Journey To The End Of The Night

By (author) Louis-Ferdinand Céline
By (author) Louis-Ferdinand Céline; By (author) Céline, Louis-Ferdinand; Translated by Manheim, Ralph; Afterword by Vollmann, William T.
Short description/annotation
Céline’s masterpiece—colloquial, polemic, hyper-realistic, boiling over with black humor
Description
Céline’s masterpiece—colloquial, polemic, hyper realistic—boils over with bitter humor and revulsion at society’s idiocy and hypocrisy: Journey to the End of the Night is a literary symphony of cruelty and violence that hurtles through the improbable travels of the petit bourgeois (and largely autobiographical) antihero, Bardamu: from the trenches of WWI, to the African jungle, to New York, to the Ford Factory in Detroit, and finally to life in Paris as a failed doctor. Ralph Manheim’s pitch-perfect translation captures Céline’s savage energy, and a dynamic afterword by William T. Vollmann presents a fresh, furiously alive take on this astonishing novel.
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"The most blackly humorous and disenchanted voice in all of French literature."
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"My favorite French classic has to be Journey to the End of the Night. It''s an epic that takes you all around the world, but the center of the world is Paris, or Céline''s delirious, slightly hallucinatory, incredibly poetic vision of it."
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"This is the novel, perhaps more than any other, that inspired me to write fiction. Céline showed me that it was possible to convey things that had heretofore seemed inaccessible."
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"Teeming with disease, misanthropy, and dark comedy."
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"An extraordinarily gifted writer, he writes like a lunging live wire, crackling and wayward, full of hidden danger."
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"Terrifying: enormously powerful and slashing, satiric, misanthropic—but what power of the imagination!"
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"One of the greatest novels of the twentieth century. It could be said that without Céline there would have been no Henry Miller, no Jack Kerouac, no Charles Bukowski."
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"Céline is my Proust!"
Biographical note
Louis-Ferdinand Céline (1894-1961) was a French writer and doctor whose novels are antiheroic visions of human suffering. Accused of collaboration with the Nazis, Céline fled France in 1944 first to Germany and then to Denmark. Condemned by default (1950) in France to one year of imprisonment and declared a national disgrace, Céline returned to France after his pardon in 1951, where he continued to write until his death. His classic books include Journey to the End of the Night, Death on the Installment Plan, London Bridge, North, Rigadoon, Conversations with Professor Y, Castle to Castle, and Normance. Ralph Manheim (1907-1992) was an American translator of German and French literature, as well as occasional works from Dutch, Polish and Hungarian. The PEN/Ralph Manheim Medal for Translation, a major lifetime achievement award in the field of translation, is named in honor of Manheim and his work. He won many awards in his lifetime, including a MacArthur genius grant, a Guggenheim Fellowship ,and a National Book Award. William T. Vollmann is the author of The Atlas (winner of the 1997 PEN Center West Award), Seven Dreams: A Book of North American Landscapes, and Europe Central. His nonfiction includes Rising Up and Rising Down which was nominated for the National Book Critics Circle Award in 2003, and his novel Europe Central won the National Book Award in 2005.
More Information
Author By (author) Louis-Ferdinand Céline
Date Of Publication May 17, 2006
EAN 9780811216548
Contributors Louis-Ferdinand Céline; Céline, Louis-Ferdinand; Manheim, Ralph; Vollmann, William T.
Publisher New Directions Publishing Corporation
Languages English
Country of Publication United Kingdom
Width 132 mm
Height 203 mm
Thickness 33 mm
Product Forms Paperback / Softback
Weight 0.418000
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