From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Lauded for his sensitive memoir (My Own Country) about his time as a doctor in eastern Tennessee at the onset of the AIDS epidemic in the 80s, Verghese turns his formidable talents to fiction, mining his own life and experiences in a magnificent, sweeping novel that moves from India to Ethiopia to an inner-city hospital in New York City over decades and generations. Sister Mary Joseph Praise, a devout young nun, leaves the south Indian state of Kerala in 1947 for a missionary post in Yemen. During the arduous sea voyage, she saves the life of an English doctor bound for Ethiopia, Thomas Stone, who becomes a key player in her destiny when they meet up again at Missing Hospital in Addis Ababa. Seven years later, Sister Praise dies birthing twin boys: Shiva and Marion, the latter narrating his own and his brothers long, dramatic, biblical story set against the backdrop of political turmoil in Ethiopia, the life of the hospital compound in which they grow up and the love story of their adopted parents, both doctors at Missing. The boys become doctors as well and Vergheses weaving of the practice of medicine into the narrative is fascinating even as the story bobs and weaves with the power and coincidences of the best 19th-century novel. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From The Washington Post
From The Washington Post's Book World/washingtonpost.com Reviewed by W. Ralph Eubanks "Why St. Teresa, mother?" the narrator of Abraham Verghese's masterful first novel asks longingly. Marion Praise Stone wants to understand his long-dead mother and her devotion to the 16th-century mystic. But the circumstances surrounding his birth complicate that quest: Marion and his identical twin brother, Shiva, were born from a secret union between a beautiful Indian nun, Sister Mary Joseph Praise, and a British surgeon, Thomas Stone, in Addis Ababa in 1954. Now 50 years old, and a doctor like the father who abandoned him, Marion sets out to piece together his personal history, both as a spiritual exercise and as an act of reconciliation. Marion's question, "Why Saint Teresa?," is prompted by one of the few remnants of his late mother's life: a print of Bernini's sculpture of Teresa of Avila, depicting her enraptured by the love of God. He senses that his mother's beauty must have been like that of Saint Teresa, a woman known to be so attractive to men that her confessor not only fell in love with her but also wound up confessing his own sins to her. Verghese's gripping narrative moves over decades and generations from India to Ethiopia to an inner-city hospital in New York, describing the cultural and spiritual pull of these places. Sister Mary Joseph Praise and Dr. Thomas Stone meet during the young nun's voyage from India to a missionary post in Yemen. Sister Mary Joseph saves Stone's life on the tempestuous passage, one filled with typhoid and other dangers. Impressed by her skills as a nurse, Stone asks the nun to join him in Addis Ababa at a mission hospital known to natives as "Missing Hospital." She declines his invitation, noting her commitment to her order in Yemen. Later while serving in Aden, a Yemeni city that is "at once dead and yet in continuous motion," Sister Mary Joseph confronts an evil man and an act of violence that she never discusses or reveals to anyone. Yet what happened leaves its mark on her like stigmata. She flees from Yemen and finds her way to Addis Ababa and Missing Hospital. When she recovers, she and Stone become an inseparable team in the operating room. After seven years of working together and more, Stone learns of Sister Mary Joseph's pregnancy when he is called to the hospital and finds her in a distressed labor. When she dies giving birth to their twins, he disappears. Cutting for Stone then moves to the story of Marion and Shiva, as well as their adoptive parents, Stone's fellow physicians, and the world of Missing Hospital. Until their teens, the twins share a bed, sleeping with their heads touching each other just as they did in their mother's womb. Yet as young men, an act of sexual betrayal -- they share a passion for the same woman -- spirals out of control and separates them for many years. Both men become doctors, and eventually the division leads Marion to an internship at a New York hospital. But then an illness leaves Marion's life in the hands of the brother who betrayed him as well as the father who abandoned him. Even with its many stories and layers, Cutting for Stone remains clear and concise. Verghese paints a vivid picture of these settings, the practice of medicine (he is also a physician) and the characters' inner conflicts. I felt as though I were with these people, eating dinner with them even, feeling the hot spongy injera on my fingers as they dipped it into a spicy wot. In The Interior Castle, Saint Teresa's work on mystical theology, she wrote, "I began to think of the soul as if it were a castle made of a single diamond or of very clear crystal, in which there are many rooms, just as in Heaven there are many mansions." Cutting for Stone shines like that place.
