Young Adolf

by Beryl Bainbridge

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Paranoid, wilful, lazy, the young Adolf Hitler turns up in Liverpool to stay with his brother Alois and sister-in-law Bridget. Hailed by Alois as a student and an artist, Adolf soon irritates his family beyond measure by his constant sponging and his tendency to get into serious trouble with the English. Surely this is a young man who will never amount to anything.

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Member Reviews

8 reviews
Beryl Bainbridge imagines a young Hitler in Liverpool tortured by paranoia and overweening self-regard, an older brother whose business dealings are suspect, and a sister-in-law who focuses on her baby and tries to avoid the randy landlord (also young Adolf's only friend in England). Out of this unsavoury crowd, she develops an intriguing episode in the life story of a monster... and makes him all too human.
Az ifjú, ám kellőképpen zavart elméjű Hitler két évvel az első világháború előtt Liverpoolba utazik világfi bátyjához, hogy aztán ott mindenféle kalandba keveredjen. Ígéretes alapsztori, én pedig olvasás közben az irodalom örök kérdésével szórakoztathattam magam: Mit is akar mondani az író? Két elméletet is felállítottam: 1.) ez egy groteszk komédia lesz Chaplin (vagy John Cleese) modorában egy csetlő-botló, nevetséges Adolffal a főszerepben 2.) alternatív történelmi játékot látok, valamiféle „mi-lett-volna-ha” befejezéssel. Az első verziót némiképp a borító is alátámasztotta*, a másodikat pedig az a tény, hogy a regénybeli Hitler legjobb barátja éppenséggel egy zsidó show more muzsikus, de mint kiderült, sikerült túlbonyolítanom az egészet. Brainbridge vélhetően nem szándékozott mást, mint egy (fiktív) történelmi pillanatot kiragadva visszafogott abszurditással bemutatni az őrület határán táncoló elmét, az olvasóra bízva, hogyan köti össze a szöveg pontjait Hitler életének jövőbeli eseményeivel. Ami amúgy helyenként érdekes és élvezetes prózát eredményezett, bár meg kell valljam, némi hiányérzettel csuktam be a könyvet.

* Mondjuk a Rakéta Regénytár helyenként Warholt és Lichtensteint felidéző borítói amúgy is gyakran szürreális kapcsolatban állnak a szöveggel, mint jelentést hordozó tárggyal. Itt van például ez a kötet: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/48141725-az-rk-k-puszta?ac=1&from_search... A borítótervező szerint nyilván két kozák látható rajta, amint halálos vitába keverednek. Szerintem meg Baradlay Ödön a jelmezbálban nem adja oda az öccsének a vízipisztolyt.
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I got a real kick out of this 20 years ago. A paranoid,blathering Hitler on a believable housepainting job in Liverpool in his late teens or 20s. Its pretty funny
½
This book was 'fun', all about young Adolf Hitler coming to live in Liverpool.
If just saying "...and he's Hitler!" made your little ditty and its happenings that much more compelling everyone would do it.
½
An imaginative biography which reads like a dream

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Author Information

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41+ Works 6,755 Members
Beryl Bainbridge was born on November 21, 1934, in Liverpool, England. She became an actress at a young age and worked in English repertory theatres and on the radio. Her work contains dark, somber subject matter, deftly mixed with humor. Her writing acts as an outlet for her childhood frustrations, and frequently deals with family relations. In show more her novels, she recalls memories of disappointment and of a bad-tempered, brooding father. During her lifetime, she wrote 18 novels including A Weekend with Claude, Another Part of the Wood, The Bottle Factory Outing, The Birthday Boys, According to Queeney, and Young Adolf. She adapted many of her novels, such as An Awfully Big Adventure, Sweet William, and The Dressmaker, for film. She has received numerous awards and honors including the Whitbread Award in 1977 for Injury Time and in 1996 for Every Man for Himself; the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction in 1998 for Master Georgie; a Guardian Fiction Award, and the David Cohen Prize for Literature in 2003. She was made a dame by Queen Elizabeth II in 2000. She died from cancer on July 2, 2010 at the age of 77. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Series

Belongs to Publisher Series

Grote ABC (351)

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1978
People/Characters
Adolf Hitler
Important places
Liverpool, England, UK
First words
There had been a nasty incident, half-way between France and England, when young Adolf, turning in a moment of weakness to take a last look at the hills of Boulogne, had come face to face with a man wearing a beard and thick ... (show all)spectacles.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)It is a pity he will never amount to anything.'

Classifications

Genres
General Fiction, Fiction and Literature, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
LCC
PR6052 .A3195 .Y6Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1961-2000
BISAC

Statistics

Members
269
Popularity
119,783
Reviews
7
Rating
½ (3.36)
Languages
7 — Dutch, English, Hungarian, Norwegian (Bokmål), Norwegian, Spanish, Swedish
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
19
ASINs
8