词条 | I Am the Cheese |
释义 |
| name = "I Am the Cheese" | image = I-am-cheese-cover.jpg | caption = First edition | author = Robert Cormier | country = United States | language = English | genre = Young adult novel, crime fiction | publisher = Pantheon Books | pub_date = 1977 | media_type = Print (hardcover & paperback) | pages = 233 pp (first edition) | isbn = 978-0-394-83462-7 | congress = PZ7.C81634 Iac[1] | oclc = 2645991 }} I Am the Cheese is a young adult novel by the American writer Robert Cormier, published in 1977. PlotThe novel opens with protagonist Adam Farmer biking from his home in the fictional town of Monument, Massachusetts (based on Cormier's home town of Leominster, Massachusetts{{citation needed|date=December 2010}}) to visit his father in Rutterburg, Vermont. The story alternates with transcripts of tapes between a "subject" and Brint. The subject receives psychotherapy and is interrogated by Brint. As the book continues, it is revealed that Adam is the subject, who was formerly Paul Delmonte of a small New York town. His father, "David Farmer", was a newspaper reporter who was enrolled in the Witness Protection Program (WPP). The family moved to Monument and escaped several close calls with their identities, but the parents are killed in the penultimate chapter in a car collision. Adam/Paul survives, and is taken to a government mental asylum. The last chapter implies that WPP agents killed the family, and reveals that Paul is regularly interrogated on the topic. Each time, Paul is unable to handle his realizations of his past and embarks on his delusion bike ride across the ground of the facility. At the end of the last tape, Brint recommends authorization to kill Adam. Characters
TitleThis quote is the last verse from "The Farmer In The Dell", a song that Adam sings during the book: The cheese stands alone He sings many of these songs throughout the novel. The song contains several characters, each taking someone with them when the farmer leaves, yet the cheese has nobody. Adam believes that he is the cheese. He is alone in the world, his mother dead and his father missing, and he lives in a hospital. Another point is that his father had taught him the song, possibly in a way to reinforce the new name, 'Farmer,' they had adopted. Literary significance and criticismThe 1975 novel I Am the Cheese began Cormier's experimentation with first-person, present-tense narration. When Cormier sent the manuscript to the publisher of his previous novel, The Chocolate War, he was confused and depressed, convinced that he was alienating his new young adult audience because of the complex and ambiguous story. However, I Am the Cheese proved to be a success. Awards and nominationsI Am the Cheese was named to five annual book lists according to the publisher description of the 20th anniversary edition.[1] It won the 1997 Phoenix Award from the Children's Literature Association as the best English-language children's book that did not win a major award when it was originally published twenty years earlier. It is named for the mythical bird phoenix, which is reborn from its ashes, to suggest the book's rise from obscurity.Film adaptations{{Main article|I Am the Cheese (film)}}I Am the Cheese was released as a movie in 1983, directed by Robert Jiras and starring Robert MacNaughton, Hope Lange, Don Murray, Lee Richardson, Cynthia Nixon and Robert Wagner. The screenplay was written by David Lange (Hope Lange's brother) and Robert Jiras.[2]Publication history
WorldCat libraries report holding Danish (1986), Catalan (1987), Spanish (1998), Chinese, Polish, Serbian and Korean-language editions. See also{{Portal bar |Children's literature |Crime |Novels}}References1. ^1 "I am the cheese" (first edition). Library of Congress Catalog Record. Retrieved 2012-12-13. . Children's Literature Association. Retrieved 2012-12-13.2. ^{{cite news | last = Maslin | first = Janet | title = Movie Review: I Am The Cheese (1983) | work = The New York Times | date = November 11, 1983 }} See also the current homepage "Phoenix Award". }} External links
10 : 1977 American novels|American crime novels|American novels adapted into films|American young adult novels|Fiction with unreliable narrators|Novels by Robert Cormier|Novels set in Massachusetts|Novels set in Vermont|Leominster, Massachusetts|Pantheon Books books |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。