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Le monde est rond

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«Le Monde est rond» est le plus célèbre des livres de Gertrude Stein à destination des enfants. Initialement paru en 1939, il est actuellement épuisé dans sa version intégrale en français. Après la découverte du «Livre de lecture», les éditions Cambourakis poursuivent donc leur travail de redécouverte de textes majeurs de Gertrude Stein, servie par une nouvelle traduction de Martin Richet et des illustrations d'Alice Lorenzi, qui avaient déjà travaillé sur le précédent volume. On y suit les tribulations de deux enfants, Rose et Willie, en quête d'identité au milieu d'une faune et d'une flore luxuriante. On y retrouve les éléments caractéristiques de l'écriture de Gertrude Stein, sa manipulation de la grammaire, les allitérations, le tout culminant dans la célèbre ritournelle « a rose is a rose is a rose », gravée sur un arbre sur le chemin des deux enfants.

128 pages, Unknown Binding

First published January 1, 1939

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1398 people want to read

About the author

Gertrude Stein

409 books1,190 followers
Gertrude Stein was an American writer who spent most of her life in France, and who became a catalyst in the development of modern art and literature. Her life was marked by two primary relationships, the first with her brother Leo Stein, from 1874-1914, and the second with Alice B. Toklas, from 1907 until Stein's death in 1946. Stein shared her salon at 27 rue de Fleurus, Paris, first with Leo and then with Alice. Throughout her lifetime, Stein cultivated significant tertiary relationships with well-known members of the avant garde artistic and literary world of her time.

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5 stars
226 (33%)
4 stars
212 (31%)
3 stars
150 (22%)
2 stars
55 (8%)
1 star
23 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 108 reviews
Profile Image for Sasha.
Author 9 books5,047 followers
Want to read
August 30, 2016
Well, Gertrude Stein wrote a children's book. “Don’t bother about the commas which aren’t there, read the words. Don’t worry about the sense that is there, read the words. If you have any trouble, read faster and faster until you don’t.”
Profile Image for K Marcu.
291 reviews11 followers
Read
February 12, 2022
Hmmm

maybe I’m not ‘artsy’ enough to understand this but I felt like throwing this out the window
263 reviews52 followers
January 23, 2014
Not sure if I liked or disliked this book. It was kind of a thing that happened.
2 reviews
April 4, 2013
I've tried to read other works by Gertrude Stein, but have found them un-engaging. And then there's this book. It's probably one of my favorite three or four books of all time.

It's really not like anything else Stein ever wrote and to file it under "children's literature" is unfair, because there's just as much here (probably more) for adults than there is for kids. I'll let you draw your own conclusions, but as other reviewers have said, it's about self-determination, finding your place in the world, fulfillment (and lack thereof), and what it means to be human. And all in a very simple story about a girl and a chair that you can read in about an hour.

A brief synopsis:

Rose, roughly six years old, lives with her parents and her dog.

The first third of the book tells of her relationship with her dog and the neighbors' dog, and, also, her relationship with her cousin Willie (also about six years old). Willie acts brave, much to Rose's annoyance, but when he gets a pet lion, his true colors shine through.

The rest of the book is about Rose carrying a blue chair up a "mountain" (more like a hill) that's not far from her backyard.

That's pretty much it in the way of plot. The star here is the language, though, and how well it fits with the characters and how easily it relates feelings and thoughts that all of us have, at every age, through the eyes of a child. But not in any condescending way. Which is why this book is so great. Stein succeeds in leaving herself out of it. It doesn't feel like it's written by an adult trying to see the world again through the eyes of a child. Instead, a six year old child is telling you this story, and she's trying to figure out what it means to be alive.
Profile Image for Kunal Sen.
Author 32 books66 followers
February 6, 2014
I am glad that I didn't read this book as a child, because I'm not sure if I would have enjoyed it as much. The writing is incredibly beautiful. I think we all have a Rose in us, who is trying to go somewhere, but when we reach there, we realize that there is not there.
Profile Image for Hermien.
2,313 reviews64 followers
October 2, 2018
I was delighted by this little book, and that is even without the illustrations.
Profile Image for Charlie.
362 reviews43 followers
December 18, 2013
NO - you cannot put this book down and just walk away. Ever wonder who you are? "Who am I?" This book should open your eyes. Not a hard read but a fun, easy read to make you think a bit. First published in 1939. So, now you know it is not a NEW book but a 'refreshed' book that is, I think made for children AND adults.
This book is just over 100 pages, kinda like a fill-in between the serious books that you read.
You will get to know Rose, Willie and Billie. BUT ROSE IS A ROSE.
AND yes, got this book free from Goodreads.com and the Author.
Profile Image for Gergana Dimitrova.
44 reviews19 followers
September 18, 2017
Веднъж се срещнах аз и аз побягнах.
Да бягам никой там не ме видя.
Веднъж щом може може пак
И никой нищо да не види факт
Но каквото искам аз ще правя
Ще бягам тичам и летя
Аз Уили аз.

