From the International Booker Prize–winning author of Time Shelter, a powerful novel on grief and the inevitable end of childhood.“My father was a gardener. Now he is a garden.”Death and the Gardener traces the final month of a father’s life, a dying father in a dying world. His son Georgi, the narrator, reports both radically and gently from those end times. The novel unfolds also as a history of the father’s generation—born in Bulgaria at the end of World War II, “often absent, clinging to th…
From the International Booker Prize–winning author of Time Shelter, a powerful novel on grief and the inevitable end of childhood.
“My father was a gardener. Now he is a garden.”
Death and the Gardener traces the final month of a father’s life, a dying father in a dying world. His son Georgi, the narrator, reports both radically and gently from those end times. The novel unfolds also as a history of the father’s generation—born in Bulgaria at the end of World War II, “often absent, clinging to the snorkel of a cigarette, swimming in different waters and clouds.” What kept the old man down to earth was his garden, turning after his departure into a place of ultimate loss but also of consolation, where he would live on in the first tulips of spring. With striking acuity, Georgi Gospodinov explores the peculiar reality of taming grief through storytelling. Masterfully translated by Angela Rodel, this is another profoundly moving novel from “one of the indispensable writers of our times” (International Booker Prize Jury).
From the International Booker Prize–winning author of Time Shelter, a powerful novel on grief and the inevitable end of childhood.
“My father was a gardener. Now he is a garden.”
Death and the Gardener traces the final month of a father’s life, a dying father in a dying world. His son Georgi, the narrator, reports both radically and gently from those end times. The novel unfolds also as a history of the father’s generation—born in Bulgaria at the end of World War II, “often absent, clinging to the snorkel of a cigarette, swimming in different waters and clouds.” What kept the old man down to earth was his garden, turning after his departure into a place of ultimate loss but also of consolation, where he would live on in the first tulips of spring. With striking acuity, Georgi Gospodinov explores the peculiar reality of taming grief through storytelling. Masterfully translated by Angela Rodel, this is another profoundly moving novel from “one of the indispensable writers of our times” (International Booker Prize Jury).
Reviews
No reviews
0 customers have rated this item.
5
0%
4
0%
3
0%
2
0%
1
0%
Price guarantee
Bookbook.eu guarantees the best price for items marked with the “Price Guarantee” badge. If an identical item costs less at another online store, we will refund the price difference. Prices are compared with the prices of items at the list of stores specified by bookbook.eu. Bookbook.eu undertakes to refund the price difference to the customer who applies under the conditions specified in the “Price Guarantee” rules. Learn more
E-book
22,39 €
ATTENTION!
This book is provided ACSM format. It is not suitable for standard reading devices that support EPUB or MOBI format e-books.
Important! It is not possible to download e-books when connecting from the United Kingdom.
This is a book being sold by a private person. After you pay for your order, the book seller will send it within 7 days . If the seller does not do this on time, the money will be refunded to you automatically.
The condition of this book has not been assessed by Bookbook.eu experts, so all responsibility for the stated book quality lies with the seller.
Would you also like to sell used books and earn money? Learn more here
Item successfully added to cart
Used book:
A used book sold directly from the Bookbook.eu warehouse. The book's quality has been assessed by Bookbook.eu experts.
Reviews