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To the Wedding

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Booker Prize-winning author John Berger gives a novel both tragic and joyous, intelligent and erotic. In To the Wedding, a blind Greek peddler tells the story of the wedding between a fellow peddler and his bride in a remarkable series of vivid and telling vignettes. As the book cinematically moves from one character's perspective to another, events and characters move toward the convergence of the wedding—and a haunting dance of love and death.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 18, 1996
      British novelist and art critic Berger's novel is a bittersweet love story celebrating post-Cold War Europe.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 1, 1995
      Ritual and myth; technology and science; history, both natural and human--each plays a crucial supporting role in this novel about a Franco-Italian railwayman, a Czech engineer, their un-selfpitying HIV-positive daughter and the Italian street vendor who determines to marry her. Among the many beauties of this highly original work--which matches Berger's Into Their Labours trilogy in sweep and power--are its command of the various cultures and settings depicted and the way its voices filter through the central narrative presence, a blind Greek peddler of religious artifacts. Berger's gift for the succinctly rendered incident or detail--heightened in the context of the daughter's impending death--lends the tale both eventful density and narrative lightness, speeding it across the post-Cold War Europe that is the story's true love object, toward the moving and bittersweet scenes of the denouement. With its muted despair over our recent cultural and political failings (``Mankind has lost its nerve'') and its tender and determined celebration of its characters in spite of it, Berger's latest work speaks uniquely to the present.

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  • English

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