Дай ми хляб
Дай масло
Дай ми сирене
И сладко
Дай ми мляко
И кокошка
Дай ми повече яйца
Също мъничко салам който бързо да изям.
Profile Image for Sıla Küçükoğlu.
8 reviews
Read
August 3, 2024
Alara'yla almıştık ve içine yazdığı nota bakılırsa rüyalar hakkında baya konuşmuşuz o gün. Çok güzel uyuyor çünkü kitap okumuş değil de öğlen sızıp bir rüya görmüş gibi hissediyorum. Mutluyum.
Profile Image for Illiterate.
2,797 reviews56 followers
April 17, 2019
A child’s questions, songs, and explorations of world and self. Stein’s style suits children, and writing for children curbs her pretentiousness.
Profile Image for J. Alfred.
1,829 reviews37 followers
January 28, 2021
Gertrude Stein is a genius and this is a kids book (?) or at least, it is certainly a book, written by her, with illustrations by the great Clement Hurd. The 75th anniversary edition also features a long essay by Hurd's wife, which gives all kinds of good information about Stein herself and the world of children's literature, back when that was an emerging genre. This tells me, among other things, that there were carpets and wallpapers done featuring Hurd's illustrations for this book. A google search or two has not found me any variants of these that I can purchase, and I am disappointed. Where, I ask, is the entrepreneurial vigor of the internet? Somebody make this happen immediately. Harrumph.
Profile Image for Jos.
169 reviews
July 17, 2012
Gertrude Stein gilt als die “Mutter der verlorenen Generation” und war schon zu ihrer Zeit eine Kultfigur. In ihrem Salon gaben sich Hemingway, Matisse, Picasso, Man Ray, Scott Fitzgerald, Thomas Eliot und viele andere die Klinke in die Hand. Was für eine spannende, kreative Zeit muss das damals in Paris gewesen sein und wie gern hätte ich mal Mäuschen gespielt – bei den Gesprächen in denen Stein Hemingway dazu brachte, seine Reportertätigkeit aufzugeben und Schriftsteller zu werden oder bei den endlosen Sitzungen in denen Picasso Gertrude portraitierte oder bei den vergeblichen Versuchen von James Joyce einen Verlag zu finden.. ach ja..

Doch zurück zu Gertrude, die nicht nur Schriftsteller und Künstler in Paris zusammenbrachte und beeinflusste, sondern auch selber schrieb. Es dauerte jedoch lange, bis man ihr Talent wirklich anerkannte, denn ihr avantgardistischer Schreibstil ist nicht für Jedermann.
Auch das kleine Buch “Die Welt ist rund”, um das es hier gehen soll, ist keine Alltagslektüre. Eigentlich war es eine Auftragsarbeit, ein Kinderbuch (1938 erschienen) - doch es steckt so viel mehr drin!

“Eine Rose ist eine Rose ist eine Rose”
Viele von uns kennen diese Worte, die wenigsten wissen, dass sie von Gertrude Stein stammen. Rose ist in diesem Fall ein kleines, weinerliches Mädchen, das oft singen muss, gern nachdenkt “Kann Rose eine Rose sein wenn ihre Lieblingsfarbe Blau ist?” und sich mit ihrem blauen Stuhl auf die Reise den Berg hinauf macht. Bei ihrem Abenteuer begleiten sie am Anfang ihr Freund Willie, die Hunde Love und Pépé und ein Löwe namens Billie. Oben auf dem Berg angekommen, ritzt sie ihren Namen in den Stamm eines Baumes und weil der Baum rund ist, ritzt sie einfach weiter “Eine Rose ist eine Rose ist eine Rose (..) und dann ist’s einfach da und ich höre nirgends mehr irgendwas das mir in der Nacht Angst macht.”

