基本信息·出版社:Riverhead Trade ·页码:384 页 ·出版日期:2006年06月 ·ISBN:1594481989/9781594481987 ·条形码:9781594481987 ·装帧:平装 · ...
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基本信息·出版社:Riverhead Trade
·页码:384 页
·出版日期:2006年06月
·ISBN:1594481989/9781594481987
·条形码:9781594481987
·装帧:平装
·正文语种:英语
·外文书名:睡美人
内容简介 Sandra is a dancer in the corps of the New York City Ballet who has just been chosen for stardom by the great ballet master George Balanchine. Adam is an explosively gifted new star who has defected to the rival company, the American Ballet Theatre. They're an ambitious young pair on the thrilling precipice of fame, ill-prepared to handle the demands, seductions, expectations, and choices that are visited on them as they finally come within reach of their dreams.
作者简介 Adrienne Sharp is the author of the acclaimed short story collection, White Swan, Black Swan (not published in the UK, though a bestseller in the US). She studied ballet from the age of seven and trained with the prestigious Harkness Ballet in New York. She lives in LA.
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition. 媒体推荐 书评
From Publishers Weekly Former ballerina Sharp presents a sentimental portrait of two ballet dancers, Sandra Ellis and Adam LaSalle, in her debut novel (after her collection
White Swan, Black Swan). Best friends since the age of 15, Sandra and Adam become lovers in their 20s, by which point Adam has left Balanchine''s New York City Ballet for starring roles with Baryshnikov''s American Ballet Theater, while Sandra remains a loyal member of the corps. Sharp frames the novel, set in the ''80s, with the fairy tale of "Sleeping Beauty," a story that Balanchine had in reality always wanted to choreograph but never fully did. Here, though, Sandra serves as the inspiration for Balanchine''s staging of the tale: she catches his eye because of the passion Adam has awoken, and Balanchine plucks her from the corps to transform her into a principal dancer in the epic. But Sandra struggles to choose between her relationship with Adam and the total commitment and sacrifice she believes Balanchine requires. The point of view shifts between each corner of this triangle, often dragging with Adam and Sandra''s inner monologues but sparkling with Balanchine''s richly reimagined story. Sharp offers a detailed insider view of the ballet world, but her love story, though intelligently written, can mire in the maudlin.
(July) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition. From Booklist *Starred Review* As she did in her superb short story collection,
White Swan, Black Swan(2001), Sharp, a former dancer, dramatizes the romance, ambition, and obsessive eroticism of the dance world in her ravishing first novel, adeptly partnering real-life figures with fictional creations. Set in the early 1980s at the height of American ballet''s frenzied popularity and the onset of the AIDS epidemic, it stars the genius dance master George Balanchine, now aging and haunted. As he dreams of creating one last epic work, a sumptuous
Sleeping Beauty, two young dancers long for greatness. Adam, a sexual magnet for men and women, has left Balanchine''s company for Baryshnikov''s and become a star, but Sandra, fragile and elusive, continues to dance in Balanchine''s corps. Opposites attract, but love is a liability in their competitive realm. Just as a dancer fuses with her roles, Sharp fully inhabits the troubled psyches and hard-driven bodies of her commanding yet maddening characters, describing with transporting detail everything from a costume''s cut and sparkle to a tragic kiss. Sharp''s bewitchingly sensual and trenchant tale embodies the sublime and the monstrous aspects of dance and explores our depthless capacity for exultation and suffering.
Donna SeamanCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to the Hardcover edition. Kirkus Reviews, May 1, 2005 A noteworthy, if melancholy, examination of the dancer''s life: years of suffering for moments of beauty.
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition. San Francisco Chronicle, June 19, 2005 For high drama and steamy sex delivered with craft, take
First Love to the beach.
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition. 编辑推荐 From Publishers Weekly Former ballerina Sharp presents a sentimental portrait of two ballet dancers, Sandra Ellis and Adam LaSalle, in her debut novel (after her collection
White Swan, Black Swan). Best friends since the age of 15, Sandra and Adam become lovers in their 20s, by which point Adam has left Balanchine's New York City Ballet for starring roles with Baryshnikov's American Ballet Theater, while Sandra remains a loyal member of the corps. Sharp frames the novel, set in the '80s, with the fairy tale of "Sleeping Beauty," a story that Balanchine had in reality always wanted to choreograph but never fully did. Here, though, Sandra serves as the inspiration for Balanchine's staging of the tale: she catches his eye because of the passion Adam has awoken, and Balanchine plucks her from the corps to transform her into a principal dancer in the epic. But Sandra struggles to choose between her relationship with Adam and the total commitment and sacrifice she believes Balanchine requires. The point of view shifts between each corner of this triangle, often dragging with Adam and Sandra's inner monologues but sparkling with Balanchine's richly reimagined story. Sharp offers a detailed insider view of the ballet world, but her love story, though intelligently written, can mire in the maudlin.
(July) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition. From Booklist *Starred Review* As she did in her superb short story collection,
White Swan, Black Swan(2001), Sharp, a former dancer, dramatizes the romance, ambition, and obsessive eroticism of the dance world in her ravishing first novel, adeptly partnering real-life figures with fictional creations. Set in the early 1980s at the height of American ballet's frenzied popularity and the onset of the AIDS epidemic, it stars the genius dance master George Balanchine, now aging and haunted. As he dreams of creating one last epic work, a sumptuous
Sleeping Beauty, two young dancers long for greatness. Adam, a sexual magnet for men and women, has left Balanchine's company for Baryshnikov's and become a star, but Sandra, fragile and elusive, continues to dance in Balanchine's corps. Opposites attract, but love is a liability in their competitive realm. Just as a dancer fuses with her roles, Sharp fully inhabits the troubled psyches and hard-driven bodies of her commanding yet maddening characters, describing with transporting detail everything from a costume's cut and sparkle to a tragic kiss. Sharp's bewitchingly sensual and trenchant tale embodies the sublime and the monstrous aspects of dance and explores our depthless capacity for exultation and suffering.
Donna SeamanCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to the Hardcover edition. Review A noteworthy, if melancholy, examination of the dancer's life: years of suffering for moments of beauty. --
Kirkus Reviews, May 1, 2005For high drama and steamy sex delivered with craft, take
First Love to the beach. --
San Francisco Chronicle, June 19, 2005 --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.