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Olin nuorena villi ja luova skeittarin alku. Olin hyvin paljon omissa oloissani ja kotona ei nähty, että minkälaista elämää elän kodin ulkopuolella, kertoo 38-vuotias nimimerkki Mindlessflow. Ympäristötekijät, perhesuhteet, psykososiaaliset resurssit lapsuudessa ja nuoruudessa vaikuttavat siihen, miten me kasvamme. Kehitys ei mitenkään nollaannu aikuisuudessa vaan se kasautuu, kertoo Terveyden ja hyvinvoinninlaitoksen tutkija Jenna Grundström toimittaja Satu Kivelän haastattelussa. Ristiriitainen kiintymyssuhde ja emotionaalinen vaille jääminen on näkynyt aikuisuudessa masennusjaksoina, kertoo 43-vuotias nimimerkki Sara. Lama-ajan kokemukset ovat lisänneet ymmärrystä siitä, että taloudellinen ahdinko sairastumisen tai korkojen nousun myötä voi kohdata ketä tahansa, sanoo eräs vastaaja Varsinais-Suomesta. Toimittaja: Satu Kivelä Äänisuunnittelija: Lukijat: Susanna Vainiola, Miika Lauriala ja Aapo Laakso Musiikki: Epidemic Sound Tuottaja: Pertti Ylikojola Vastaava toimittaja: Ville Vilén Lähteet: Yanagihara, Hanya, Pieni elämä (2015) Keltainen kirjasto. Tokola, Maiju, Airo, Riikka (2024) Kiintymyssuhteet ja kiintymyssuhdemallit. Lääkärikirja Duodecim.
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David Odyssey stops by again to touch on the cultural influence and metaphor of Scream and Buffy the Vampire Slayer, gay hookup culture and moral consideration, Welcome to the Dollhouse and Heather Matarazzo's performance, fantasy and fashion shows, Kanye's tweets revealing a larger conversation between Jews and black people, ambiguity, transcending trauma and metamorphosis, the issue with Yanagihara's A Little Life, and of course, astrology. David's Website: https://davidodyssey.com/David's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/david_odyssey/?hl=enIffy's Patreon: https://patreon.com/theiffy
Bicycle Racing: Yanagihara Wins in Her Debut at Annual Girls' Grand Prix
La monumental «Tan poca vida» (Lumen, 2016) fue un éxito inesperado que convirtió a la escritora y periodista Hanya Yanagihara en una revelación: una novela de mil páginas, capaz de hilvanar la intimidad plagada de silencios, sexo y culpa de cuatro hombres durante tres décadas. Seis años después, publica «Al paraíso» (Lumen, 2022), una novela escrita a la sombra de su trabajo como editora en «The New York Times» durante los años de Trump. El resultado es un libro hecho de dos ucronías y una distopía: tres hombres, tres intimidades y tres caminos para las Norteaméricas posibles. A continuación, la misma Yanagihara habla de los conflictos que atraviesan los tres universos de su esperado y celebrado regreso: la falta de pertenencia de los privilegiados, los totalitarismos, el dinero y la empatía como antesala del amor y motor de la lucha.Encuentra este y otros artículos en http://revistalengua.comTexto narrado por Paloma Castro.Crédito Imagen ilustrativa: D.R: Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
God had spoken to him. “It is okay to be born disabled, even as disabled as you are. I am going to reveal my glory through you.” The Far East podcast is narrated by John Doherty. Subscribe to the Far East magazine at https://goo.gl/5ukmQX
Author of the wildly popular and, at times, controversial A Little Life, Hanya Yanagihara, is out with a new novel. To Paradise is an epic – in three parts – sprawling over 700 pages and 200 years about a make-believe New York City. Yanagihara was mostly through writing her story, which features pandemics prominently, when COVID-19 first hit in early 2020. But Yanagihara told NPR's Scott Simon that she was able to keep her story and her fears about the pandemic in reality separate.
