Kafka Franz

Le Château

Version 32087 - 2012-03-22 20:57:36 +0100


Étrange et lointain, le château se dresse dans la nuit. Tout juste arrivé au village voisin, K., le nouvel Arpenteur, ne sait ni en quoi consiste son travail, ni comment accéder au château. Il se trouve confronté au chaos d'un système conçu pour être appliqué tel qu'il est : inflexible, imparable... absurde.

Tour à tour onirique ou réaliste, drôle et terrifiant, Le Château est beau comme un oxymore.
Auteur majeur de la littérature mondiale du XXe siècle, Franz Kafka, écrivain tchèque né en 1883, est également l'auteur du Procès et de La Métamorphose. Il meurt en 1924. Ses romans seront publiés à titre posthume.

« Le génie de Kafka, c'est justement de se dérober à toute interprétation, d'aller toujours au-delà de ce qu'on en dit. » - Georges-Arthur Goldschmidt

Traduit de l'allemand et présenté par Georges-Arthur Goldschmidt

Vargas Fred

Temps glaciaires

Temps glaciaires s'ouvre sur deux suicides qui lancent le commissaire Adamsberg et ses hommes vers deux enquêtes en apparence sans lien. L'une se déroule au large de l'Islande, sur l'ilôt du Renard, où, 10 ans plus tôt, des touristes français ont vécu un cauchemar, et l'autre au sein d'une société secrète où se retrouvent des adorateurs de Robespierre.

Vitoux Frédéric

Dictionnaire Amoureux des Chats

" Dans l'arbitraire enchanté de mon amour des chats, je n'ai voulu négliger aucune discipline. Ni aucun aveu. J'ai tenu à évoquer les chats dont j'ai eu l'honneur de partager la vie. Je me suis efforcé de n'oublier aucun des livres que j'ai aimés et où les chats ont joué un rôle à mes yeux prépondérants. Cinéphile, j'ai resongé bien sûr aux films où les matous jouaient les stars ou les rôles de composition... Mais n'insistons pas ! J'aimerais que le lecteur ouvre, s'il le désire, ce livre un peu au hasard, pour aller de surprises en surprises, de portraits en anecdotes. Qu'il soit complice en somme de cette promenade dans un domaine qui relève aussi de la plus haute civilisation – car l'homme, en un sens, s'est vraiment civilisé quand il a accepté le chat à ses côtés, tel un libre compagnon, un associé, et non pas un animal domestique ou domestiqué, ce que celui-ci n'a jamais voulu être... "

Frederick Forsyth

Devil's Alternative

The brief paragraph on the front page of Lloyd's list of shipping news went pretty much unnoticed. But there is one reader, Andrew Drake, senior clerk in a London firm of chartered shipbrokers, for whom that paragraph will have more than passing interest. As it turns out, the man discovered unconscious and near-dead in the Black Sea off the coast of Turkey is a refugee Ukrainian partisan. Drake meets the survivor and suddenly finds he is party to international terror and intrigue. "A good long -- possibly prophetic -- read, and exciting enough to make you sweat." (The Daily Mail)

Frederick Forsyth

Dogs of War

#1 New York Times bestselling author Frederick Forsyth delivers an international thriller that takes readers into the darkest hearts of men and nations…
 
In a remote corner of the impoverished African republic of Zangaro lies Crystal Mountain. At certain times of the day, the mountain itself seems to glow with a strange light. Only the ruthless and untouchable tycoon Sir James Manson knows why: the mountain contains billions of dollars worth of the world’s most valuable mineral—platinum. And he wants it all.

To do so, he must first remove the unfriendly government currently in power and replace it with a puppet regime. Towards this end, Manson hires the deadly Cat Shannon and his team of mercenaries to do the dirty work. But he didn’t realize how bloody things were going to get. And when he betrays the mercenaries to a brutal fate, he doesn’t realize how far Shannon is willing to go for revenge…

