翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Blow Up (club night)
・ Blow Up (EP)
・ Blow Up (magazine)
・ Blow Up (The Smithereens album)
・ Blow Up Hollywood
・ Blow Up Records
・ Blow Up the Moon
・ Blow Up the Outside World
・ Blow Up the Pokies
・ Blow Up Your Video
・ Blow Up Your Video World Tour
・ Blow Ya Mind
・ Blow Your Cool!
・ Blow Your Face Out
・ Blow Your Headphones
Blow Your House Down
・ Blow Your Mind
・ Blow Your Mind (J. Williams song)
・ Blow Your Mind (Jamiroquai song)
・ Blow Your Mind (Redman song)
・ Blow Your Pants Off
・ Blow Your Trumpets Gabriel
・ Blow'n Chunks
・ Blow's Down
・ Blow-me-down Bluff
・ Blow-me-down Brook
・ Blow-Me-Down Covered Bridge
・ Blow-Me-Down Grange
・ Blow-Up (DJ duo)
・ Blow-Up (soundtrack)


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Blow Your House Down : ウィキペディア英語版
Blow Your House Down

''Blow Your House Down'' is the second novel by Pat Barker. Published in 1984, the novel follows the lives of a number of prostitutes working in a northern English city at a time when a serial killer of prostitutes is haunting the area. The main focus is on two prostitute characters, Brenda and Jean, and their respective histories.
==Plot summary==
The novel is divided into three parts. Part 1, which is centred on Brenda, starts off by showing Brenda in the role of a mother of three children; she is shown putting them to sleep before she goes out for the evening. Most of Part 1 sees Brenda (in conjunction with Audrey) walking the street; episodes/encounters with customers are juxtaposed with passages telling Brenda’s history of becoming a prostitute. In the final section of part 1 the focus switches to Kath, an ‘old’, experienced, but ruined prostitute whose three kids were taken into communal care and whose luck has steadily deteriorated since that time. On leaving Palmerston (a pub where the prostitutes have their drinks before starting their work) Kath is approached by a client. He turns out to be the killer. Kath in her highly intoxicated state is unable to proffer any resistance to the man and he kills her.
Part 2 shows the intensifying of the fear among the prostitutes. It also further elaborates on the motherly part of the prostitutes’ lives; Elaine is expecting a baby but continues in her job - she starts working in a pair with Jean who seems to have a plan of some sort to trap and find the killer. The focus of the narrative gradually switches to Jean.
Part 3 is the climax of the novel as it leads to Jean’s identification and killing of the serial killer. It is narrated by Jean who tells the story of her friendship, teamwork, and love-relationship with Carol, a young and vulnerable fellow prostitute who one day disappeared under dramatic circumstances. After Carol’s corpse has been found on a heap of rubbish the strength of Jean’s love for Carol makes her determined to track down the murderer. From the clues given to her by her instinct and the murderer’s ‘handwriting’ she chooses a spot where she thinks she is most likely to meet him. Her waiting finally bears fruit and she manages to stab the man with a knife. Though in the end she herself is left to wonder whether she has killed the real murderer the reader – from the description of the murderer’s encounter with Kath – suspects that she has killed the right person (although this is never made clear). In the final chapter the news is told that Elaine has given birth to a boy.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Blow Your House Down」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.