Many people recognize Yanagihara as the author of "A Little Life." My guest today loved the book so much, he decided to go back and read her very first work, "The People in the Trees." We talk about the plot and its style, as well as how it can speak to any lover of fiction. -- Interested in this title? Consider supporting local bookstores and this podcast by purchasing from: https://bookshop.org/a/79981/9780345803313 -- Host: Kyle Johnson (@panic_kyle and @panic_kyle_booktok); Guest: Paige (@paigexviii); https://substack.com/profile/76099334-paige; Music: Julian Loida (www.julianloida.com) -- Get in touch with the show! panic.kyle.tt@gmail.com
Your Friendly Neighborhood Librarians are back at it with another book club! This time they're talking about To Paradise, the follow-up novel to Hanya Yanagihara's 2015 epic masterpiece, A Little Life. Tune in to hear all of the hot takes and strong opinions Jim, Robyn, and special guest Roberta the Page have to share about Yanagihara's captivating journey through time.
Mit ihrem Roman "Ein wenig Leben" gelang Yanagihara ein internationaler Bestseller, der viele Leserinnen und Leser zu Tränen rührte. "Ich habe schlimm geheult", sagt Moderatorin Judith Liere. Yanagiharas neues Buch "Zum Paradies" besteht aus drei Teilen, zwischen denen jeweils 100 Jahre liegen – und die alle in demselben Haus in New York spielen: 1893, in einer fiktiven Vergangenheit, in der die Menschen in der freien Welt so leben und lieben dürfen, wie sie es möchten, und in der Homosexualität als selbstverständlich anerkannt ist. 1993, als Manhattan von Aids erschüttert wird. Und 2093, in einer von Seuchen bestimmten Welt. Fast alle Hauptfiguren in Hanya Yanagiharas Romanen sind männlich. Die Autorin sagt, dass es für sie weniger interessant sei, über Frauen zu erzählen. In ihren Romanen gibt es oft Menschen mit sehr viel oder sehr wenig Geld. Letztlich handelten aber "alle Romane von Geld", sagt die Autorin, egal ob Tolstoi, Thomas Mann oder Dickens. "Alle diese Bücher handeln von Geld und von Klassen und alle handeln davon, wie Geld einen Charakter, seine Möglichkeiten und alles limitieren." Das Gespräch ist die Aufzeichnung einer ausverkauften Veranstaltung im Literaturhaus München vom 16. März 2022: https://www.zeit.de/kultur/literatur/2022-03/zum-paradies-hanya-yanagihara-gespraech-livestream
Na Een klein leven, dat met 300.000 Nederlandstalig verkochte exemplaren een bestseller werd, is Hanya Yanagihara nu terug met een nieuwe, wederom vuistdikke roman: Naar het paradijs. Het werk is opgedeeld in drie delen, waarin ze drie verschillende versies van Amerika beschrijft, in drie verschillende eeuwen. Wat vindt het panel van haar nieuwe roman, dat een alternatieve geschiedschrijving van de VS beschrijft en een dystopische blik op de toekomst werpt? En een luisteraar vraagt: welke klassiekers vinden wij nou eigenlijk echt overschat?
di Matteo B. Bianchi | Matteo ci parla del nuovo romanzo-fenomeno di Hanya Yanagihara “Verso il paradiso” (Feltrinelli). Pasquale Langella della libreria Langella di Napoli ci racconta la sua esperienza di libraio e piccolo editore; incontriamo poi Pietro Forti di Scomodo, il magazine gratuito e indipendente con la redazione under 25 più grande d'Italia. Infine, Francesco Pacifico ci parla della sua esperienza di traduttore proprio del romanzo della Yanagihara, dandoci un suo particolare consiglio di lettura.Libri consigliati:VERSO IL PARADISO di Hanya Yanagihara, FeltrinelliL'EDITORE PRESUNTUOSO di Sandro Ferri, e/oPasquale Langella, della libreria e casa editrice Langella di Napoli ci ha consigliato:NAPOLI VISTA DALLE SIRENE Sergio Siano, edizioni Intra MoeniaUN MONDO DIVERSO di Hans Christian Andersen, Langella editorePietro Forti della redazione di Scomodo ha scelto per noi:LE SETTE ROME di Keti Lelo, Salvatore Monni e Federico Tomassi, DonzelliLA CASA DEGLI SGUARDI di Daniele Mencarelli, MondadoriInfine Francesco Pacifico, fra tutti i libri che ha tradotto, ci invita a leggere:UOMO INVISIBILE di Ralph Ellison, Fandango
Autumn, Miranda, and Chris discuss BookPage magazine's recent recommendations. The Bookmark is your place to find your next great book. Each week, join regular readers Miranda Ericsson, Chris Blocker and Autumn Friedli along with other librarians as they discuss all the books you'll want to add to your reading list.