**

Lucien Febvre

Martín Lutero

¿Unabiografía de Lutero? No. Un juicio sobre Lutero, nada más. Dibujarla curva de un destino que fue sencillo pero trágico; situar con precisión lospocos puntos verdaderamente importantes por los que pasó; mostrar cómo, bajo lapresión de qué circunstancias, su impulso primero tuvo que amortiguarse y sutrazo primitivo desviarse; plantear así, a propósito de un hombre de unasingular vitalidad, el problema de las relaciones del individuo con lacolectividad, de la iniciativa personal con la necesidad social, que es, talvez, el problema capital de la historia: tal ha sido nuestro intento. Intentarrealizarlo en tan pocas páginas era consentir de antemano en enormessacrificios. Sería un poco injusto reprochárnoslos demasiado. Y no deberáasombrar que, ante el límite de espacio, hayamos sacrificado deliberadamente alestudio del Lutero maduro que de 1517 a 1525 desempeña en el escenario delmundo, con tanta potencia, su papel heroico de profeta inspirado, el Luterohipotético de los años de juventud, o ese Lutero cansado, agobiado,desilusionado, que se va marchitando de 1525 a 1546. ¿Debemos añadir que alescribir este libro no hemos tenido más que una idea: comprender y, en lamedida en que nos era posible, hacer comprender? Más vale decir cuántasatisfacción tendríamos, sencillamente, si en este trabajo de vulgarización, dereflexión también, los exégetas calificados del pensamiento luteranoreconocieran por lo menos una constante preocupación: la de no empobrecerexcesivamente, por simplificaciones demasiado violentas, la riqueza matizada deuna obra que no fue nada melódica, sino que, de acuerdo con la moda de suépoca, fue polifónica.

Jasper Fforde

The Locked Room

"So who's the victim?" asked Detective Inspector Jack Spratt, shaking his overcoat of the cold winter rain as he entered Usher Towers. "It's Locked Room Mystery," explained his amiable sidekick, Detective Sergeant Mary Mary. "He was found dead at 7.30pm. But get this: the library had been locked ... from the inside."

Jean Yves Frétigné

Histoire de la Sicile

Difficile d’imaginer un territoire sur lequel se sont succédé autant de civilisations brillantes et où tant de populations se sont tour à tour installées ! Depuis l’Antiquité jusqu’à nos jours, la Sicile a abrité quelques-unes des cités grecques les plus prestigieuses, les empires romain et byzantin, des établissements musulmans. Elle a été mise en tutelle par une poignée de chevaliers venus de Normandie, dominée par l’Empire germanique puis par l’Espagne et soumise au règne d’une branche des Bourbons. Faisant partie de l’Italie unifiée depuis un siècle et demi, elle n’en conserve pas moins des traits tout à fait marqués : Rome n’y a pas toujours été toute-puissante.Terre de culture d’une densité et d’une personnalité historiques très fortes mais aussi victime de nombreux préjugés, la Sicile est un objet d’histoire à part entière. Ouvrage de référence, compagnon de voyage, le récit documenté de Jean-Yves Frétigné n’a guère d’équivalent sur le sujet.

Jean-Yves Frétigné est maître de conférences à l’université de Rouen, agrégé d’histoire, docteur en histoire contemporaine (IEP-Paris) et ancien membre de l’Ecole française de Rome. Il est spécialiste de l’histoire italienne des xixe et xxe siècles. Il est notamment l’auteur d’une biographie de Giuseppe Mazzini (Fayard, 2006) couronnée par le prix de l’Académie du Maine.

Luis E Íñigo Fernández

Breve historia de la Alquimia

Breve Historia de la Alquimianos ayuda a comprender la fuerte vinculación de la ciencia con la naturaleza espiritual del universo. Lejos de ser unos charlatanes, los alquimistas han sido los filósofos más relevantes de su tiempo, auténticos estudiosos de la realidad con una conciencia metafísica que les llevó a buscar la Piedra Filosofal que convertiría el plomo en oro y daría al hombre la inmortalidad.Luis Íñigo nos ofrece una versión total de la alquimia, desde sus antecedentes en los doctrinas filosóficas del hermetismo, del gnosticismo, del pitagorismo y de la Escuela de Jonia hasta la actualidad en la que, si bien no se practica, si que se han aprovechado sus hallazgos en medicina o en química. Nos muestra en el inicio del libro las teorías de la alquimia, el trabajo de laboratorio de los alquimistas y los avances a los que llegaron con principios que aún pertenecen a la ciencia como el de causa y efecto; tras esto recorre en un estilo ágil la historia de la alquimia desde sus inciertos orígenes en el Antiguo Egipto, hasta el siglo XVIII en el que la revolución científica y el racionalismo crítico cambian los procedimientos de la alquimia por otros más seculares.He aqui la increíble historia de la disciplina que ha combinado la superstición y la ciencia en busca de la Piedra Filosofal, el Elixir de la Vida.

