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My Family and Other Animals Paperback – 2 januari 2025

4,5 van 5 sterren 8.179 beoordelingen

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Aankoopopties en uitbreidingen

Gerald Durrell’s beloved account of his childhood in Corfu, now in Penguin Modern Classics for the first time

‘When My Family and Other Animals was published it was as if someone had flung back the curtains, thrown up the windows and let in a stream of bright light’ - Kathryn Hughes, Guardian

‘Gerald Durrell was magic’ - Sir David Attenborough

'Living in Corfu was rather like living in one of the more flamboyant and slapstick comic operas’

It is 1935 and the Durrells have escaped the leaden summer skies of Bournemouth to arrive ‘like a troupe of medieval tumblers’ on the sun-drenched island of Corfu for a new life. Gerald Durrell’s beloved portrayal of his chaotic family – beatific Mother, Roger the dog, diet-obsessed Margo, book-loving Lawrence and gun-wielding Leslie – as well as his own adventures with a burgeoning menagerie of beasts, birds and insects (including an owl called Ulysses), is a timeless account of an idyllic childhood and an uproarious portrait of the English abroad.

Productbeschrijving

Recensie

Glorious hilarity … a comic masterpiece -- Meg Rosoff ― Guardian

This enchanting autobiographical account of his idyllic Corfu childhood and early fascination with the animal kingdom was … a bible for adults and children alike ―
Guardian

A heart-warmingly affectionate portrait of Corfu and its inhabitants, utterly evocative of sun-soaked summer holidays -- Alison Flood ―
Guardian

When
My Family and Other Animals was published in 1956 it was as if someone had flung back the curtains, thrown up the windows and let in a stream of bright light -- Kathryn Hughes ― Guardian

Gerald Durrell was magic -- Sir David Attenborough

One of the finest and most lyrical of nature writers in English ―
Observer

A lot of frolic, fun and charming ribaldry, as well as the warm feeling of having been transported to a lovely spot where worry is unknown and anything is believable ―
New York Times

Durrell has an uncanny knack of discovering human as well as animal eccentricities ―
Sunday Telegraph

If animals, birds and insects could speak, they would possibly award Mr Gerald Durrell one of their first Nobel prizes ―
Times Literary Supplement

Animals come close to being Durrell's best friends. He writes about them with style, verve and humour ―
Time

Over de auteur

Gerald Durrell was born in Jamshedpur, India, in 1925. He returned to England in 1928 before settling on the island of Corfu with his family. In 1945 he joined the staff of Whipsnade Park as a student keeper, and in 1947 he led his first animal-collecting expedition to the Cameroons. He later undertook numerous further expeditions, visiting Paraguay, Argentina, Sierra Leone, Mexico, Mauritius, Assam and Madagascar. His first television programme, Two in the Bush¸ which documented his travels to New Zealand, Australia and Malayawas made in 1962; he went on to make seventy programmes about his trips around the world. In 1959 he founded the Jersey Zoological Park, and in 1964 he founded the Jersey Wildlife Preservation Trust. He was awarded the OBE in 1982. Encouraged to write about his life's work by his brother, Durrell published his first book, The Overloaded Ark, in 1953. It soon became a bestseller and he went on to write thirty-six other titles, including My Family and Other Animals, The Bafut Beagles, Encounters with Animals, The Drunken Forest, A Zoo in My Luggage, The Whispering Land, Menagerie Manor, The Amateur Naturalist and The Aye-Aye and I. Gerald Durrell died in 1995.

Productgegevens

  • Uitgever ‏ : ‎ Penguin Books Ltd (UK) (2 januari 2025)
  • Taal ‏ : ‎ Engels
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 336 pagina's
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0241762944
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0241762943
  • Afmetingen ‏ : ‎ 12.9 x 1.7 x 19.8 cm
  • Klantenrecensies:
    4,5 van 5 sterren 8.179 beoordelingen

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  • Chef Anna
    5,0 van 5 sterren What a discovery!
    Beoordeeld in de Verenigde Arabische Emiraten op 24 maart 2023
    This piece is my new favorite.
    Melden
  • Jaime V.
    5,0 van 5 sterren Libro excelente y divertido
    Beoordeeld in Spanje op 1 augustus 2023
    Es ya un clásico para los que quieren iniciarse en la literatura inglesa
  • mukesh
    5,0 van 5 sterren So good, I have bought a copy to gift to a friend
    Beoordeeld in India op 21 februari 2024
    I read the book the first time drawn by the quirky title. Then the back cover told me that it was about animals. I had found a kindered spirit. That was way back in the early seventies.

    What the book gave me is, not only the animals, but also a crazy family, like most families are. Gerald brings all them to your drawing room, while taking you to the quaint Corfu.