Erst der Name eines Objektes/einer Person verkörpert das Bild und die damit verbundenen Gefühle – was denken wir beim Namen Rose? Die Wiederholungen sorgen dafür, dass eine Sache im Gedächtnis bleibt – eine Rose ist eine Rose – und sie zeigen für Gertrude eigentlich das Leben auf, denn das Leben ist eine immer wiederkehrende Wiederholung – „alles immer wieder” hat sie in „The Making of Americans” geschrieben. Und sie sagte einmal, dass es ihr Hund Basket mit seinem rhythmischen Milch Schlecken war, der ihr den Unterschied zwischen Prosa und Poesie beigebracht habe. So liest sich das Buch auch: rhythmisch, poetisch, voller Wiederholungen, manchmal so als ob es ein dreijähriges Kind geschrieben hätte.

Es ist eine moderne Geschichte, experimentell, Kubismus in Literaturform – kein Wunder bei ihrer Freundschaft zu Picasso. Doch wie Picassos Werke nicht von allen verstanden werden, verschliesst sich auch Gertrude Steins Werk vielen Menschen. Nicht nur die endlosen Wiederholungen, Reime, ja der Sprechgesang macht die Leser nervös, sondern auch das Weglassen von Satzzeichen.
“Satzzeichen sind nur für schwachsinnige Personen” so wird sie zitiert, würde man diese Hilfestellung weglassen, “fördere man die Selbständigkeit des Lesers beim Verarbeiten der Wortfolgen” - oder man fördert das Desinteresse am Buch – viele Verlage lehnten Steins Werke mit der Begründung ab, dass sich dafür keine Leser fänden. Ihr Kritiker bezeichnen viele ihrer Werke als unlesbar.

Doch Rose wurde veröffentlicht und geblieben ist uns ein wunderschönes Zitat, auch, wenn wir heute kaum noch wissen woher es stammt. Doch dieses Problem habe ich jetzt behoben ;)

“Und manchmal verkaufte jemand eins recht oft verkaufte jeder eins. Willies Vater ging sich eins holen aber welches das durfte Willie aussuchen. Es war komisch wilde Tiere in einem Boot zu sehen ein wildes Tier in einem Ruderboot ein wildes Tier in einem Segelboot ein wildes Tier in einem Motorboot es war schon komisch da in dieser Stadt das heisst es wäre da nicht komisch gewesen es war wie überall woanders nur hatte jeder immer ein wildes Tier bei sich. Männer Frauen und Kinder und sehr oft waren sie auf dem Wasser in einem Boot und das wilde Tier war bei ihnen und natürlich sind wilde Tiere wild natürlich sind sie wild es war schon komisch da”

Nun, wer diese Art des Bücherschreibens komisch findet, ist wohl nicht allein auf der Welt – egal ob auf einem Boot mit einem wilden Tier oder nicht. Aber es ist mit Sicherheit auch ein Erlebnis, sich auf Gertrudes Stil einzulassen. Ich gestehe, dass mir die Beschäftigung mit der Person Gertrude Steins, ihrem Leben, ihren Ideen und Gedanken mehr Spaß gemacht hat als das Lesen dieses Buches, trotzdem möchte ich jetzt nicht mehr missen. Ob ich weitere Werke von Stein lesen werde, weiss ich noch nicht, vielleicht wenn mir der Sinn wieder mal nach fehlenden Satzzeichen steht und ich Lust auf die Avantgarde des 20. Jahrhunderts habe.

