Feeërie voor een andere keer

by Louis-Ferdinand Céline

Paper Book, 1991

Status

Available

Call number

843.914

Publication

Amsterdam Meulenhoff cop. 1991

Description

Fable for Another Time is one of the most significant and far-reaching literary texts of postwar France. Composed in the tumultuous aftermath of World War II, largely in the Danish prison cell where the author was awaiting extradition to France on charges of high treason, the book offers a unique perspective on the war, the postwar political purges in France, and Louis-Ferdinand Céline's own dissident politics.   The tale of a man imprisoned and reviled by his own countrymen, the Fable follows its character's decline from virulent hatred to near madness as a result of his violent frustration with the hypocrisy and banality of his fellow human beings. In part because of the story's clear link to his own case--and because of the legal and political difficulties this presented--Céline was compelled to push his famously elliptical, brilliantly vitriolic language to new and extraordinary extremes in Fable for Another Time. The resulting linguistic and stylistic innovation make this work stand out as one of the most original and revealing literary undertakings of its time.   Louis-Ferdinand Céline (1894-1961) was a French writer and physician best known for the novels Journey to the End of the Night (1932) and Death on the Installment Plan (1936). Céline was accused of collaboration during World War II and fled France in 1944 to live first in Germany, then in Denmark, where he was imprisoned for over a year; an amnesty in 1951 allowed him to return to France. Céline remains anathema to a large segment of French society for his antisemitic writings; at the same time his novels are enormously admired by each new generation.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member LolaWalser
Céline eating sh*t, squirming like a worm in a frying pan, raving like a lunatic. He pleads, he snivels, he begs, he yells, he wants to makes us see that he, HE, has suffered, just like, EXACTLY like the victims of German lagers--he's lost 45 kilos, ladies and gentlemen!--45 kilos!--he has
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pellagra! pellagra!--he is being tortured and crucified! the mutilated invalid of the Great War! the "traitor"! What, he asks, has he betrayed? He asks sincerely. He never saw any difference between himself and the others, except that they were on the winning side. He imagines nostalgic scenarios in which he too had picked the (eventually) winning side, like a drunk winning a lottery in his head. The entire war boils down for this monstrous egoist to a personal kick in the pants.

The great hater loved his own ass well enough to bother running away from France, first to the crumbling Naziland, then north, ever farther north, till he hit the safety of a Danish prison (the Danes refused to extradite him to France...) But how could even someone like Laval engage this idiot to be his personal doctor? How desperate they must have been, how perfectly deliciously sweatingly clawingly desperate. Oh yes, quick death was too good for the likes of him. I'm glad the turd lived to hurt as long as he did.
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Language

Original language

French

Original publication date

1952

ISBN

9029025751 / 9789029025751

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Library's rating

Pages

248
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