Marcel Möring
Author of In Babylon
About the Author
Works by Marcel Möring
Het beloofde leven 17 copies
Een lange weg 11 copies
De Kotzker : een pastiche 8 copies
Nachtzwemmen 4 copies
Betaaldag : novelle 3 copies
14 mei. Het lichaam en de ziel. 2 copies
Het verdriet van Drenthe 1 copy
Sample-God in Cyberspace 1 copy
Reizen zonder gids 1 copy
Associated Works
De Nederlandse en Vlaamse literatuur vanaf 1880 in 60 lange verhalen (2006) — Contributor — 43 copies, 2 reviews
Omdat hij het was, omdat ik het was verhalen over vriendschap (2010) — Author, some editions — 7 copies
Bilbao : het debuut van Mirjam Boelsums, Hans Fels, Frans Kingma, Nausicaa Marbe & Hermine de Graaf, Oek de Jong, Ma (1998) — Contributor — 2 copies
Over X-jes, de zandloper en de herenbobbel. Een handleiding tot de kunsten voor Maarten Asscher (1998) — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Möring, Marcel Gerard
- Other names
- Möring, Marcel
- Birthdate
- 1957-09-05
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- Nederland
- Birthplace
- Enschede, Overijssel, Nederland
Members
Reviews
Hell and nothing but that. That is the world.
In a Dark Wood: A Novel is an urgent retelling of the Inferno as by Patrick White. Ulysses, The Odyssey and The Flounder are all at play. There are also motorcycles, plenty of them -- and beer. This tale may involve survival but certainly not redemption. I have my doubts about the former as the central character emerges damaged and bereft, a healing transformation isn't in the cards. What was actualized within the novel was the incontinence of show more memory and a diminution of empathy post-Shoah.
3.5 stars
Soundtrack: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0JchD-NZWPM show less
In a Dark Wood: A Novel is an urgent retelling of the Inferno as by Patrick White. Ulysses, The Odyssey and The Flounder are all at play. There are also motorcycles, plenty of them -- and beer. This tale may involve survival but certainly not redemption. I have my doubts about the former as the central character emerges damaged and bereft, a healing transformation isn't in the cards. What was actualized within the novel was the incontinence of show more memory and a diminution of empathy post-Shoah.
3.5 stars
Soundtrack: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0JchD-NZWPM show less
I sat at the table, the intoxicating smell of fresh bread around me, and listened like a child being told that there's no such thing as Sinterklaas.
There is a wandering frame and focus to In Babylon. The disillusionment detailed above is an aspect of its effect, as is entropy: the latter receives a lengthy digression. The novel is also about false starts and dead ends. Its about picking up the pieces and attempting to find order, just as one's genetic code is screaming: RUN. Nathan show more Hollander, author of fairy tales and owner of a dismal romance record, has inherited his uncle's house. There is but one stipulation: he must compose a biography of his Uncle. Instead, a Oulipean taxonomy of the family ensues, most of which remains unfinished, the rest misleading. It reminds one of Mulisch or Nooteboom, the national bleak stare is evident, the need to look outward from the Netherlands: a harbor, designed for commerce and cultural projection. This is an engaging modernist epic stretching from Los Alamos to Israel on the cusp of the Yom Kippur War. An added perspective is a pair of family ghosts, prowling the estate since the 17th Century. It isn't all fun, but it is interesting. show less
There is a wandering frame and focus to In Babylon. The disillusionment detailed above is an aspect of its effect, as is entropy: the latter receives a lengthy digression. The novel is also about false starts and dead ends. Its about picking up the pieces and attempting to find order, just as one's genetic code is screaming: RUN. Nathan show more Hollander, author of fairy tales and owner of a dismal romance record, has inherited his uncle's house. There is but one stipulation: he must compose a biography of his Uncle. Instead, a Oulipean taxonomy of the family ensues, most of which remains unfinished, the rest misleading. It reminds one of Mulisch or Nooteboom, the national bleak stare is evident, the need to look outward from the Netherlands: a harbor, designed for commerce and cultural projection. This is an engaging modernist epic stretching from Los Alamos to Israel on the cusp of the Yom Kippur War. An added perspective is a pair of family ghosts, prowling the estate since the 17th Century. It isn't all fun, but it is interesting. show less
The Dream Room is one of those pleasant little novels about a quaint little family and a simple little storyline with big ideas behind it. David is a 12-year-old boy who likes to cook. He cooks for his parents every chance he gets, and he reads cookbooks as if they were novels. His father was a pilot in the big one and his mother was a nurse. Surprise surprise, they meet and fall in love when the father crashes and the mother takes care of him. At the novels start, the father is unemployed show more and the mother loses her job. With no source of income, the boy comes up with an idea. Living above a toy shop, he decides they should buy model airplanes, build them together, and sell them for profit. What follows is a touching story of a family coming together to make it through a tough time in their lives.
Unfortunately, towards the end of the novel I think the author gets a little too philosophical for his own good. The story is left incomplete after a "mysterious event" and the reader is left wondering what on earth just happened. The final chapter is very cryptic and even after mulling it over for awhile I'm still not 100 percent sure if I've wrapped my head around it properly.
Still, I really enjoyed this little book. It has given me a lot to think about and, had I read it with a group of people, would probably have created a lot of discussion. Definitely a book I would recommend to others. show less
Unfortunately, towards the end of the novel I think the author gets a little too philosophical for his own good. The story is left incomplete after a "mysterious event" and the reader is left wondering what on earth just happened. The final chapter is very cryptic and even after mulling it over for awhile I'm still not 100 percent sure if I've wrapped my head around it properly.
Still, I really enjoyed this little book. It has given me a lot to think about and, had I read it with a group of people, would probably have created a lot of discussion. Definitely a book I would recommend to others. show less
In a Dark Wood, by Marcel Moring is a compelling book, and one that was difficult to write my thoughts on due to the intensity of the prose, underlying themes, strong metaphors and the overall contents of the novel, part of which is slightly based on Dante’s Inferno, which is the first part of Dante’s poem, The Divine Comedy.
Marcel Moring’s brilliance radiates throughout the pages, and his masterful writing is intense and filled with much to ponder, from metaphors to religious show more symbolism. I highly recommend In a Dark Wood, by Marcel Moring to those interested in the study of the after-effects, the human emotions and the trauma resulting from the Holocaust and how it can affect those who have survived the atrociousness. show less
Marcel Moring’s brilliance radiates throughout the pages, and his masterful writing is intense and filled with much to ponder, from metaphors to religious show more symbolism. I highly recommend In a Dark Wood, by Marcel Moring to those interested in the study of the after-effects, the human emotions and the trauma resulting from the Holocaust and how it can affect those who have survived the atrociousness. show less
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- Works
- 34
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- 10
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- 1,285
- Rating
- 3.4
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