Author of the wildly popular and, at times, controversial A Little Life, Hanya Yanagihara, is out with a new novel. To Paradise is an epic – in three parts – sprawling over 700 pages and 200 years about a make-believe New York City. Yanagihara was mostly through writing her story, which features pandemics prominently, when COVID-19 first hit in early 2020. But Yanagihara told NPR's Scott Simon that she was able to keep her story and her fears about the pandemic in reality separate.
In conversation with Andy Kahan, Ruth W. and A. Morris Williams, Jr. director of author events ''A wrenching portrait of the enduring grace of friendship'' (NPR), Hanya Yanagihara's bestselling novel A Little Life is a story of tragedy and transcendent praise to brotherly love and an unsettling meditation on sexual abuse, suffering, and the difficulties of recovery. A National Book Award Finalist and short-listed for the Man Booker Prize, it was named to dozens of publications' ''best books of the year'' lists. Yanagihara is also the author of The People in the Trees, shortlisted for the PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize for debut fiction. She is editor-in-chief at T Magazine: The New York Times Style Magazine. A story about the deep recesses of the human heart, To Paradise, her new centuries-spanning novel, follows three sets of characters navigating alternate realities that reveal frightening implications for our own lives. (recorded 1/18/2022)
As-tu pleuré aussi fort que tu aies eu peur que tes voisins t'entends? Ce roman a été pour moi aussi beau que triste, dur, touchant, magnifique. Je sais que lire c'est un acte solitaire, mais avec ce livre tu auras besoin de quelqu'un qui puisse te serrer dans ces bras. Je suis Hugo Marroquin. Même si la plupart d'épisodes de ce podcast sont en espagnol –ma langue maternelle– j'aime tant le français que de temps en temps j'en ferai mon mieux pour que tu puisse découvrir avec moi des livres, des vidéos, des podcast, des films, et même des articles dans la presse international. Je suis éclectique et curieux. Et je n'en parle pas du côté intello, mais d'après ce qu'on sens quand on regarde, écoute ou lis. Et pour les fautes de la langue… je m'excuse. Cette fois ci je veux parler du roman de l'écrivain américaine Hanya Yanagihara, Une vie comme les autres. Sans doute, mon livre préféré jusqu'a présent. Hugo Marroquín est un écrivain Mexicain qui habite en Colombie. Ses deux romans sont publiés en espagnol et les droits pour la langue française sont disponibles. Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hugomarroquin__ Twitter: https://twitter.com/hugomarroquin_ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/marroquin/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/HugoMarroquinMX Escucha las novelas narradas por el autor en audiolibro: https://www.storytel.com/mx/es/buscar-hugo+marroquin Consigue las dos novelas en físico con Amazon México: https://www.amazon.com/s?i=stripbooks&rh=p_27%3AHUGO+MARROQUIN&s=relevancerank&text=HUGO+MARROQUIN&ref=dp_byline_sr_book_1 Ebooks disponibles a nivel mundial: https://books.apple.com/mx/book/los-a%C3%B1os-de-los-amantes/id1019523430
An iDepartment teacher since Day 1 of the Sullivan Center for Innovation and Leadership, Gabriel Yanagihara also has served as the head coach of ‘Iolani School's eSports teams since 2019. The video game design teacher gets us up to speed on the eSports scene, in addition to providing valuable insight on other issues related to video games and the gamification of many aspects of our daily lives. Please subscribe to the ‘Iolani School Podcast. Mahalo!
Mein Freund der Baum - das Bücher-Radio mit Andreas Baum & Andi Arbeit
Andreas Baum und Andrea Frey und vier Bücher von Harari, Yanagihara, Jan Wagner und Inger-Maria MahlkeYuval Harari: Eine kurze Geschichte der Menschheit Hanya Yanagihara: Ein wenig Leben Jan Wagner: Regentonnenvariationen Inger-Maria Mahlke: Archipel
In de tweede aflevering van seizoen 2 van Boeken FM bespreken Ellen Deckwitz, Joost de Vries en Peter Buurman 'Een klein leven' van de Amerikaanse schrijfster Hanya Yanagihara, naar aanleiding van de theaterbewerking van Toneelgroep Amsterdam die op 23 september in première gaat. Het panel praat over waarom dit boek, ondanks alle inhoudelijke ellende, toch zo veel gelezen wordt, vertelt over wat Jude precies symboliseert, en hoort meer over de bibliofilie van Joost de Vries.
