O Céu é dos Violentos

by Flannery O'Connor
Publisher: Cavalo de Ferro, September of 2008 ‧
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Publicado em 1960, «O céu é dos violentos» é o segundo e último romance de Flannery O’Connor.

O livro narra a história de Francis Tarwater, um adolescente de 14 anos, que tenta a todo o custo escapar ao seu destino: tornar-se num profeta religioso, seguindo as pisadas do seu tio-avô. Quando este último morre, logo no início do romance, Francis renega os seus ensinamentos, põe fogo à propriedade rural onde ambos viviam e vai ao encontro do seu tio, Rayber e do filho deste, Bishop, uma criança mentalmente atrasada, cujo avô de Francis queria salvar através do baptismo. No entanto, Francis descobre que a força do destino se sobrepõe à sua nova vida secular e, através de um acto de extrema violência, reconcilia-se com a missão que lhe tinha sido traçada desde a infância pelo seu avô.

O Céu é dos Violentos

by Flannery O'Connor

Property Description
ISBN: 9789896230838
Publisher: Cavalo de Ferro
Release Date: September of 2008
Language: Portuguese
Dimensions: 132 x 211 x 17 mm
Cover: Softcover
Pages: 240
Format: Book
Categories: Books in Portuguese > Fiction > Romance
EAN: 9789896230838

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Flannery O'Connor

American writer Mary Flannery O'Connor, born on March 25, 1925, in Savannah, Georgia, and died on August 3, 1964, became known for her Southern Gothic short stories. Her writing focused primarily on the decadence of the American South and its people, combining the comic, the tragic, and the brutal.
At the age of twelve, when his father was diagnosed with lupus (a hereditary disease), he moved to Milledgeville, where his mother was born, also in Georgia. His father would die three years later.
Flannery O'Connor graduated with degrees in English and Sociology, and in 1946, her application to the Iowa Writers' Workshop was accepted. That same year, she published her first story. GeraniumLater he would rewrite this story and title it... Judgment DayThis would be his last known work. In 1947, he published the first of his only two novels, Wise Blood, with which he won the Rinehart-Iowa Fiction Award. Two years later, he accepted an invitation from the Greek translator and poet Robert Fitzgerald to live with him and his wife in Redding, Connecticut. However, after a year, Flannery O'Connor was diagnosed with lupus and given a life expectancy of five years (he ended up living about fifteen). He decided to return to Milledgville, to his farm in Andalusia.
It was her most creative period, and in 1955 she herself compiled a collection of her short stories and published it. A Good Man Is Hard to Find and Other StoriesIn 1960, he published his second novel, The Violent Bear It Away (The World Belongs to the Violent)Five years later, a new collection of short stories was published posthumously. Everything That Rises Must Converge, which was further compiled by the author.
Alongside her writing career, Flannery O'Connor also dedicated herself to raising birds, particularly peacocks, and to painting on her farm in Andalusia.
When she died at age 39 on August 3, 1964, Flannery O'Connor had produced 32 short stories and two novels.
Following her death, the Flannery O'Connor Short Story Prize was created, which is awarded annually in the United States of America.

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