¿Qué pasa con Baum? (Alianza Voces)

by Woody Allen

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"Asher Baum está perdiendo el juicio. Pero, ¿a quién no le pasaría en su lugar? Baum es un escritor judío de mediana edad, petulante e inadaptado, que no logra hacerse un hueco en el mundo literario y se encuentra ridículamente paralizado por preocupaciones neuróticas sobre la futilidad y el vacío de la existencia. Su tercer matrimonio se tambalea, sus libros reciben críticas tibias y su prestigioso editor neoyorquino lo ha abandonado a su suerte. Por si fuera poco, tiene que show more soportar la relación, demasiado estrecha, de su mujer con su hijo, un escritor joven y exitoso. Pero de repente descubre un secreto sorprendente que puede cambiarlo todo. ¿Qué pasa con Baum? es una evocadora carta de amor a Nueva York y una novela sumamente entretenida, repleta de esos momentos desternillantes y absurdos sólo al alcance de Woody Allen, que recrea con humor irreverente la escena cultural neoyorquina, las miserias de la vida familiar, el declive del amor en las parejas y el destino fatal de quienes son ensalzados pese a su mediocridad... Woody Allen en estado puro." (Alianza) show less

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268+ Works 15,987 Members
Allen's favorite personality-the bemused neurotic, the perpetual worrywart, the born loser-dominates his plays, his movies, and his essays. A native New Yorker, Allen attended local schools and despised them, turning early to essay writing as a way to cope with his Since his apprenticeship, writing gags for comedians such as Sid Caesar and Garry show more Moore, the image he projects-of a "nebbish from Brooklyn"-has developed into a personal metaphor of life as a concentration camp from which no one escapes alive. Allen wants to be funny, but isn't afraid to be serious either-even at the same time. His film Annie Hall, co-written with Marshall Brickman and winner of four Academy Awards, was a subtle, dramatic development of the contemporary fears and insecurities of American life. In her review of Love and Death, Judith Christ wrote that Allen was more interested in the character rather than the cartoon, the situation rather than the set-up, and the underlying madness rather than the surface craziness. Later Allen films, such as Crimes and Misdemeanors or Husbands and Wives, take on a far more somber and philosophic tone, which has delighted some critics and appalled others. In Allen's essays and fiction reprinted from the New Yorker, Getting Even New Yorker, (1971), Without Feathers (1975), and Side Effects (1980), the situations and characters don't just speak to us, they are us. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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