Eryk hanut biography of william hill
Also, do you have any ideas about why Hanut's book wasn't published in French? Is it too similar in genre to other French-language books e. Joseph, je vous conseille chaudement le livre de Bozon. Celui de est plus complet que celui de Je ne sais pas pourquoi le livre de Norma serait plus cher, ce n'est pas le plus long. Ah, I always forget that Amazon.
I will try ordering lots of things on Amazon. Fabrice, are there any other Marlene biographies that have not been translated into French? What a surprise! At least it is in Japanese, German, and Russian. You're wright, Joseph, it's ridiculous! Un vrai scandale! Well, I did indeed order lots of books. Maybe I'll finally get that copy of the Remarque letters with the Marlene nude, too.
As for the lack of French translations, it truly is scandalous! Perhaps you should offer your services? Je pourrais traduire en Oh, I can be cruel! Let your tears flow! If you have enough for 2 rivers, why not fill the Tigris and the Euphrates by standing in Iraq, dear? Just don't do anything down there that breaks Hammurabi's code--it's an eye for eye, you know!
I have always thought of the Hanut book as a sort of elaborate fiction,and taken with a pince of salt. Too much Hanut and not enough Dietrich. Notice how he describes her dress as "like a fish that has jumped out of the water" and Maria describes it as a "bugle-bead that we christened "the eel"because she looked like one swimming through clear water"It's an OK read but that is all.
For a very quick read I enjoyed Michael Brown's "Good afternoon Miss Dietrich",at least he met her but there are a few error's,still I enjoyed it. I wont mention the Bret book because again of many errors,I know for a fact that he recorded conversations with her,but it is pretty much a cut and paste job. Joseph, I can't add anything, I never read this book.
It's always a delight to read your writings!! Definitely puts things in perspective :. Paul, you've cut right to the crux! I wanted to say something about that fishy imagery but couldn't quite remember what could have been Hanut's source. Jean Cocteau deserves credit, too. In his salute, he cites Marlene's sequins in various films and calls her "un poisson chinois" a Chinese fish.
That Michael Brown book is one I still haven't read--thus, another to eventually add to this series! Karine, thank you for your kind words. If you ever do get around to reading this, please remember this post and comment here because I delight in reading your writing, too. I will, thanks. I have been lazy lately, only enjoying to read al the new post without participating at all.
Shame on me! I finally responded on Remarque letters foreword by Maria. I guess it is wishful thinking that I will finish writing my post on the records any time soon, sorry about that. Anyway keep up the good work, I love it! Politics: Democrat. Religion: Christian. Hobbies and other interests: Animal welfare, animal rights. Office— South Suffalo Dr.
A, Las VegasNV Author and photographer. Inspirational writer and photographer Eryk Hanut studied theatre and photography at schools in Brussels and Paris, then moved to the United States in to pursue his passion for writing. Hanut is best known as the author of The Road to Guadalupe: A Modern Pilgrimage to the Goddess of the Americas, in which he describes his pilgrimage to Mexico City and "interweaves the fantastic story of the Lady of Guadalupe with a piquant, deliciously iconoclastic account of his own pilgrimage," according to a reviewer for Publishers Weekly.
The Road to Guadalupe brings readers closer to the enchanting story of the Lady of Guadalupe, a vision that first appeared to a poor Mexican named Juan Diego in Hanut visited the site inand in his recollections of that pilgrimage alternately describes what he knows and imagines of Diego's experiences alongside his own. In Library Journal Stephen Joseph called Hanut "a skillful observer" who "brings life to the characters he meets.
As Cezanne once said 'No matter what you are painting, flowers, landscape, etc. Rate this book. A unique blend of memoir and literary portraiture, I Wish You Conversations with Marlene Dietrich is a moving account of the author's remarkable friendship with one of Hollywood's greatest legends. As a young man living in Paris in the s, Eryk Hanut on a whim wrote the by-then reclusive Dietrich after seeing her films and hearing her songs.
To his surprise, she telephoned him a few days later, ushering in a surprisingly intimate friendship that encompassed the last years of her life. In their frequent conversations, Dietrich shared her thoughts on a wide range of topics - from art and literature to haute couture, her film and singing career, her striking persona and image, Hollywood, and the epochal events of the twentieth century through which she had lived.
Dietrich reveals herself as a woman of wisdom, wit, and acute sensitivity, offering insights into life, love, and loneliness. Dietrich loved food, loved eryk hanut biographies of william hill She hated mediocrity and mediocrity returned the hatred with interest; Her ego could be sharp like a stiletto heel, but the vastness of her being healed whatever wounds she inflicted.
She was capable of talking about Stravinsky, the gowns of Travis Benton, or evoking Jean Cocteau and Richter in a single breath--and of mailing me menacing salamis that looked like Mandragora roots. Any catastrophe, or war, or rainstorm or subway strike--always turned Dietrich into a squirrel. During the first winter of our five-year long conversation, it snowed extravagantly--for Paris that is--and the park of Bagatelle was closed to the public.
I crossed the street and made angel prints for a long time. I always obeyed her--whether it was to take a "wonderful stomach remedy" that looked and tasted like tar, or to keep and freeze the body of a kitten I had found in a flowerbed "until we find its owners," or make angel prints in the snow on command.
Eryk hanut biography of william hill
I hope she knew something of what she left me when she went. She left me a much greater knowledge of everything--and a deeper sense of loss; The sort of loss that years never sweeten and that keeps on aching--the way it should be with great loves. Purrball did everything with extreme refinement. Eating, licking her ash and olive paws, and playing with her friend the cricket--a cricket that came to visit her for a whole summer.
She never hurt him. She would watch him and jump all over the room, totally in harmony with him. She loved me, but treated me like another Tabby; I was the one she woke up if we dared-- again --to feed her diet cat food. I loved to bury my nose in her warm belly, always fragrant like a fresh dinner roll. She adored Andrew. She looked at him as if he was some Rudolph Valentino of cats.
Light came into her eyes and sadness left the world, when he entered a room. She loved him so much that, when the time came, she decided to die in my arms and not in his. She knew it would be too sad for the two of them. She came down the spiral staircase of her coral-walled duplex in New York. Talk about Dea ex Machina. And she was holding a matching cane; She made an exercise in elegance out of a badly injured knee.
Thank God, she quit using the cane soon after, but the halogen smile and the wisdom remained; Her smoky-quartz voice has been guiding our lives for many years now.