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"Count d'Orgel" is a study of a three-sided relationship set in
Parisian society after World War I. Count Anne d'Orgel and his wife
Maliant befriend the young Francois de Seryeuse, and find that
their marriage is alternately qualified and confirmed by the
feelings released.
Set in Paris during the last years of World War One, this is one of
the finest, most delicate love stories ever written. The narrator,
a boy of 16, tells of his love affair with a young woman whose
husband is away at the Front.
Count d'Orgel is handsome, charming, and carefree, a model of cool
aristocratic aplomb. His wife, the Countess, is beautiful and pure
and loves her husband more than anything in the world. But from the
moment the d'Orgels meet and befriend the clever young Francois de
Seryeuse backstage at the circus, all three of these supremely
civilized and witty people are caught up in an ever more intricate
and seductive dance of deception and self-deception. At Count
d'Orgel's masquerade ball, the real disguises are those of the
human heart.
Completed just before Raymond Radiguet's death at the age of
twenty, "Count d'Orgel's Ball" is a love story that is as
disturbing as it is delicious.
As the First World War reaches its final year, an illicit love
affair is beginning between a sixteen-year-old boy and a young
woman married to a soldier at the front. They meet secretly in her
flat on the outskirts of Paris, in cornfields and on river banks.
When she receives letters from her husband, they burn them
together. Intoxicated by passion, they cannot bear to end their
affair, even when it causes a scandal among their friends and
neighbours. Instead, they hurtle towards tragedy. Written in spare,
haunting prose when Raymond Radiguet was still a teenager, this
semi-autobiographical novel became an instant bestseller and its
author was hailed as a genius before his tragic death at the age of
twenty. Expressing all the anguish and joy of adolescence, it is a
work of startling imagery and subtle beauty. Translated by Robert
Baldick with an introduction by Fay Weldon
He belonged to the solemn race of men whose lives unfold too
quickly to their close.?Jean Cocteau
"The Devil in the Flesh," one of the finest, most delicate love
stories ever written, is set in Paris during the last year of the
First World War. The narrator, a boy of sixteen, tells of his love
affair with Martha Lacombe, a young woman whose soldier husband is
away at the front. The liaison soon becomes a scadal and their
friends, horrified and incredulous, refuse to accept what is
happening - even when the affair reaches its tragic climax.
In the film "Le Diable au Corps" (with Gerard Philipe and Micheline
Presle), Claude Autant-Lara recreated this story of the First World
War with nostalgic tenderness. His sensitive dramatization treats
the affair with such delicacy that many critics consider the love
scenes to be among the most beautiful ever photographed. The film
won the Grand Prix and the International Critics Prize.
Raymond Radiguet wrote "The Devil in the Flesh" between the ages of
sixteen and eighteen, about his own adolescent love affair with an
older woman. He died from typhoid fever at the age of twenty. His
only other novel is "Comte d'Orgel," also available from Marion
Boyars Publishers.
..".a triumph of the poetic intelligence: a masterpiece..."?"New
Statesman"
Hailed by Jean Cocteau as a "masterpiece," and by the "Guardian"
as "Bret Easton Ellis's "Less Than Zero, avant la lettre,"" this
taut tale written by a teenager in the form of a frank "confession"
is a gem of early twentieth century romanticism. Long unavailable
in the U.S., it is here presented in a sparkling new
translation.
Set in Paris during the First World War, it tells the story of
Francois, the 16-year-old narrator, who falls in love with Marthe,
an older, married woman whose husband is off fighting at the front.
What seems to begin as a charming tale of puppy love quickly
darkens, and they launch into a steamy affair. In the tense
environment of the wartime city, their love takes on a desperation
transcending their youthfulness.
And as the badly-kept secret of their relationship unfolds, scandal
descends, leading the story to a final, startling conclusion--and
causing the book itself to become a scandal when it was first
published in 1923, just before the author's death at the age of
20.
A romantic novel set in Paris during the final years of the First
World War in which the narrator, a sixteen-year-old boy, recounts
his love affair with a woman whose husband is fighting at the
Front. From the author of COMTE D'ORGEL. In French.
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