Copyright 2009, The Washington Post. All Rights Reserved.
亚伯拉罕•维基斯(Abraham Verghese)
埃塞俄比亚裔医学专家和作家,现任美国斯坦福大学医学院教授、内科副主任。自1993年在爱荷华大学作家工坊学习并获得艺术学位之后,开始执刀亦执笔的生涯。
《斯通,与另一个斯通》是作者历经十年淬炼写就的长篇小说。2009年甫一出版便受好评,当选《出版家周刊》年度好书、美国亚马逊年度编辑选书,更被奥巴马总统选为假期读物。
成长这词说起来总觉得有些沉重,而且势必伴随着痛苦和煎熬。我不是很喜欢看国内的成长小说,那种消费时代物欲奔涌下巨大的孤独感和无力感,使得几乎所有的作品都充斥着一种挥之不去的不安与衰颓。 事实上,西方文学中成长小说的主题应当是充满了积极意义的,是讲述个体...
评分一个悲伤但充满力量的故事,满满的都是爱,曾经的年少无知,爱恨情仇,总敌不过亲情。命运总是这么琢磨不透,但又是那种环环相扣。 里面有对医学的描述,不是那种晦涩血腥的,因为是始终与故事相关的,总觉得里面最饱满的人物反而是戈什。
评分我始终执着于珍妮特的年少无知,与生命的洪流相比,政治永远只是无谓的浪花;罗西娜的残忍愚昧,伤害别人永远无法使自己内心得到平伏。而她们就是那个悲剧的开端。为什么生命中总有女人这种愚昧无知的动物呢。不想表达性别歧视,但是不得不提一件让我影响深刻的事例:9年前我被...
评分很悲伤的故事,令人心痛。“我用一生在寻找的,其实早已失去。”这句话很好地阐述了这个故事。如果没有曾经的背弃和追寻,就没有最终的悔悟与救赎,生命所追求与抗争的仿佛永远是荒谬的悖论。好厚一本书,五百多页,好久没有看过这么厚的书,但是很值得,一遍读完仿佛经历了一...
评分作者用 Twins 中哥哥 Marion 的角度, 讲述父母那一辈和自己的故事, 强大的医学背景, 让整个故事看起来真实可信. 这对 Twins 似乎一生坎坷, 经历各种悲欢离合. 母亲 Mary 难产而死, 父亲 Thomas 深受打击出走, 可他们却幸运的被 Hema and Gosh 收养, 还有 Missing 所有人的精心...