José Frèches

Dictionnaire amoureux de la Chine

Complexe, incongrue, millénaire, « baroque » à bien des égards, la Chine déroute autant qu’elle fascine. Depuis des millénaires, son peuple a réussi à s’organiser pour éviter le chaos qui guette les sociétés surpeuplées. Aujourd’hui, la Chine est double : chinoise et capitaliste, douce et rude, généreuse et vorace, yin et yang, comme il se doit… C’est ce continent en cours de transformation, écartelé entre le poids de son immense passé et les promesses d’un futur guidé par sa puissance économique et l’émergence de sa classe moyenne, que José Frèches entend faire aimer à son lecteur en lui racontant « sa » Chine. Nourri de références historiques, mais également d’anecdotes vécues, son ouvrage se veut avant tout drôle et sincère, guidé par une curiosité mêlée de sympathie avec laquelle il a toujours abordé la Chine. Sinologue et historien d’art de formation, ancien conservateur au musée Guimet, José Frèches est l’auteur de romans historiques sur la Chine (Le Disque de Jade, L’Impératrice de la soie, L’Empire des larmes, Les Dix Mille Désirs de l’Empereur, etc.). Commissaire général de la France à l’Exposition universelle de Shanghai en 2010, il en a conçu et géré le pavillon français, le plus visité de tous.

Joshua Foer

Moonwalking With Einstein: The Art and Science of Remembering Everything

Amazon.com Review

Amazon Best Books of the Month, March 2011: Moonwalking with Einstein follows Joshua Foer's compelling journey as a participant in the U.S. Memory Championship. As a science journalist covering the competition, Foer became captivated by the secrets of the competitors, like how the current world memory champion, Ben Pridmore, could memorize the exact order of 1,528 digits in an hour. He met with individuals whose memories are truly unique—from one man whose memory only extends back to his most recent thought, to another who can memorize complex mathematical formulas without knowing any math. Brains remember visual imagery but have a harder time with other information, like lists, and so with the help of experts, Foer learned how to transform the kinds of memories he forgot into the kind his brain remembered naturally. The techniques he mastered made it easier to remember information, and Foer's story demonstrates that the tricks of the masters are accessible to anyone.
--Miriam Landis

Author Q&A with Joshua Foer

Q: First, can you explain the title of you book, Moonwalking with Einstein?

A: The title refers to a memory device I used in the US Memory Championship—specifically it's a mnemonic that helped me memorize a deck of playing cards. Moonwalking with Einstein works as a mnemonic because it's such a goofy image. Things that are weird or colorful are the most memorable. If you try to picture Albert Einstein sliding backwards across a dance floor wearing penny loafers and a diamond glove, that's pretty much unforgettable.

Q: What are the U.S. Memory Championships? How did you become involved?

A: The U.S. Memory Championship is a rather bizarre contest held each spring in New York City, in which people get together to see who can remember the most names of strangers, the most lines of poetry, the most random digits. I went to the event as a science journalist, to cover what I assumed would be the Super Bowl of savants. But when I talked to the competitors, they told me something really interesting. They weren't savants. And they didn't have photographic memories. Rather, they'd trained their memories using ancient techniques. They said anyone could do it. I was skeptical. Frankly, I didn't believe them. I said, well, if anyone can do it, could you teach me? A guy named Ed Cooke, who has one of the best trained memories in the world, took me under his wing and taught me everything he knew about memory techniques. A year later I came back to the contest, this time to try and compete, as a sort of exercise in participatory journalism. I was curious simply to see how well I'd do, but I ended up winning the contest. That really wasn't supposed to happen.

Q: What was the most surprising thing you found out about yourself competing in the Memory Championships?

A: In the process of studying these techniques, I learned something remarkable: that there's far more potential in our minds than we often give them credit for. I'm not just talking about the fact that it's possible to memorize lots of information using memory techniques. I'm talking about a lesson that is more general, and in a way much bigger: that it's possible, with training and hard work, to teach oneself to do something that might seem really difficult.

Q: Can you explain the "OK Plateau?"

A: The OK Plateau is that place we all get to where we just stop getting better at something. Take typing, for example. You might type and type and type all day long, but once you reach a certain level, you just never get appreciably faster at it. That's because it's become automatic. You've moved it to the back of your mind's filing cabinet. If you want to become a faster typer, it's possible, of course. But you've got to bring the task back under your conscious control. You've got to push yourself past where you're comfortable. You have to watch yourself fail and learn from your mistakes. That's the way to get better at anything. And it's how I improved my memory.

Q: What do you mean by saying there an "art" to memory?