4 faszinierte Sterne für die Rose die eine Rose ist

Fun fact: Als man Frau Stein zum wiederholten Male nach dem Sinn des Rosen – Satzes fragte, antwortete sie: “Also hören Sie! Ich bin doch kein Narr. Ich weiß, dass man im täglichen Leben nicht sagt, ,is a …is a … is a …’. Aber ich denke, dass in dieser Zeile die Rose zum ersten Mal seit hundert Jahren in der Dichtung rot ist.” – nachdenkenswert, oder?
Profile Image for Cheryl.
13k reviews484 followers
Read
February 18, 2017
Books in Search of Children: reports from children:

12 yo boy 'relaxing'
another 'the use of words has you laughing till your sides ache.'
another 'much more *human* than most books.'
13 yo girl 'I think Rose and Willie are wonderful. I like people who really feel things inside, and adore the way they express themselves in their wonderful songs.'
another 13 yo girl 'the story is simple and dreamy. You can forget yourself and live in a separate world while you are reading it.'
younger child 'I love the new style writing because it is the way I, or any other child, would think and write.'
"Of course there were also children who thought 'dumb.'"

Ok, so now I've read it. Thank goodness I had this new edition, with plenty of notes. I did manage to read, *aloud*, the whole thing, and hear the 'music' of it, but I still didn't enjoy it much. It had a little bit of Ruth Krauss vibe to it, and maybe even a bit of Mr. God This is Anna, but only if you're immediately familiar with those will my comment mean anything to you.

It's not "difficult." In that I agree with the commentators. But it is personal; iow it appeals to some readers and not others. If you're artistic, sensitive, philosophical, you're likely to appreciate it more than I did. I'm generally more pragmatic, and I value logic and stoicism, so, um, well, let's just say that I'm not the intended audience, I didn't manage to feel enriched, and I don't feel as if I can rate it.
Profile Image for Gabrielle.
57 reviews14 followers
June 3, 2015
I don't think Gertrude Stein is for me.

The packaging of the book was beautiful! The art was fantastic. However, the blue type on pink paper really strained my eyes.
Profile Image for Kris Dersch.
2,371 reviews24 followers
July 30, 2018
I have a lot of trouble figuring out how to classify this one. I liked it...it's whimsical and sweet and I found the playing with language delectable. But it is long for a kids' book...I wish I had gotten through it in one setting and I'm not sure I'd totally classify it as a kids' book. But I also would totally encourage sharing it with kids because I think it will totally encourage their own writing and drawing and dreaming. In some ways, Stein is a fabulous author for kids because once you get past the pretense the playing with language is pleasing to the ear and fun to read out loud.
Overall, super glad I read it, super glad it exists, but I can see how this is not going to be for everyone. But if no literary experimentation exists, where are we really?
Profile Image for Annie.
446 reviews3 followers
March 1, 2022
YEARS ago, had friends doing their Masters Thesis on Gertrude Stein. I Did Not Get It. Found it humorless, repetitive. Fast forward 40+ years... a reference to this book made it sound, well, worth reading. Found an audiobook. WOW. WHAT a difference from my theater friends version from way back! enchanting, intriguing. ok, NOT perfect--still things I had trouble with--but for the greater part, MUCH more worth the listen, the thinking about the words--and o, her humor and kindness shone thru!
Profile Image for belisa.
1,444 reviews42 followers
December 13, 2021
başlamak için iyi bir kitap, sıkılmadan okudum...
Profile Image for Joana Esteves.
2 reviews1 follower
December 5, 2019
O livro não é de todo o meu "cup of tea" e cansativo de ler. Apesar disso, gosto muito das ilustrações e do aspeto do livro.
8 reviews7 followers
January 8, 2022
An existentialist children's book...
It is written in a very descriptive voice as a child would write. I find myself reading it in parts and not from beginning to end. It is written with a stream of consciousness... flowing from one thought to the next with a repetitive choice of words.
I enjoyed it immensely and it even influenced the children's book I wrote, "Animals Have Their Say"
The plot in "The World is Round" is simple involving a girl named Rose, her cousin Willie, and a blue chair.
Rose climbs a mountain with her blue chair and in a sense discovers who she is..
Profile Image for Emilia.
616 reviews137 followers
May 27, 2022
Me gustó mucho, la edición es bellísima y me sentí muy atraído por la forma en que está escrito. No sabría analizarlo más allá de decir que me gustó jeje
Profile Image for Книжни Криле.
3,620 reviews204 followers
August 26, 2017
„Земното кълбо се върти”, и то понякога с такава скорост, че всичките точки, тирета и запетайки да се разхвърчат из дълбините на космоса! Новото предложение на издателство „Лист” от серията „Детски шедьоври от велики писатели” ще хвърли в ужас и потрес всеки педант на пунктуацията, но тук (д)ефектът е напълно целенасочен. Грабвайте книжката на Гертруд и гарантирано ще си глътнете граматиката! Прочетете ревюто на "Книжни Криле":