In de tweede aflevering van seizoen 2 van Boeken FM bespreken Ellen Deckwitz, Joost de Vries en Peter Buurman 'Een klein leven' van de Amerikaanse schrijfster Hanya Yanagihara, naar aanleiding van de theaterbewerking van Toneelgroep Amsterdam die op 23 september in première gaat. Het panel praat over waarom dit boek, ondanks alle inhoudelijke ellende, toch zo veel gelezen wordt, vertelt over wat Jude precies symboliseert, en hoort meer over de bibliofilie van Joost de Vries.
For almost exactly a year now, Hanya Yanagihara has been molding T Magazine, the New York Times’ lifestyle and culture magazine, in her image. A recent refresh brought in a new logo and typeface, but the full bleed art, smart cultural journalism and yes the ads — so many ads — are still going strong. Hanya is also the author of the critically acclaimed 2015 novel A Little Life. Here, she discusses her tenure as T Magazine’s editor one year in, fiction writing versus non-fiction editing, where the lush magazine fits in the broader New York Times ecosystem, and why — in an era when the Times is doubling down on digital — she herself doesn’t tweet and has never been on Facebook.
Efter en månads paus är vi tillbaka i nästan nytt format, och pratar om vad vi hann och vad vi inte hann läsa under semestern!Böcker som recenseras: Ett litet liv – Hanya Yanagihara Min fantastiska väninna – Elena Ferrante Billie, avgång 9:42 till nya livet och Billie du är bäst – Sara Kadefors Det lilla bageriet på strandpromenaden och Den lilla bokhandeln runt hörnet – Jenny Colgan Andra böcker som nämns: Hundra år av ensamhet – Gabriel Garcia Marquez Hausfrau – Jill Alexander Essbaum Borta bäst – Sara Kadefors Andra tidsfördriv: Gruppen Litteraturgäris på Facebook En Förbannad Read-Along Merge Dragons! Sven Nordqvist på Kulturhuset i Stockholm See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
One of the most talked-about books of last year (nominated for the Man Booker Prize and The National Book Award), A Little Life is a profoundly bold epic about love and friendship in the twenty-first century. Yanagihara follows the tragic and transcendent lives of four men—an architect, painter, actor and lawyer—who meet as college roommates and move to New York to spend the next three decades adrift, buoyed only by their friendship and ambition. Join Yanagihara for an intimate look at this masterful depiction of heartbreak and brotherly love.**Click here for photos from the program.
US novelist Hanya Yanagihara presents 'A Little Life' onstage at Foyles, in conversation with author and Associate Editor of The Bookseller Cathy Rentzenbrink. After enthralling readers and reviewers alike with her debut 'The People in the Trees', Yanagihara's new novel spans the decades-long relationships across a group of four college graduates who move to New York to pursue their various careers—aspiring actor Willem; struggling architect Malcolm; JB, a painter making his way in the art world; and Jude. Withdrawn, enigmatic, crippled by an accident of which he doesn't speak, Jude is haunted, damaged from a childhood kept hidden from his closest friends. Increasingly successful in his career as a lawyer, yet increasingly broken by a past that comes to define him, Jude's position as the dazzling black hole at the centre of the group will come to send shockwaves through the characters—and through the reader too. Still buzzing from its release in the US earlier in the year, this is a profoundly moving work that will leave its mark on the reader and the industry for years to come. Yanagihara unpicks this contemporary literary triumph onstage at Foyles in conversation with Rentzenbrink.
In the second part of our lunch-time chat with Hanya Yanagihara for the amazing A Little Life, we began by discussing how her second book was a reaction to her debut, the also amazing The People in the Trees.----more---- ‘I just wanted to do something that felt a little dangerous, in a sense. I wanted to do something that felt inescapable.’ ‘I wanted to try to create that quality of not being able to deny Jude’s life, because so much of Jude’s life is people denying him in one way or the other.’ the exaggerated, overly intense feeling of the novel ‘I wanted the reader to feel drugged’ her frustration with emotionally stingy novels that hold you at arm’s length the models, from visual art, that inspired A Little Life on technology the commodification of friendship jealousy, envy and the thrill of messy friendship Jude and the problems of being a friend talking, story-telling and the problem of personal pain was writing A Little Life therapeutic for Yanagihara herself? ‘It is a personal book, not so much based on content as based on ways of coming to terms with how you think about your own history’ turning 40: what next? responses to A Little Life A Little Life as a New York novel Yanagihara and the laziness of brand names models for Jude ‘This book is a lot about absences’: family and surviving tragedy is A Little Life an angry book? on the institutions that failed Jude Yanagihara and the allure of male relationships ‘I find men very interesting because there are a lot of things as men you are never allowed to discuss, never allowed to feel and never allowed to put voice to.’ Part three will follow next week.
