Pedigree

by Georges Simenon

Other authorsLuc Sante (Introduction), Robert Baldick (Translator)
Paperback, 2010

Status

Available

Call number

843.912

Collection

Publication

NYRB Classics (2010), Paperback, 560 pages

Description

Pedigree is Georges Simenon’s longest, most unlikely, and most adventurous novel, the book that is increasingly seen to lie at the heart of his outsize achievement as a chronicler of modern self and society. In the early 1940s, Simenon began work on a memoir of his Belgian childhood. He showed the initial pages to André Gide, who urged him to turn them into a novel. The result was, Simenon later quipped, a book in which everything is true but nothing is accurate. Spanning the years from the beginning of the century, with its political instability and terrorist threats, to the end of the First World War in 1918, Pedigree is an epic of everyday existence in all its messy unfinished intensity and density, a story about the coming-of-age of a precocious and curious boy and the coming to be of the modern world.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member PaolaM
A largely autobiographical novel peering through the difficulties of life in Liege at the beginning of the last century by charting the story of a family, with all the unpalatable resentments, jealousies, pettiness, sour disappointment with a life that is not taking the right turns that can go on
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underneath the surface. The misery of human nature laid bare in a powerful book.
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LibraryThing member encephalical
Begins like a dreary Tristram Shandy as it takes almost 400 pages before it starts following Simenon's stand-in in earnest. There are passages of inner lives which are great but not enough to overcome the overall tediousness.
LibraryThing member philabookster
Read this book with a map of Liège in one hand. It is really the story of that city, from the perspective of three generations of the Mamelin-Peters family, and it is filled with specific references to named streets and other local landmarks. And at the same time, this highly autobiographical
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novel provides plenty of insight into this most obsessive of writers. The novel begins the day before the primary character, Roger Mamelin, is born, and it ends when he is 15 and World War I has just come to an end. Roger is born just after midnight, on Friday, January 13, 1903 (which his parents agree to lie about, and instead claim that he was born 11 minutes earlier, thus his birth certificate has his date of birth as January 12). His mother, Élise, was the thirteenth child in her family, although Simenon only seems to name 10 of her siblings: Léopold, Louisa, Marthe, Félicie, Hubert, Louis, Franz, Poldine, and Madeline. He also states that her husband, Désiré, has 13 siblings (at least there are 13 “mouths to feed” at their home), but he only mentions 5 of them by name: Cécile, Arthur, Lucien, Françoise, and Guillaume. There’s some irony in that Roger, as the alter-ego of this crazily driven author, gets a job in Germain’s Bookshop (“Contrary to what he would have imagined in the past, it was the passers-by who were in the aquarium and it was he who, through the bookshop window, watched them with a curiosity tinged with pity.”), where the owner attempts to stop him from doing any work that might give him (Roger) pleasure – and Roger incurs the owner’s wrath by showing, in front of an important customer, that he knows more than the owner about the novels of Dumas. In an interesting parallel, the narrator of The Man with the Little Dog also worked as an assistant in a bookshop with a not very benevolent owner.
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Language

Original language

French

Original publication date

1948

Physical description

560 p.; 7.94 inches

ISBN

1590173511 / 9781590173510
Page: 0.2183 seconds