Gør som tusindvis af andre bogelskere
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En mand styrter ned med et fly på en skæbnesvanger dag i Europa.En anden mand går omkring i Paris med sin hustru og inviterer hende, en flygtning, en amerikaner og en hest på café.En tredje mand tilbyder modstræbende en forkommen kvinde husly for natten i sit spartanske køkken.En fjerde mand ifører sig et farvestrålende, stjålent slips, og pludselig opfører hans omverden sig ganske ejendommeligt.Fire kortromaner om mænd og deres til tider besynderlige adfærd i en verden, de har svært ved at finde sig til rette i. Finlands mest populære forfatter i det 20. århundrede, Mika Waltari (1908-1979), er især kendt for sit storværk Sinhue, ægypteren (da. 1948), en historisk roman der udspiller sig i Egypten 1300 f.v.t.; international bestseller og stadig til dato den mest oversatte roman i Finlands historie. I løbet af fem årtier udkom Waltari med over 100 værker indenfor historisk fiktion, krimier, lyrik, noveller, essays, eventyr, rejseberetninger og skuespil. I Finland er han særligt elsket for sine kortromaner, hvoraf fire her præsenteres på dansk. Hans bøger er oversat til over 40 sprog. Internationalt sammenlignes Waltari oftest med Paul Morand, Ernst Hemingway og F. Scott Fitzgerald.
First published in 1956, the novel Etruscan by Finnish author Mika Waltari begins around 480 B.C., and the story takes us on the spiritual journey of a young man named Lars Turms as he adventures through Ancient Greece to Sicily, Rome and, finally, Tuscany, searching for the meaning of life. He gradually becomes aware of his immortality and his duties to the future. Although set in ancient civilization, the book poses many of life's existential questions asked to this day, and the reader will find timeless answers to these timeless questions through the main character. Lars Turm's troubles begin after having abducted Arsinoe, the wanton priestess of Eryx, as he followed her to whatever lands promised her wealth and luxury. But when she falls in love with another, he is forced to flee... and find a destiny beyond his wildest expectations and powers.
Against a background of the strife-torn land of Judea two thousand years ago, Mika Waltari has written what is certainly his most important novel.Seeking the meaning to his life in the study of philosophy, the young Roman. Marcus Manilianus, discovers in an Alexandrian library a vast number of predictions, all tending to confirm his own feeling that the world is about to enter upon a new era. Two chance encounters with Jews who proclaim the coming of a world leader whom they call the Messiah or King, cause Marcus to resolve to make a visit to the Holy City of the Jews. He arrives outside Jerusalem in time to see crowds-some curious, some shocked-staring up at three crosses on a nearby mound. Above the center cross, an inscription had been fixed: JESUS OF NAZARETH, KING OF THE JEWS.The quest that ensues leads Marcus through all parts of Jerusalem and into contact with men and women of all stations of life who had known this remarkable man. And by degrees, wonderful if strange things are revealed to him of Jesus' teaching, and he experiences the odd sensation of almost believing in the destiny of this crucified Roman among the alien Jews, Stands alone on the borderline of two worlds, feelings he belongs to neither, and it becomes vital to him to find "the way, "the Kingdom," to again knowledge and certainty, not merely belief.What follows, as Marcus pursues his search for the promised secret of the Kingdom, bring to a climax as exciting and deeply moving a novel as Mika Waltari, certainly one of the world's outstanding historical novelists, has ever written. It is a story of a time long past, yet it deals with a theme as modern as today: the dilemma of modern man and his culture in gaining and retaining a faith. And always present throughout the novel is the splendor, the irony and humor which have so delighted millions of readers of other Waltari novels from The Egyptian to The Etruscan.
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