For the second Writing Life Podcast conversation with Hanya Yanagihara, we moved from tea at a posh London hotel to lunch at a posh(ish) London restaurant. This was not the only difference. Yanagihara had herself moved: jobs, from Conde Nast to the New York Times; and novels from her debut The People in the Trees to A Little Life, which has recently been long-listed for the Man Booker prize.----more---- The conversation took place about a month before publication in the UK, but shortly after it was released in America to ecstatic reviews. I had recently been in New York and seen the novel everywhere. Well, mainly in bookstores, but on prominent display. We begin - Hanya in mid-breadmunch - with her hero, Jude: 'I just wanted to write a character who never got better,' she tells me. From there, we shift focus to examine: how A Little Life challenges current American beliefs in character development on suffering and trauma 'I do think there is a point where some people are too damaged to be alive' Yanagihara's scepticism about therapy Jude as lovable and frustrating Jude vs The American Dream on the rituals of self-harm and cutting emotional overdrive: the challenge of reading A Little Life 'It’s an exaggerated book. There is nothing subtle about the book. I really push the conventions of a literary novel, and the restraint of the contemporary literary novel.' damage and the challenge of personhood 'I'm sorry' and challenges of friendship was writing a second novel easier than her debut writing process and research talking to people about careers how personal is A Little Life? (as I begin to serve carrots), how does friendship change over the decades? love, marriage, relationships and friends 'I am personally not interested in getting married' Part 2 will follow in the nextfew days.
In the final part of my Yanagihara trilogy from 2014, we continue to discuss her astonishing, unnerving debut The People in the Trees. ----more----Yanagihara begins by answering my question about whether her fiction sets out to astonish or unnerve. She continues by addressing at least some of the following: asking questions in art that she can't answer in lifeher (former) day job at Conde Nast Travelerabout the advantages of a work-writing balanceabout the research needed to write The People in the Treesscience and animal researchYanagihara's father and the evolution of scienceimmigration and American sciencereactions from family and colleagues to The People in Trees'I dont love the book either...'a preview of her next book, A Little LifeThe interview ends with me gushing and the sounds of a hotel preparing for lunch. A new four part podcast about A Little Life will be released later this month.
A short taster for my first interview with Hanya Yanagihara from 2014 about her extraordinary debut novel, The People in Trees. A Writing Life podcast with Hanya about her differently extraordinary Man Booker longlisted A Little Life will be out last this month. For now, enjoy Yanagihara on encountering an Upper East Side book group.
Hawaiian-born Hanya Yanagihara has been feted across the world, and longlisted for 2015's Man Booker Prize, for her amazing A Little Life. A Writing Life podcast is on the way.----more---- Last year Writing Life met Hanya for equally unsettling and unputdownable debut, The People in the Trees, the story of an anthropologist who travels to a tiny Micronesian island in the search for extended life and ends up accused of child abuse. In the first part of this three part interview, we met at a noisy Berners Street hotel. Hanya began by wondering whether she feels like a novelist. Then: the importance of her work for Conde Nast in freeing her creatively'My only concern with the books is the world I create be as logical and complete as possible'the conservative nature of modern publishinglaziness and taking 20 years to write a novelthe strain of writing as an old manwhere did the idea for the novel come from?the real-life story of the novel's inspiration, Daniel Carleton Gajdusekresearching Gajdusek, science and controversyHawaii, Barack Obama and Yanagihara's cultural background'I am the first generation of my family not to work in the fields'colonisation in Hawaii and Yanagihara's fiction The Tempest as inspiration for The People in the Treestravel, Empire, science and transformationlove, loneliness, science and Yanagihara's central character, Norton Perinagenius and the 'Great Man'Yanagihara's scientist fathermoral questions: does the end always justify the means in scientific researchthe vexed question of extended life 'Nobody wants you to be old anymore'Read my review in the Independent of The People in the Trees here.