Julian Barnes publishes a short story collection I'm going to read it. He writes the mundane, everyday lives of his characters in such a way that the reader doesn't realize the craft of writing behind them, one reads each story and relates. Each of his characters could be someone you know, and in so few pages you do get to know them. I couldn't help reacting as I was reading with a sigh, a snigger, a raised brow, a tear, or a chuckle. Give Julian Barnes a try.