这部作品简直是一场文字的盛宴,它的叙事节奏如同马拉松选手般稳定而充满力量,让人从翻开第一页起就被牢牢吸住,难以自拔。作者构建的世界观宏大而细腻,每一个角落都充满了历史的厚重感和人性的复杂性。我特别欣赏它对于社会议题的探讨,那种毫不回避、直击人心的力量,使得阅读过程不仅是娱乐,更是一次深刻的自我反思。书中人物的塑造极为立体,他们不是非黑即白的符号,而是活生生、呼吸着的个体,他们的挣扎、他们的选择,都像一面镜子,映照出我们自身在面对困境时的种种可能。情感的张力把握得炉火纯青,高潮迭起却又恰到好处,绝不流于煽情。读完后,那种久久不散的余味,像一杯陈年的威士忌,辛辣中带着回甘,让人忍不住想立刻重读一遍,去捕捉那些初读时可能遗漏的深层寓意。这是一本值得被反复品味的杰作,它拓宽了我对文学叙事边界的认知,也让我对人类精神的韧性有了全新的理解。
评分说实话,我一开始抱着怀疑的心态去读这本书的,毕竟现在市面上充斥着太多故作高深的“大部头”,但这部作品很快就打破了我的固有偏见。它的文笔犹如精雕细琢的艺术品,每一个句子都经过了反复的锤炼,遣词造句之间透着一种老派的优雅和现代的锐利。最让我震撼的是它对时间线的处理,看似线性展开,实则暗藏着精巧的伏笔和回溯,读到最后真相大白的那一刻,那种豁然开朗的快感,简直无与伦比。故事的背景设定非常考究,那种地域性的风土人情被描绘得栩栩如生,仿佛我本人就身处那个特定的时空,呼吸着那里的空气。它成功地将宏大的历史背景与个体的微观命运编织在一起,展示了时代的洪流如何塑造和碾压那些渺小却又坚韧的灵魂。我得说,这本书的阅读体验是极具沉浸感的,它不是让你“看”故事,而是让你“活”在故事里。
评分我通常不太喜欢篇幅过长的作品,总担心后劲不足或者虎头蛇尾,但这部作品的收尾处理堪称教科书级别。它没有给出所有问题的标准答案,反而留下了一片广阔的想象空间,这种“留白”的艺术,才是真正高明的作者才会使用的技巧。书中探讨的主题涉及的广度令人咋舌,从家族的宿命到社会伦理的困境,再到个体对真理的不懈追求,几乎涵盖了存在主义文学的多个重要母题。我尤其欣赏作者对于复杂人际关系的处理,那种微妙的猜疑、不言而喻的默契,都被捕捉得入木三分,让人深切感受到人与人之间连结的脆弱与珍贵。阅读这本书的过程中,我发现自己频繁地停下来,不是因为看不懂,而是因为被某个观点、某句对白深深触动,需要时间去消化和品味。它迫使你思考,迫使你质疑你一直以来深信不疑的东西,这才是好文学的终极价值所在。
评分在众多当代小说中,这部作品犹如一颗未经打磨的巨型钻石,粗粝的外表下是难以估量的内在光芒。它的主题大胆而前卫,触及了一些社会约定俗成的话题,却处理得极其克制和智慧,没有落入说教的窠臼。我个人对书中关于“身份认同”和“历史记忆”的探讨深感兴趣,作者巧妙地利用虚构的情节来映照现实世界中那些难以言说的集体创伤。阅读体验是极度“耗能”的,因为它要求读者全程保持高度的专注和思考,但这种付出绝对是值得的,因为最终获得的回报是精神上的极大满足感。这本书的文学性是毋庸置疑的,它超越了单纯的故事讲述,上升到了一种对人类境遇的哲学探讨。如果你正在寻找一本能让你在合上书本后依然久久不能平静,并且愿意与人分享讨论的深刻作品,那么请毫不犹豫地选择它。
评分这本书的结构如同一个设计精密的万花筒,当你以为看清了某个图案时,稍微转动一下视角,全新的、同样迷人的景象又出现了。它的叙事声音变化多端,时而是冷静客观的旁观者,时而又切换为某个角色内心最隐秘的独白,这种视角的跳跃不仅没有造成混乱,反而增强了叙事的张力和层次感。我必须称赞作者在细节描摹上的功力,那些看似不经意的侧写,往往在故事的后半段会爆发出惊人的能量,印证了“魔鬼藏在细节里”这句话。它不仅仅是在讲述一个发生过或可能发生的故事,更像是在构建一个可以供读者进入并栖居的完整宇宙。对于那些喜欢深度挖掘文本隐藏含义的读者来说,这部作品简直是一座宝藏,充满了等待被发掘的彩蛋和象征意义。它拒绝平庸,坚持走一条充满挑战和深度的创作之路,这一点非常值得尊敬。
评分他乡遇故知的那段令人感动。
评分他乡遇故知的那段令人感动。
评分他乡遇故知的那段令人感动。
评分他乡遇故知的那段令人感动。
评分他乡遇故知的那段令人感动。
本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2026 book.quotespace.org All Rights Reserved. 小美书屋 版权所有