The Occupation Trilogy: La Place de L'Etoile, the Night Watch, Ring Roads
Autor Patrick Modianoen Limba Engleză Paperback – 21 sep 2015
Born at the close of World War II, 2014 Nobel Prize winner Patrick Modiano was a young man in his twenties when he burst onto the Parisian literary scene with these three brilliant, angry novels about the wartime Occupation of Paris.
The epigraph to his first novel, among the first to seriously question Nazi collaboration in France, reads: "In June 1942 a German officer goes up to a young man and says: 'Excuse me, monsieur, where is La Place de l'Etoile?' The young man points to the star on his chest." The second novel, The Night Watch, tells the story of a young man caught between his work for the French Gestapo, his work for a Resistance cell, and the black marketeers whose milieu he shares. Ring Roads recounts a son's search for his Jewish father who disappeared ten years earlier, whom he finds trying to weather the war in service to unsavory characters.
Together these three brilliant, almost hallucinatory evocations of the Occupation attempt to exorcise the past by exploring the morally ambiguous worlds of collaboration and resistance. Award-winning translator Frank Wynne has revised the translations of The Night Watch and Ring Roads--long out of print--for our current day, and brings La Place de l'Etoile into English for the first time. The Occupation Trilogy provides the perfect introduction to one of the world's greatest writers.
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Specificații
ISBN-10: 1632863723
Pagini: 352
Dimensiuni: 140 x 211 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury USA
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Descriere
Caracteristici
Recenzii
Like a cartoon strip in prose, caricatural and explosive . A disturbing evocation of the terror and treachery of the Occupation, and a mordant reminder of the tense relationship between Jewishness and Frenchness
Self-consciously outrageous ... Conventions and pieties are torn to pieces in a manner befitting a book published in Paris in 1968 . The more Modiano you read, the more seductive his work becomes ... Hypnotic and compulsive
Brisk, smart, witty, elliptical ... Recalls the directors of the New Wave - Godard, Truffaut, Louis Malle - as much as the opaque narrators of the nouveau roman . Frank Wynne captures this scattergun savagery with formidable bite . Bracing and brilliant ... Deepens the twilit mood of 1940s film noir or mid-period Graham Greene with an immersive intensity
A Marcel Proust of our time
Modiano is a pure original
Modiano is the poet of the Occupation and a spokesman for the disappeared, and I am thrilled that the Swedish Academy has recognised him
Europe's home-grown divisions haunt the edgy, atmospheric Parisian fictions of 2014 Nobel laureate Patrick Modiano: sample the three early novels of The Occupation Trilogy
Usually when we think of French novels or films about Vichy France we think of the heroism of the Resistance. Modiano has a much darker subject: the grey zone of French collaboration. He is drawn to the murky worlds of gangsters, informers, collaborators and black marketeers . This is Modiano's world as it was in the time of his father in wartime Paris . La Place de l'Étoile is very unusual for Modiano. It's a shocking, almost hysterical rant by a French, Jewish anti-Semite, Raphael Schlemilovitch. It is nasty, brutish and short. It's a very knowing, literary work with references to French writers, Jewish and anti-Semitic alike, from Proust and Sartre to the notorious Jew-hater Brasillach . Schlemilovitch constantly changes his identity. Few of Modiano's characters are sympathetic but Schlemilovitch is easily the least likeable . The Night Watch marks Modiano's breakthrough . The real change is in style. The narrative moves between a hazy, imprecise world where things are 'blurred' and 'fogged' to a precise world where everything is described in minute detail. Above all, there is a sense of mystery . By the end of Ring Roads, Modiano had found his voice and was on his way to becoming one of France's most fascinating contemporary writers