    Really a great read. I was not so much impressed by Durrel's later books. May be because they don't have much of his family.
  • Karla.Kolumna
    5,0 van 5 sterren Ein absolut wundervolles Buch!
    Beoordeeld in Duitsland op 31 december 2024
    Wer Englisch lesen kann und Freund des guten Humors ist, wird dieses Buch lieben. Wunderschön geschrieben, mit detaillierten Beschreibungen und einem einmaligen Schreibstil. Wir lernen nicht nur die eigensinnige Familie kennen, sondern auch Korfu und das Leben dort... für mich perfekt zum Abschalten!
  • Iona Main Stewart
    5,0 van 5 sterren Hilarious and brilliantly written
    Beoordeeld in het Verenigd Koninkrijk op 14 juni 2016
    This is the first volume of Gerard Durrell's Corfu trilogy.

    It's the story of the Durrell family's stay on the Greek island of Corfu in the 30s just before World War II.

    The family, whose members are described in a hilarious manner, consists of Mother, Larry, Leslie, Margo and, of course, Gerry.

    Mother, the head of the family, is mostly concerned with concocting delicious meals, and otherwise appeasing the various family members, these being overly inclined to argue with each other, as well as hushing them when they say something improper. Larry, the eldest, is intellectual, highly knowledgeable about literary matters and continually making critical and satirical remarks. He later becomes a famous writer, his most renowned work being “The Alexandria Quartet”. The second son is Leslie, who is enamoured of guns, ballistics in general, and hunting. Margo, the only girl, is portrayed as rather naïve and with a habit of using proverbs but picking the wrong key words in these proverbs when flustered- “After all, you only die once!” She sews and paints pictures. Then of course there's the youngest, the author, Gerry; in this trilogy he is perpetually portrayed as being ten years old. He is a gifted naturalist and, to the despair of the family, particularly Larry, brings home many variously assorted species of animals, from large birds to tiny spiders. There is also Roger, Gerry's dog with his lovable, lopsided grin.

    You will laugh out loud at many of the passages in the book. I rarely laugh out loud, hut have done so continually when reading this book. Though the author writes at the beginning of the book:
    “My grateful thanks --- to:
    My wife, who pleased me by laughing uproariously when reading the manuscript, only to inform me that it was my spelling that amused her.” The spelling has been corrected, but the reader will still laugh uproariously.

    We begin with the family's arrival in Corfu, where they are faced by the essential and basic task of finding a house to live in.

    They have examined ten villas but none are to Mother's satisfaction. In despair, the estate agent asks Mother: “Madame Durrell ---- I have shown you every villa I know, yet you do not want any. Madame, what is it you require? What is the matter with these villas?” Mother answered: “Didn't you notice? --- None of them had a bathroom.” (The estate agent) “wailed in genuine anguish, 'what for you want a bathroom? – Have you not got the sea?'”

    But they are lucky to quickly run into Spiro, a helpful native, who speaks English of a sort. He finds them a strawberry-pink villa with a bathroom. He lends Mother money, since hers has not yet arrived from England. Their luggage has been languishing in the Customs warehouse, but the irascible Spiro, like an angry bear, bullies the Customs man, whom he knows well, slams the lid of a box down on the man's fingers when he tries to examine its contents, mentions the man's past crimes (dynamiting fish) and thus succeeds in reclaiming their “boxes of merchandise”, all intact and unexamined.

    Once comfortably installed in the villa with his family, little Gerry investigates crab-spiders, lacewing flies and earwigs. He and Roger take exploratory walks every day to remote olive-groves to study the wildlife. They get to know the elderly Agathi, who teaches Gerry peasant songs, Yani, an old shepherd with incredible moustaches who plies him with advice and warnings, and the dumb Rose-beetle Man dressed fantastically, his hat “speckled and smeared with dust, wine stains, and cigarette-burns”. “In the band were stuck a fluttering of feathers: cock-feathers, hoopoe-feathers, owl-feathers, the wing of a king-fisher, the claw of a hawk, and a large dirty feather that may have come from a swan.”

    The Rose-beetle Man gives Gerry a tortoise, which he christens Achilles, whose favourite fruit is strawberries. He falls down a wall, however, so the Rose-beetle Man instead presents Gerry with a musical pigeon which he calls Quasimodo.

    During his time on Corfu Gerry did not go to school. When possible Mother arranged private lessons for him from various eccentric but knowledgeable persons. However, these lessons did not always bear fruit since about the only subject that caught his interest was natural history; this was no doubt the reason for Gerry the adult's poor spelling skills!

    The book is filled with marvellous stories, humorous episodes, mostly concerning the family, picturesque descriptions and detailed and fascinating naturalist observations.

    The author is a gifted writer and brilliant humorist.

    I firmly recommend that you read the book, I will now tackle further of Gerard Durrell's works. Consequently, I will re-read big brother Larry's beautiful books which are penned in quite a different, poetic style. (I see from another review that Larry's writing was highly praised by the illustrious poet T.S. Eliot.)