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Our Lady of the Flowers, often considered Genet's masterpiece, was
written in the cell of a French prison where he was being held for
theft. Here is the darker side of Montmartre, a world of pimps,
thieves, prostitutes, queens and blackmailers, where 'morality' in
the common sense of the word has no meaning. The story of Divine, a
drag-queen prostitute, is interwoven with that of one of his
lovers, a young man due to be arrested for murder. A story of sex,
crime and death, Our Lady of the Flowers is a powerful and original
debut novel, which put Genet into the front rank of French writers.
The Thief's Journal is perhaps Jean Genet's most authentically
autobiographical novel; an account of his impoverished travels
across 1930s Europe. The narrator is guilty of vagrancy, petty
theft and prostitution, but his writing transforms such
degradations into an inverted moral code, where criminality and
delinquency become heroic. With a holy trinity of his own making -
homosexuality, theft and betrayal - in The Thief's Journal Genet
produced a startlingly powerful novel without precedent.
This is a new release of the original 1949 edition.
This is a new release of the original 1949 edition.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Muerto en Paris, donde paso los ultimos anos de su vida bajo
seudonimo, Oscar Wilde (1854-1900), irlandes de nacimiento pero
ingles de devocion, tuvo que afrontar un escandaloso proceso por
B+ultraje a la moralB; en la rigida sociedad victoriana, que habria
de llevarle a la carcel y al exilio. Andre Gide (Paris 1869-1951,
premio Nobel de Literatura en 1947) no ofrece aqui una biografia de
Wilde o un ensayo sobre su obra, sino que recoge dos B+semblanzasB;
la primera, escrita apenas un ano despues de la muerte del autor de
Balada de la carcel de Reading, es una elegia a la memoria de un
escritor que, defendiendo los principios del B+arte por el arteB; ,
paga, paradojicamente, la practica del arte con la propia vida; la
segunda es un analisis, antes moral (aqui sin comillas) que
literario, del poema De Profundis, que Wilde escribiera en prision
en forma de carta dirigida a Lord Douglas, el personaje
desencadenante de su desgracia, y que no se publicaria hasta 1905,
postumamente. Dos textos, en suma, que nos hablan de la categoria
humana y artistica de dos escritores de nuestro tiempo.
Muerto en Paris, donde paso los ultimos anos de su vida bajo
seudonimo, Oscar Wilde (1854-1900), irlandes de nacimiento pero
ingles de devocion, tuvo que afrontar un escandaloso proceso por
B+ultraje a la moralB; en la rigida sociedad victoriana, que habria
de llevarle a la carcel y al exilio. Andre Gide (Paris 1869-1951,
premio Nobel de Literatura en 1947) no ofrece aqui una biografia de
Wilde o un ensayo sobre su obra, sino que recoge dos B+semblanzasB;
la primera, escrita apenas un ano despues de la muerte del autor de
Balada de la carcel de Reading, es una elegia a la memoria de un
escritor que, defendiendo los principios del B+arte por el arteB; ,
paga, paradojicamente, la practica del arte con la propia vida; la
segunda es un analisis, antes moral (aqui sin comillas) que
literario, del poema De Profundis, que Wilde escribiera en prision
en forma de carta dirigida a Lord Douglas, el personaje
desencadenante de su desgracia, y que no se publicaria hasta 1905,
postumamente. Dos textos, en suma, que nos hablan de la categoria
humana y artistica de dos escritores de nuestro tiempo.
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Guignol's Band (Paperback)
Louis-Ferdinand Celine; Translated by Bernard Frechtman, Jack Nile
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R317
R260
Discovery Miles 2 600
Save R57 (18%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Celine's third novel, first published in 1944 but dealing with
events taking place during the First World War, Guignol's Band
follows the narrator's meanderings through London after he has been
demobilized due to a war injury. The result is a frank,
uncompromising, yet grotesquely funny portrayal of the English
capital's seedy underworld, peopled by prostitutes, pimps and
schemers. Often considered to be Celine's funniest work, Guignol's
Band showcases its author's idiosyncratic style at its finest,
frantically blending slang, invective, onomatopoeia with literary
language, and bridging the gap between gritty realism and absurd
mysticism.
The hero, the semi-autobiographical Ferdinand, moves through the
nightmare of London's underworld during the years of World War I.
In this distressing setting, he meets pimps and prostitutes,
pawnbrokers and magicians, policemen and arsonists. He sees social
and physiological decomposition as these processes unfold along
parallel lines of development. The illusions of existence are
nakedly exposed. The narrative erupts in Celine's characteristic
elliptical style. His splintered sentences and scatology reflect
his fury at the fragmentation of experience and at his own
impotence in the face of it. Out of his rage, he forces the
meaninglessness back on itself, and the exuberance of his struggle
triumphs in the comic exaggeration of satire. Ultimately, his
subject is not death but life, and he responds to it by a
strengthened commitment to the sensual and concrete. His
hallucinatory world is so vividly realized that it does, indeed,
challenge the reality of the reader's more conventional world.
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