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Set in a bizarre and slightly sinister town where the elderly are
auctioned off at an Old Folks Fair, the townspeople assail the
priest in hopes of making it rain, and the official town scapegoat
bears the shame of the citizens by fishing junk out of the river
with his teeth. Heartsnatcher is Boris Vian's most playful and most
serious work. The main character is Clementine, a mother who
punishes her husband for causing her the excruciating pain of
giving birth to three babies. As they age, she becomes increasingly
obsessed with protecting them, going so far as to build an
invisible wall around their property.
Boris Vian was a jack of all trades - although unfortunately his
name was Boris and "Boris of all trades" never took off as a turn
of phrase. But nevertheless Vian was a great songwriter,
playwright, singer, jazz critic and, of course novelist so it
should have been Boris instead of Jack. Vian's 1947 novel Autumn in
Peking (L'Automne Pikin) is perhaps Vian's most slapstick work,
with an added amount of despair in its exotic recipe for a violent
cocktail drink.
The story takes place in the imaginary desert called Exopotamie
where all the leading characters take part in the building of a
train station with tracks that go nowhere. Houses and buildings are
destroyed to build this unnecessary structure - and in Vian's world
waste not, make not.
In Alistair Rolls' pioneering study of Vian's novels, "The Flight
of the Angels," he expresses that Exopotamie is a thinly disguised
version of Paris, where after the war the city started changing its
previous centuries of architecture to something more modern. Yes,
something dull to take the place of what was exciting and
mysterious.
Vian, in a mixture of great humor and unequal amount of disgust,
introduces various 'eccentric' characters in this 'desert'
adventure, such as Anne and Angel who are best friends; and
Rochelle who is in love and sleeps with Anne, while Angel is madly
in love with her.
Besides the trio there is also Doctor Mangemanche; the archeologist
Athanagore Porphyroginite, his aide, Cuivre; and Pipo - all of them
in a locality similar to Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland, where
there is a tinge of darkness and anything is possible, except for
happiness.
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Mood Indigo (Paperback)
Boris Vian; Translated by Stanley Chapman
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R403
R334
Discovery Miles 3 340
Save R69 (17%)
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The basis of the new major movie from Michel Gondry, starring
Audrey Tautou, the beloved French modern classic hailed as "the
most poignant love story of our time" by Raymond Queneau
The story is simple: Boy meets girl; boy marries girl; girl falls
ill on their honeymoon with a water lily on the lung, which can
only be treated by being surrounded by flowers; boy goes broke
desperately trying to keep his true love alive.
First published in 1947, "Mood Indigo "perfectly captures the
feverishly creative, melancholy romance of mid-century
Saint-Germain-des-Pres. Recently voted number ten on "Le Monde"'s
list of the 100 Books of the Century (the top ten also included
works by Camus, Proust, Kafka, Hemingway, and Steinbeck), Boris
Vian's novel has been an icon of French literature for fifty
years--the avant-garde, populist masterpiece by one of
twentieth-century Paris's most intriguing cultural figures, a
touchstone for generations of revolutionary young people, a
jazz-fueled, science-fiction-infused, sexy, fantastical,
nouveau-decadent tear-jerker that has charmed and beguiled hundreds
of thousands of readers around the world. With the help of Michel
Gondry and Audrey Tautou, it is set to seduce many, many more.
Dan, un barman que lleva una vida relativamente apacible junto su
esposa y su hija, pierde los estribos cuando se le presenta un
hermanastro del que no tenia ninguna noticia, y lo mas grave del
asunto es que, a diferencia de Dan, su hermano Richard es negro.
Eso despierta un resorte que Dan desconocia de si mismo, al que
acaba matando, da un vuelco a la vido del barman.
Sin adscribirse a ninguna tendencia y sin dejarse encasillar en
ninguna escuela ni corriente, la obra de Boris Vian (1920-1959)
puede resultar huidiza a la vez que cargada de una honda angustia
vital, la angustia del tiempo destructor, del deterioro, de la
muerte, a traves de un universo insolito, descabellado y
fascinante.
Tras saludar a los amigos y tomar una copa, Rock Bailey salio del
club del viejo Lem a tomar el aire. Una invitacion a fumar, un
pequeno mareo yb& Rocky, joven y atractivo deportista
californiano, se ve envuelto, sin comerlo ni beberlo, en una turbia
historia de experimentos geneticos, luchas entre bandas y
misteriosas apariciones y desapariciones de rubias despampanantes.
A cuestas con su preocupacion por conservarse casto hasta los
veinte anos, Rocky, ayudado por sus amigos, intentara resolver una
enmaranada trama a lo largo de las paginas de esta delirante y
corrosiva parodia de novela negra, tan de moda en sus dias. Aqui
todo es posible: dar al traste con los buenos propositos de
castidad, lanzarse en paracaidas sobre una isla, que hablen los
perros, que se hagan chistes sobre el presidente Trumanb& y que
se desee la muerte de los feos.
" This collection] displays Vian's range from gallows humor to
verbal fireworks, and happily serves to give visibility to this
important writer."- Publishers Weekly. "Ultimately, Blues for a
Black Cat is a collection of moral fables, albeit fables told in a
cynical, mocking voice and set in a skewed version of the real
world. Under the surface absurdity and verbal play, they offer
serious indictments of human weakness and pretensions. Further,
they reveal the spiritual emptiness just beneath our civilized
faade. Vian's blues are not only for a black cat, but for a society
without meaning."- Manoa. " Blues for a Black Cat] brings back the
nimble Vian in a collection of his short fiction, initially
published as Les Fourmis in 1949. The work has the unmistakable
flavor of the time and place, Claude Abadie's jazz band, the coded
and absurdist messages of rebellion, the wistful fables, verbal
riffs and goofy anarchic encounters; the mise-en-scene includes an
expiring jazzman who sells his sweat, a cat with a British accent
and a piano that mixes a cocktail when "Mood Indigo" is
played."-Boston Globe. Boris Vian (1920-59), a trained engineer and
jazz trumpet player, was a major literary figure in World War II
France. Julia Older is the author or editor of many works. Her
stories, translations, and poems have appeared in New Directions,
the New Yorker, and many other journals.
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