x

A Prayer for Owen Meany: A Novel

John Irving (Auteur)
Description

“A remarkable novel. . . . A Prayer for Owen Meany is a rare creation in the somehow exhausted world of late twentieth-century fiction—it is an amazingly brave piece of work . . . so extraordinary, so original, and so enriching. . . . Readers will come to the end feeling sorry to leave [this] richly textured and carefully wrought world.”   — STEPHEN KING, Washington PostA PBS Great American Read Top 100 PickI am doomed to remember a boy with a wrecked voice—not because of his voice, or because he was the smallest person I ever knew, or even because he was the instrument of my mother's death, but because he is the reason I believe in God; I am a Christian because of Owen Meany.In the summer of 1953, two eleven-year-old boys—best friends—are playing in a Little League baseball game in Gravesend, New Hampshire. One of the boys hits a foul ball that kills the other boy's mother. The boy who hits the ball doesn't believe in accidents; Owen Meany believes he is God's instrument. What happens to Owen after that 1953 foul ball is extraordinary.“Roomy, intelligent, exhilarating, and darkly comic . . . Dickensian in scope . . . Quite stunning and very ambitious.” — Los Angeles Times Book Review“Brilliantly cinematic . . . Irving shows considerable skill as scene after scene mounts to its moving climax." — ALFRED KAZIN, New York Times

Biographie de l'auteur

John Winslow Irving, né le 2 mars 1942 à Exeter, New Hampshire (États-Unis), est un romancier et scénariste canado-américain. Son quatrième roman, Le Monde selon Garp, paru en 1978, lui a apporté une reconnaissance internationale qui fait de chacune de ses nouvelles productions un bestseller. Il s'est vu récompenser en 2000 par un Oscar du cinéma pour le scénario de L'Œuvre de Dieu, la Part du Diable (The Cider House Rules) adapté de son sixième ouvrage. Son œuvre est traduite dans une quarantaine de langues.