Bővebb ismertető
THAT "DIRTY" WAR^
by Graham Greene
PpaxeM PpHH (p. 1904 r.) npHOÓpeji HSsecTHOCTb Kax nHcaxejib, ctohiuhh na nosHUHHx KpHXHHecKoro pe-a/iHSMa. nocjie oKOHqaHHH OKC(|)opzi.cKor© yHHBepcH-TCTa pphh paóoTaji mypHaJiiicTOM, mhofo nyxeiuecTBo-baji, 6hiJi b sanajxhoh a4)phke h hniiokhtae.
HaHÓojiee SHaHHxejibHbie npoH3Be;ieHH5i FpHna no-jiBHJiHCb B nocjieBoeHHbiH nepHO^i: «Thxhh aMepHKa-Heu» (1948) H «Ham qejiobck b FaBane» (1958).
B poMane «Thxhh aMepHKaneu» PpHH BbicTynaer KaK npOTHBHHK KOJIOHHaJIHSMa h phcyct BCCbMa HenpH-BJieKaxejibKbiH nopxpex aiviepHKaHCKoro pa3Be;iqHKa Hafijia.
B npHBozüHMbix KH>Ke oxpbiBKax H3 sxoro poMana ifl,aioxcH peaJiHCXHqecKHe KapxHHbi «rpasHofi» bokhm,. KGTOpyK) BejiH B xcieHHe pma Jiex bo Bbexnaivie (|)paH-iiyscKHe KOJiOHHsaxopbi.
1. War on the canals
From the bell tower of the Cathedral, the bat-tie was only picturesque, fixed like a panorama of the Boer War^ in an old Illustrated London News.^ An aeroplane was parachuting supplies to an isolated post in the calcaire, those strange weather-eroded mountains on the Annam border that look likej)iles of pumice, and because it always returned to the same place for tts glide, it might never have moved, and the paira-