A: The "art of memory" refers to a set of techniques that were invented in ancient Greece. These are the same techniques that Cicero used to memorize his speeches, and that medieval scholars used to memorize entire books. The "art" is in creating imagery in your mind that is so unusual, so colorful, so unlike anything you've ever seen before that it's unlikely to be forgotten. That's why mnemonists like to say that their skills are as much about creativity as memory.

Q: How do you think technology has affected how and what we remember?

A: Once upon a time people invested in their memories, they cultivated them. They studiously furnished their minds. They remembered. Today, of course, we've got books, and computers and smart phones to hold our memories for us. We've outsourced our memories to external devices. The result is that we no longer trust our memories. We see every small forgotten thing as evidence that they're failing us altogether. We've forgotten how to remember.

Q: What is the connection between memory and our sense of time?

A: As we get older, life seems to fly by faster and faster. That's because we structure our experience of time around memories. We remember events in relation to other events. But as we get older, and our experiences become less unique, our memories can blend together. If yesterday's lunch is indistinguishable from the one you ate the day before, it'll end up being forgotten. That's why it's so hard to remember meals. In the same way, if you're not doing things that are unique and different and memorable, this year can come to resemble the last, and end up being just as forgettable as yesterday's lunch. That's why it's so important to pack your life with interesting experiences that make your life memorable, and provide a texture to the passage of time.

Q: How is your memory now?

A: Ironically, not much better than when I started this whole journey. The techniques I learned, and used in the memory contest, are great for remembering structured information like shopping lists or phone numbers, but they don't improve any sort of underlying, generalizable memory ability. Unfortunately, I still misplace my car keys.

(Photo of Joshua Foer © Emil Salman Haaretz)

From Booklist

If you sometimes can't remember where you put your car keys or, like Foer, the car itself, don't panic. You're not alone, and you can do something about it. In this intriguing look at the nature of memory, Foer reassures us that we don't need to acquire a better memory; we just need to use the one we have more effectively. Foer introduces us to people whose memories are both astonishing, like the man who could memorize 1,528 random digits in order, and frightening, such as a man with such an extreme case of amnesia that he doesn't know his own age and can't remember that he has a memory problem. He explores various ways in which we test our memories, such as the extensive training British cabbies must undergo. He also discusses ways we can train ourselves to have better memories, like the PAO system, in which, for example, every card in a deck is associated with an image of a specific person, action, or object. An engaging, informative, and for the forgetful, encouraging book. --David Pitt

Katie Fforde

Stately Pursuits

Just the thing for a broken heart. A wonderfully romantic novel from the No. 1 Sunday Times bestselling author of Recipe for Love, A French Affair and The Perfect Match.

'I don't suppose you'd care to house-sit for a while...'

Hetty Longden's mother thinks that looking after Great Uncle Samuel's crumbling stately home will be just the thing for Hetty's broken heart. Hetty doesn't mind; at least she can be miserable in private. But 'private' is a relative term in a village which revolves around the big house. Particularly when you are expected to thwart Great Uncle Samuel's awful heir, and his nefarious plans for his inheritance.

Pitchforked into the community's fight to save the manor, Hetty has no time to wallow. And once she has shared her troubles with one neighbour (Caroline: a very understanding shoulder, despite her glamorous...

Ken Follett

Hornet Flight

From the master storyteller, a startling new thriller set amidst the Danish Resistance It is June 1941 and Denmark is under German occupation. On the rocky coast of Denmark, two brothers, Harald and Arne Olufsen are straining against the rigid confines imposed by their elderly parents. Meanwhile, a network of MI6 spies is attempting to decipher an encrypted Luftwaffe radio signal which mentions the new Freya-Gerat - a rudimentary form of German radar equipment. Arne's relationship with Hermia Mount, an MI6 analyst draws him into underground politics, putting him under surveillance by the Danish security forces - and by one man in particular who has a personal motive to see Arne fall. It is only a matter of time before the brothers' paths converge in a united effort to overcome the Nazis. A disused Hornet Moth biplane is their only means of getting a vital message to the British...

Ken Follett

Modigliani Scandal

A fabulous "lost masterpiece" becomes the ultimate prize for an art historian whose ambition consumes everyone around her, an angry young painter with a plan for revenge on the art establishment, and a desperate gallery owner who may have double-crossed his own life away... 

Review

"THE #1 "MASTER" OF THE FINE ART OF SUSPENSE." - Time

About the Author

Ken Follett was only twenty-seven when he wrote the award-winning novel Eye of the Needle, which became an international bestseller and film. He has since written several equally successful novels, including, most recently, Whiteout. He is also author of the non-fiction bestseller On Wings of Eagles. Ken Follett lives with his family in London and Stevenage.

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