https://knijnikrile.wordpress.com/201...
Profile Image for Constance Liu.
17 reviews
December 11, 2023
My six year old daughter sat seriously under a table reading this book when she picked it up at a used book fair. She asked me to buy it, saying: “I don’t understand it but I like it.”

Sounds about right -
Profile Image for mandy.
313 reviews10 followers
October 7, 2008
an amazing book that is part children's story, part existential journey---Rose is on a quest to discover if she would still be Rose if she had a different name. Wonderful illustrations and a great sing-song writing style by Gertrude Stein....



"Rose was her name and would she have been Rose if her name had not been Rose. She used to think and then she used to think again.

Would she have been Rose if her name had not been Rose and would she have been Rose if she had been a twin.

Rose was her name all the same and her father's name was Bob and her mother's name was Kate and her uncle's name was William and her aunt's name was Gloria and her grandmother's name was Lucy. They all had names and her name was Rose, but would she have been she used to cry about it would she have been Rose if her name had not been Rose.

I tell you at this time the world was all round and you could go on it around and around."
Profile Image for Mae.
214 reviews13 followers
December 12, 2013
a rose is a rose is a rose. Gertrude Stein loved to say and to use this. This fascinating little book written by Gertrude Stein and illustrated by Clement Hurd is a beautiful looking book, printed in rose colored pages and blue lettering. Meant as a children book, I found the book is better as a collectors item. An item of an era, and the example of a daring and innovative author. One cannot escape the modernist feeling of this book. I almost want to rip its pages out and frame them.
The actual story has various levels and is a good exercise for reading out loud. I don't have small children anymore, but I think my kids would have appreciate a couple of evenings of this book read out loud. Its got rhythm and musicality, but the jury is still out as far as the story is concerned. I may review this entry after I read it to a child.
Profile Image for Sarah Lada.
110 reviews5 followers
January 12, 2014
Having just finished reading Antoine De Saint Exupery's "The Little Prince", I found myself reading yet another story for both children and adults that approaches a wonder-filled child and their search for who they are or where they belong. "A Rose is a Rose is a Rose is a Rose" is a popular Stein-ism that finds itself encircling a trunk when Rose, the main character, becomes slightly overwhelmed by her journey up a mountain. Not to be cryptic, but I certainly found this trek up a mountain to also be death. Once she gets up to the mountain to sit in her blue chair, she tries very hard to stay in that chair. She sees a bright light. I'll admit, the ending was abrupt and convenient, but I enjoyed the read. Also, if you plan on reading this book, don't forget Stein's modernist writing full of puns, rhymes, endless repetition, and lack of proper punctuation.
38 reviews
July 26, 2008
I love Gertrude Stein. I learned to write from reading Virginia Woolf and Gertrude Stein, so there is a sense of gratitude and wonderment and pleasure here that I won't ever outgrow. That said, there is much Stein I have not read and I haven't read any Stein in a while.
This one is a children's book, and I really want to use it literally as that: when I finish it, I want to send it to my mother-in-law and ask, beg, plead, with her to read it aloud to her grandchildren. The prose has all the non-linearity of children telling a story and there is something captivating about this non-goal-oriented experience of literature, as of the world, that needs to be encouraged and enjoyed.
Profile Image for Raena Mceuin.
14 reviews1 follower
November 26, 2013
A compilation of poetry layered with angular minimalist pink and blue world makes this book a visually appealing abstract exploration. Gertrude Stein has a mind of note as well, and I was surprised to find that she had written a children's book. I think the elements of this book expose kids to the specificity and meticulousness poetry and prose can embody, and I would use this book to explore the world she created. The format varies from paragraph to short quips. It resembles a folk-tale in it's general characters, plot line, so we would read through the book and determine elements that fall into their respective genres. 3rd grade.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 108 reviews

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